Hi Elijah!
On Sat, 23 Mar 2019 18:07:17 -0700 Elijah Newren <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Rohit!
>
> On Fri, Mar 22, 2019 at 8:12 AM Rohit Ashiwal
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> > PS: Point one is missing in the timeline from the ideas page[0], can someone
> > explain what exactly it wants?
>
> I don't understand the question; could you restate it?
I was talking about this point: " The suggestion to fix an interrupted rebase-i
or cherry-pick due to a commit that became empty via git reset HEAD (in
builtin/commit.c)
instead of git rebase --skip or git cherry-pick --skip ranges from annoying to
confusing.".
> > Points to work on:
> > ------------------
> > - Add `git cherry-pick --skip`
>
> I'd reword this section as 'Consistently suggest --skip for operations
> that have such a concept'.[1]
Alright! I'll correct this in comming revisions.
> > - [Bonus] Deprecate am-based rebases
> > - [Bonus] Make a flag to allow rebase to rewrite commit messages that
> > refer to older commits that were also rebased
>
> I'd reorder these two. I suspect the second won't be too hard and
> will provide a new user-visible feature, while the former will
> hopefully not be visible to users; if the former has more than
> cosmetic differences visible to user, it might transform the problem
> into more of a social problem than a technical one or just make into
> something we can't do.
There is no "order" in these points, just a rough TODO list, but I get your
point here.
> > Proposed Timeline
> > -----------------
> > + Community Bonding (May 6th - May 26th):
> > - Introduction to community
> > - Get familiar with the workflow
> > - Study and understand the workflow and implementation of the
> > project in detail
> >
> > + Phase 1 (May 27th - June 23rd):
> > - Start with implementing `git cherry-pick --skip`
> > - Write new tests for the just introduced flag(s)
> > - Analyse the requirements and differences of am-based and other
> > rebases flags
>
> Writing or finding tests to trigger all the --skip codepaths might be
> the biggest part of this phase. Implementing `git cherry-pick --skip`
> just involves making it run the code that `git reset` invokes. The
> you change the error message to reference `<command> --skip` instead
> of `git reset`. What you're calling phase 1 here isn't quite
> microproject sized, but it should be relatively quick and easy; I'd
> plan to spend much more of your time on phase 2.
>
> > + Phase 2 (June 24th - July 21st):
> > - Introduce flags of am-based rebases to other kinds.
> > - Add tests for the same.
>
> You should probably mention the individual cases from "INCOMPATIBLE
> FLAGS" of the git rebase manpage. Also, some advice for order of
> tackling these: I think you should probably do --ignore-whitespace
> first; my guess is that one is the easiest. Close up would be
> --committer-date-is-author-date and --ignore-date. Re-reading, I'm
> not sure -C even makes sense at all; it might be that the solution is
> just accepting the flag and ignoring it, or perhaps it remains the one
> flag the interactive backend won't support, or maybe there is
> something that makes sense to be done. There'd need to be a little
> investigation for that one, but it might turn out simple too. The
> --whitespace={nowarn|warn|fix|error|error-all} flag will be the
> kicker. I don't know how long that one will take, but I'm certain
> it's harder than the other flags and it might conceivably take up most
> the summer or even extend beyond.
>
> > + Phase 3 (July 22th - August 19th):
> > - Act on [Bonus] features
> > - Documentation
> > - Clean up tasks
>
> I'd prefer that Documentation updates were made as you went; you'll
> particularly need to look at Documentation/git-cherry-pick.txt and
> Documentation/rebase.txt, especially the "INCOMPATIBLE OPTIONS" and
> "BEHAVIORAL DIFFERENCES" sections of the latter.
Thanks for advice, yes, of course, the documentation and implementation will go
hand in hand.
> Also, as far as timing goes, the rewriting of commit messages seems
> relatively straightforward; you may want to consider doing it before
> the --whitespace flag (despite the fact that I originally suggested it
> as a bonus item). Deprecating am-based rebases, on the other hand, is
> a bit of a wildcard. It depends on Phase 2 being completed so it
> definitely makes sense to be last. If phase 2 is complete, it's
> conceivable that deprecating am-based rebases only takes a little more
> work, but it might expand to use up a lot of time.
>
> > Relevant Work
> > =============
> > Dscho and I had a talk on how a non-am backend should implement `git rebase
> > --whitespace=fix`, which he warned may become a large project (as it turns
> > out it is a sub-task in one of the proposed ideas[0]), we were trying to
> > integrate this on git-for-windows first.
> > Keeping warning in mind, I discussed this project with Rafael and he
> > suggested
> > (with a little bit uncertainty in mind) that I should work on implementing
> > a git-diff flag that generates a patch that when applied, will remove
> > whitespace
> > errors which I am currently working on.
>
> It's awesome that you're looking in to this, but it may make more
> sense to knock out the easy parts of this project first. That way the
> project gets some value out of your work for sure, you gain confidence
> and familiarity with the codebase, and then you can tackle the more
> difficult items. Of course, if you're just exploring to learn what's
> possible in order to write the proposal, that's fine, I just think
> once you start on this project, it'd make more sense to do the easier
> ones first.
Yes, I'm looking into the code to get some clear vision.
> Hope that helps,
Yes! The vision in now clearer. Thanks Elijah. :)
> Elijah
Thanks for the review
Rohit