Sorry, was away from my computer for a while there.

Joe, sounds like what happened was that you pushed the tag without pushing
the branch. That has happened a few times in the past by others (including
myself). No biggie. The ASF repos disable git push --force, so I don't
think it's even possible for tampering to happen.


On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 6:53 PM, Joe Bowser <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 10:48 AM, Ian Clelland <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > 1. Being on your local head does not mean that it's on the head of 3.1.x
> on
> > the remote repo.
> >
>
> The thing is that it was yesterday when I checked the commit log.
>
> > 4. Nobody's doing anything out of spite. If it means that much to you,
> I'm
> > sure people would even agree to move your commit and tag back to the
> 3.1.0
> > branch, and rewrite the history for everyone. (Okay, I'm not *sure*, and
> it
> > sounds like a pain in the ass, but we could do it.)
>
> I honestly don't care.  The bigger issue is that I don't trust the git
> repo and I don't trust the other committers to not mess with the git
> repo.  Those are some pretty serious problems.  We can go ahead and
> build this release, but at this point, I consider the git repository
> worthless as far as actually reflecting who did what work.
>

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