On Tue, Dec 1, 2015 at 2:22 PM, Junio C Hamano <[email protected]> wrote:
> Junio C Hamano <[email protected]> writes:
>
>> I do not think you would need a new option for this, by the way.
>> Just add a new syntax for the LFS of a refspec that cannot possibly
>> be confused with existing choices of what can come there (i.e. an
>> empty string to denote deletion, or a partial refname), e.g. come up
>> with an appropriate string in $sign and allow the following:
>>
>> $ git fetch ${sign}c78f7b5ed9dc
>> $ git fetch ${sign}c78f7b5ed9dc:refs/remotes/origin/frotz
That looks good to me.
>
> Instead, we should limit us to 40-hex object name and nothing else
> in the initial incarnation.
ok, will do.
>
> i.e.
>
> $ git fetch ${sign}c78f7b5ed9dc1c6edc8db06ac65860151d54fd07
> $ git fetch
> ${sign}c78f7b5ed9dc1c6edc8db06ac65860151d54fd07:refs/remotes/origin/frotz
>
> If the remote end (which, as Peff pointed out earlier, already knows
> how to respond to a fetch request for an exact object when
> configured to do so) allows such a fetch to go through, "fetch" can
> (and will) update the ref named by the RHS of storing refspec with
> the current code, so there is no need to do anything special to
> support this.
>
> As to ${sign}, I was tempted to say an empty string might be
> sufficient (i.e. "do not use 40-hex as your branch name"), but it
> probably is a bad idea.
I would think if sign is empty string the server will check if the given
40-hex is unique (either a branch named so, while there is no such
object or just that object and not branch/tag) or the remote would
reject due to disambiguation. This possibility can be done later though.
> A single dot "." would be a possibility
> (i.e. a ref component cannot begin with a dot), but squating on it
> and saying "anything that begins with . must be followed by 40-hex
> (and in the future by an extended SHA-1)" would rob extensibility
> from us, so perhaps ".@c78f7b5ed9dc1c6edc8db06ac65860151d54fd07" or
> something?
My gut reaction is to reject that notation, as it is very cryptic.
Looking at the @ sign, it reminds me of the reflog notion such as HEAD@{-1}.
So maybe it would be more appealing to specify
HEAD@{c78f7b5ed9dc1c6edc8db06ac65860151d54fd07}
to mean a specific commit. By saying HEAD we indicate it is not meant as
a branch (both on the remote as well as locally).
By having the @{ sequence this would also be dis-ambiguous from any
branch.
> That is leading "." denotes "this is an extended refspec"
> and the next character denotes what kind of extended refspec it is.
> For now we say that "@" denotes "exact object name is used instead
> of a(n abbreviated) refname".
So using @ as you propose I could also specify .@refs/heads/master as
an un-abbreviated ref?
Did you have any reason to pick . specifically or are we welcome to bikeshed
why a colon might be better? (or ":", "?", "[", "\", "^", "~", SP, or TAB)
We could use [id]c78f7b5ed9dc1c6edc8db06ac65860151d54fd07
or [const]c78f7b5ed9dc1c6edc8db06ac65860151d54fd07 ?
Looking at the big picture here, this being a preparation for improving
submodule cloning, we also want to allow tags here?
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