Brandon Williams <[email protected]> writes:
> Commit 74ed43711fd (grep: enable recurse-submodules to work on <tree>
> objects, 2016-12-16) taught 'tree_entry_interesting()' to be able to
> match across submodule boundaries in the presence of wildcards. This is
> done by performing literal matching up to the first wildcard and then
> punting to the submodule itself to perform more accurate pattern
> matching. Instead of introducing a new flag to request this behavior,
> commit 74ed43711fd overloaded the already existing 'recursive' flag in
> 'struct pathspec' to request this behavior.
>
> This leads to a bug where whenever any other caller has the 'recursive'
> flag set as well as a pathspec with wildcards that all submodules will
> be indicated as matches. One simple example of this is:
>
> git init repo
> cd repo
>
> git init submodule
> git -C submodule commit -m initial --allow-empty
>
> touch "[bracket]"
> git add "[bracket]"
> git commit -m bracket
> git add submodule
> git commit -m submodule
>
> git rev-list HEAD -- "[bracket]"
>
> Fix this by introducing the new flag 'recurse_submodules' in 'struct
> pathspec' and using this flag to determine if matches should be allowed
> to cross submodule boundaries.
Makes sense.
I initially misread the title
"pathspec: only match across submodule boundaries when requested"
to be saying that the match happens only at the boundary, but that
"only" is not about where the match happens.
"pathspec: match across submodule boundaries only when requested"
would have avoided such a confusion.
> diff --git a/builtin/grep.c b/builtin/grep.c
> index 5a6cfe6b4..3ca4ac80d 100644
> --- a/builtin/grep.c
> +++ b/builtin/grep.c
> @@ -1015,6 +1015,7 @@ int cmd_grep(int argc, const char **argv, const char
> *prefix)
> prefix, argv + i);
> pathspec.max_depth = opt.max_depth;
> pathspec.recursive = 1;
> + pathspec.recurse_submodules = !!recurse_submodules;
With the current code, recurse_submodules can only be 0 or 1 (the
only assignment is from the return value of git_config_bool()), so
the force-boolean !! is not strictly needed, but it may be a good
future-proofing measure.
Will queue; thanks.