On Fri, Sep 4, 2015 at 6:23 PM, Junio C Hamano <gits...@pobox.com> wrote:
>
> OK, I didn't know that was acceptable in the kernel community
> to have random comments like that inside the block.  Can these
> comments span multiple paragraphs?  What I am wondering is what
> you want to see in a case like this:
>
>      Signed-off-by: Noam Camus <no...@ezchip.com>
>      Acked-by: Vineet Gupta <vgu...@synopsys.com>
>      [ Also removed pointless cast from "void *". - Linus]
>      Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torva...@linux-foundation.org>
>      [ Ahh, we have to tell at least these people
>
>       - stakeholder class 1
>       - staeholder class 2
>      ]
>      Cc: foo
>      Cc: bar

So quite frankly, at that point if git doesn't recognize it as a
sign-off block, I don't think it's a big deal.

That said, the original "git am" rules actually seem to be rather
straightforward: it's never an issue about "last block of text", and
it's simply an issue of "is there a sign-ff _anywhere_ in the text".

That simplicity has a certain appeal to me. I don't think it was
necessarily written that way because it was "well designed" - I
suspect it is more an issue of "easy to implement in a shell-script".

And it's possible that I'm mis-reading the scripts too. It's not like
I _remember_ what the exact behavior was, I just think it used to work
really well for us (ie I don't recall seeing lots of those empty lines
in the middle of the sign-off block before, and this current merge
window it happened for four of the emails I applied from Andrew's
119-patch series..

Four out of 119 emails may not be a big percentage, but it does mean
that it's not horribly unusual either..

                Linus
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