Peter Korsgaard wrote on 2009-09-22 10:55: >>>>>> "AS" == Alex Schuilenburg <al...@ecoscentric.com> writes: >>>>>> > > Hi, > > AS> % ls -l /usr/bin/git-* | wc -l > AS> 136 > AS> % > > That hasn't been the situation since git 1.6.0, released 13 months > ago. When evaluating something as fast moving as DVCS'es, please use > the latest stable release of the tools. > Ah, for 1.6.x you mean # ls -l /usr/libexec/git-core | wc -l 132 # ls -l /usr/bin/git* | wc -l 4 #
You can run but you cannot hide ;-) I think if we are going to switch sooner rather than later you need to evaluate what is available pre-packaged from whatever distro or OS provider. i.e. what the regular users are going to be able to access easily without having to upgrade their system or build the tools themselves. Don't get me wrong, git is great and all empowering. But IMHO that is the problem - there is enough rope to hang yourself. For example, consider the following subtlety: "If you are staging an updated submodule for commit manually, be careful to not add a trailing slash when specifying the path. With the slash appended, Git will assume you are removing the submodule and checking that directory's contents into the containing repository." A trailing slash is what my bash completion puts in my path and is likely to be *my* default behaviour. IMHO that is broken, but I am sure someone in git-land thinks it makes perfect sense and is perfectly acceptable behaviour. If I was a git expert, maybe I would too. But the average Joe is not and not likely to want to be one. We are not talking here what is the most superior DRCS, we are talking what is the most suitable for eCos. You don't need a 10lb hammer to crack a nut. -- Alex Schuilenburg >>>> Visit us at ESC-Boston http://www.embedded.com/esc/boston <<<< >>>> Sep 22-23 on Stand 226 at Hynes Convention Center, Boston <<<< >>>> Visit us at ESC-UK http://www.embedded.co.uk <<<< >>>> Oct 7-8 on Stand 433 at FIVE ISC, Farnborough <<<< -- Before posting, please read the FAQ: http://ecos.sourceware.org/fom/ecos and search the list archive: http://ecos.sourceware.org/ml/ecos-discuss