Re: [PATCH] pull: fail early if we know we can't merge from upstream

2013-04-12 Thread Junio C Hamano
Carlos Martín Nieto  writes:

> On Thu, 2013-04-11 at 10:37 -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>
>> > +  fetch=$(git config --get-all "remote.$use_remote.fetch")
>> > +  if [ -z "$fetch" ]; then
>> > +  return
>> > +  fi
>> 
>> Hmm, it is probably correct to punt on this case, but it defeats
>> large part of the effect of your effort, doesn't it? We fetch what
>> is covered by remote.$name.fetch _and_ what need to complete the
>> merge operation (otherwise branch.$name.merge that is not covered by
>> remote.$there.fetch will not work).  So
>> 
>> [remote "origin"]
>> url = $over_there
>> [branch "master"]
>> remote = origin
>> merge = refs/heads/master
>> 
>> would still fetch refs/heads/master from there and merge it.
>
> If you run 'git pull' in this situation, then everything's fine and the
> right thing gets merged.

My mistake.  You are trying to reject an obviously bad case early,
and because this is an obviously good case, you just let it be
handled in the original codeflow (which should not find any issues
in this set-up).
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Re: [PATCH] pull: fail early if we know we can't merge from upstream

2013-04-12 Thread Carlos Martín Nieto
On Thu, 2013-04-11 at 10:37 -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> Carlos Martín Nieto  writes:
> 
> > I can't quite decide whether the behaviour of 'git pull' with no
> > upstream configured but a default remote with no fetch refspecs
> > merging the remote's HEAD is a feature, a bug or something in between,
> > but it's used by t7409 so maybe someone else is using it and we
> > shouldn't break it.
> 
> Isn't it the simplest "works without any configuration" from the
> original days? 

I don't recall remotes not having refspecs when they're int he config,
though I guess it's equivalent to running 'git pull
git://example.org/myrepo.git'.

> 
> > There's another check that could be made earlier ('git pull
> > someremote' when that's not the branch's upstream remote), but then
> > you have to start figuring out what the flags to fetch are.
> 
> When the user gave us explicitly the name of the remote, it does not
> sound too bad to fetch from there.  "git pull someremote thatbranch"
> can be given after seeing a failure and succeed without retransfer,
> no?

It's not too bad, though you're paying for connection and ref
advertisement twice which breaks the otherwise quick pace of git
commands.

What I find bad from a UI point of view is that after fetching (which
could even be from the wrong remote for 'git pull' w/o upstream info)
git turns around and says "I was never going to merge/rebase that" for
things that we can know before fetching because they depend solely on
the configuration.

> 
> I am not sure if it is worth the added complexity and potential to
> introduce new bugs in general by trying to outsmart the for-merge
> logic that kicks in only after we learn what the other side offers
> and fetch from it, but anyway, let's see what we got here...
> 
> > diff --git a/git-pull.sh b/git-pull.sh
> > index 266e682..b62f5d3 100755
> > --- a/git-pull.sh
> > +++ b/git-pull.sh
> > @@ -43,6 +43,8 @@ log_arg= verbosity= progress= recurse_submodules=
> >  merge_args= edit=
> >  curr_branch=$(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD)
> >  curr_branch_short="${curr_branch#refs/heads/}"
> > +upstream=$(git config "branch.$curr_branch_short.merge")
> > +remote=$(git config "branch.$curr_branch_short.remote")
> >  rebase=$(git config --bool branch.$curr_branch_short.rebase)
> 
> Learning these upfront sounds sensible.
> 
> >  if test -z "$rebase"
> >  then
> > @@ -138,6 +140,47 @@ do
> > esac
> > shift
> >  done
> > +if test true = "$rebase"
> > +then
> > +op_type=rebase
> > +op_prep=against
> > +else
> > +op_type=merge
> > +op_prep=with
> > +fi
> > +
> > +check_args_against_config () {
> > +   # If fetch gets user-provided arguments, the user is
> > +   # overriding the upstream configuration, so we have to wait
> > +   # for fetch to do its work to know if we can merge.
> > +   if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then
> > +   return
> > +   fi
> 
> > +   # Figure out what remote we're going to be fetching from
> > +   use_remote=origin
> > +   if [ -n "$remote" ]; then
> > +   use_remote="$remote"
> > +   fi
> > +
> > +   # If the remote doesn't have a fetch refspec, then we'll merge
> > +   # whatever fetch marks for-merge, same as above.
> 
> The "above" in this sentence refers to...?
> 
> I guess "we have to wait", but it wasn't very clear.
> 

Yes, it refers to having to wait for fetch to complete before we can
know if we'll be able to merge.

> > +   fetch=$(git config --get-all "remote.$use_remote.fetch")
> > +   if [ -z "$fetch" ]; then
> > +   return
> > +   fi
> 
> Hmm, it is probably correct to punt on this case, but it defeats
> large part of the effect of your effort, doesn't it? We fetch what
> is covered by remote.$name.fetch _and_ what need to complete the
> merge operation (otherwise branch.$name.merge that is not covered by
> remote.$there.fetch will not work).  So
> 
> [remote "origin"]
> url = $over_there
> [branch "master"]
> remote = origin
> merge = refs/heads/master
> 
> would still fetch refs/heads/master from there and merge it.

If you run 'git pull' in this situation, then everything's fine and the
right thing gets merged.

> 
> > +   # The typical 'git pull' case where it should merge from the
> > +   # current branch's upstream. We can already check whether we
> > +   # we can do it. If HEAD is detached or there is no upstream
> > +   # branch, complain now.
> 
> Drop "typical", and rephrase "merge from" to also cover "rebase" (I
> often say "integrate with").

Sounds good.

> 
> To return to your original description:
> 
> A 'git pull' without specifying a remote is asked to take the
> current branch's upstream as the branch to merge from. This
> cannot work without an upstream configuration nor with HEAD
> detached, but we only check for this after fetching.
> 
> Wouldn't it be sufficient to add something like this before fetch
> happens:
> 
>   if test $# != 0 || # args explicitly specified
>test -n "$cu

Re: [PATCH] pull: fail early if we know we can't merge from upstream

2013-04-11 Thread Junio C Hamano
Carlos Martín Nieto  writes:

> I can't quite decide whether the behaviour of 'git pull' with no
> upstream configured but a default remote with no fetch refspecs
> merging the remote's HEAD is a feature, a bug or something in between,
> but it's used by t7409 so maybe someone else is using it and we
> shouldn't break it.

Isn't it the simplest "works without any configuration" from the
original days? 

> There's another check that could be made earlier ('git pull
> someremote' when that's not the branch's upstream remote), but then
> you have to start figuring out what the flags to fetch are.

When the user gave us explicitly the name of the remote, it does not
sound too bad to fetch from there.  "git pull someremote thatbranch"
can be given after seeing a failure and succeed without retransfer,
no?

I am not sure if it is worth the added complexity and potential to
introduce new bugs in general by trying to outsmart the for-merge
logic that kicks in only after we learn what the other side offers
and fetch from it, but anyway, let's see what we got here...

> diff --git a/git-pull.sh b/git-pull.sh
> index 266e682..b62f5d3 100755
> --- a/git-pull.sh
> +++ b/git-pull.sh
> @@ -43,6 +43,8 @@ log_arg= verbosity= progress= recurse_submodules=
>  merge_args= edit=
>  curr_branch=$(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD)
>  curr_branch_short="${curr_branch#refs/heads/}"
> +upstream=$(git config "branch.$curr_branch_short.merge")
> +remote=$(git config "branch.$curr_branch_short.remote")
>  rebase=$(git config --bool branch.$curr_branch_short.rebase)

Learning these upfront sounds sensible.

>  if test -z "$rebase"
>  then
> @@ -138,6 +140,47 @@ do
>   esac
>   shift
>  done
> +if test true = "$rebase"
> +then
> +op_type=rebase
> +op_prep=against
> +else
> +op_type=merge
> +op_prep=with
> +fi
> +
> +check_args_against_config () {
> + # If fetch gets user-provided arguments, the user is
> + # overriding the upstream configuration, so we have to wait
> + # for fetch to do its work to know if we can merge.
> + if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then
> + return
> + fi

> + # Figure out what remote we're going to be fetching from
> + use_remote=origin
> + if [ -n "$remote" ]; then
> + use_remote="$remote"
> + fi
> +
> + # If the remote doesn't have a fetch refspec, then we'll merge
> + # whatever fetch marks for-merge, same as above.

The "above" in this sentence refers to...?

I guess "we have to wait", but it wasn't very clear.

> + fetch=$(git config --get-all "remote.$use_remote.fetch")
> + if [ -z "$fetch" ]; then
> + return
> + fi

Hmm, it is probably correct to punt on this case, but it defeats
large part of the effect of your effort, doesn't it? We fetch what
is covered by remote.$name.fetch _and_ what need to complete the
merge operation (otherwise branch.$name.merge that is not covered by
remote.$there.fetch will not work).  So

[remote "origin"]
url = $over_there
[branch "master"]
remote = origin
merge = refs/heads/master

would still fetch refs/heads/master from there and merge it.

> + # The typical 'git pull' case where it should merge from the
> + # current branch's upstream. We can already check whether we
> + # we can do it. If HEAD is detached or there is no upstream
> + # branch, complain now.

Drop "typical", and rephrase "merge from" to also cover "rebase" (I
often say "integrate with").

To return to your original description:

A 'git pull' without specifying a remote is asked to take the
current branch's upstream as the branch to merge from. This
cannot work without an upstream configuration nor with HEAD
detached, but we only check for this after fetching.

Wouldn't it be sufficient to add something like this before fetch
happens:

if test $# != 0 || # args explicitly specified
   test -n "$curr_branch" || # not detached
   test -n "$upstream" # what to integrate with is known
then
return ;# then no problem
fi
die "underspecified 'git pull'"

without changing anything else?  For that matter, $upstream is
likely to be empty when detached, so the second test may not even be
necessary.

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[PATCH] pull: fail early if we know we can't merge from upstream

2013-04-11 Thread Carlos Martín Nieto
A 'git pull' without specifying a remote is asked to take the current
branch's upstream as the branch to merge from. This cannot work
without an upstream configuration nor with HEAD detached, but we only
check for this after fetching.

Perform the check beforehand, as we already know whether we have
enough information to merge and can fail immediately otherwise.

Signed-off-by: Carlos Martín Nieto 
---
 git-pull.sh | 62 -
 1 file changed, 45 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-)

I can't quite decide whether the behaviour of 'git pull' with no
upstream configured but a default remote with no fetch refspecs
merging the remote's HEAD is a feature, a bug or something in between,
but it's used by t7409 so maybe someone else is using it and we
shouldn't break it.

There's another check that could be made earlier ('git pull
someremote' when that's not the branch's upstream remote), but then
you have to start figuring out what the flags to fetch are. I'll
revisit this at some point, but I wanted to get this out since it's
working.

diff --git a/git-pull.sh b/git-pull.sh
index 266e682..b62f5d3 100755
--- a/git-pull.sh
+++ b/git-pull.sh
@@ -43,6 +43,8 @@ log_arg= verbosity= progress= recurse_submodules=
 merge_args= edit=
 curr_branch=$(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD)
 curr_branch_short="${curr_branch#refs/heads/}"
+upstream=$(git config "branch.$curr_branch_short.merge")
+remote=$(git config "branch.$curr_branch_short.remote")
 rebase=$(git config --bool branch.$curr_branch_short.rebase)
 if test -z "$rebase"
 then
@@ -138,6 +140,47 @@ do
esac
shift
 done
+if test true = "$rebase"
+then
+op_type=rebase
+op_prep=against
+else
+op_type=merge
+op_prep=with
+fi
+
+check_args_against_config () {
+   # If fetch gets user-provided arguments, the user is
+   # overriding the upstream configuration, so we have to wait
+   # for fetch to do its work to know if we can merge.
+   if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then
+   return
+   fi
+
+   # Figure out what remote we're going to be fetching from
+   use_remote=origin
+   if [ -n "$remote" ]; then
+   use_remote="$remote"
+   fi
+
+   # If the remote doesn't have a fetch refspec, then we'll merge
+   # whatever fetch marks for-merge, same as above.
+   fetch=$(git config --get-all "remote.$use_remote.fetch")
+   if [ -z "$fetch" ]; then
+   return
+   fi
+
+   # The typical 'git pull' case where it should merge from the
+   # current branch's upstream. We can already check whether we
+   # we can do it. If HEAD is detached or there is no upstream
+   # branch, complain now.
+   if [ -z "$curr_branch_short" -o -z "$upstream" ]; then
+   . git-parse-remote
+   error_on_missing_default_upstream "pull" $op_type $op_prep \
+   "git pull  "
+   exit 1
+   fi
+}
 
 error_on_no_merge_candidates () {
exec >&2
@@ -151,19 +194,6 @@ error_on_no_merge_candidates () {
esac
done
 
-   if test true = "$rebase"
-   then
-   op_type=rebase
-   op_prep=against
-   else
-   op_type=merge
-   op_prep=with
-   fi
-
-   curr_branch=${curr_branch#refs/heads/}
-   upstream=$(git config "branch.$curr_branch.merge")
-   remote=$(git config "branch.$curr_branch.remote")
-
if [ $# -gt 1 ]; then
if [ "$rebase" = true ]; then
printf "There is no candidate for rebasing against "
@@ -177,10 +207,6 @@ error_on_no_merge_candidates () {
echo "You asked to pull from the remote '$1', but did not 
specify"
echo "a branch. Because this is not the default configured 
remote"
echo "for your current branch, you must specify a branch on the 
command line."
-   elif [ -z "$curr_branch" -o -z "$upstream" ]; then
-   . git-parse-remote
-   error_on_missing_default_upstream "pull" $op_type $op_prep \
-   "git pull  "
else
echo "Your configuration specifies to $op_type $op_prep the ref 
'${upstream#refs/heads/}'"
echo "from the remote, but no such ref was fetched."
@@ -213,6 +239,8 @@ test true = "$rebase" && {
fi
done
 }
+
+check_args_against_config "$@"
 orig_head=$(git rev-parse -q --verify HEAD)
 git fetch $verbosity $progress $dry_run $recurse_submodules --update-head-ok 
"$@" || exit 1
 test -z "$dry_run" || exit 0
-- 
1.8.2.524.g8f8def7

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