Joey Hess wrote:

> [2] A particularly annoying one is that git branch -d cannot be used
>     to remove a branch that is directly pointing to a corrupted commit!

It's generally considered okay for everyday commands like "git branch -d"
not to cope well with corrupted repositories, but we try to keep
plumbing like "git update-ref -d" working to give people a way out.
Is update-ref -d broken in this situation, too?

Curious,
Jonathan
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