Michael Haggerty wrote:

> --- a/lockfile.c
> +++ b/lockfile.c
> @@ -219,13 +219,13 @@ int hold_lock_file_for_append(struct lock_file *lk, 
> const char *path, int flags)
>               if (errno != ENOENT) {
>                       if (flags & LOCK_DIE_ON_ERROR)
>                               die("cannot open '%s' for copying", path);
> -                     close(fd);
> +                     rollback_lock_file(lk);
>                       return error("cannot open '%s' for copying", path);

Makes sense.

Now that I'm here, I wonder a little at the error convention.  If the
caller doesn't pass LOCK_DIE_ON_ERROR, are they supposed to be able to
use unable_to_lock_message?  What errno would they pass in the err
parameter?  Would callers want handle failure to acquire a lock
differently from other errors (e.g., by sleeping and trying again),
and if not, what is the optionally-die behavior in hold_lock_file
about?

In any case,
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnie...@gmail.com>
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