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authorLinus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>2005-10-25 15:24:55 -0700
committerJunio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>2005-10-26 16:49:38 -0700
commit7b34c2fae0d2875b35ad1cc0e416b9c2b9b02b1f (patch)
treec148c898d13e9ff6eedd3b2968a0fe37052efab4 /git-log.sh
parentbd321bcc51e95f644ac5335abe673afcbcaade62 (diff)
downloadgit-7b34c2fae0d2875b35ad1cc0e416b9c2b9b02b1f.tar.gz
git-rev-list: make --dense the default (and introduce "--sparse")
This actually does three things: - make "--dense" the default for git-rev-list. Since dense is a no-op if no filenames are given, this doesn't actually change any historical behaviour, but it's logically the right default (if we want to prune on filenames, do it fully. The sparse "merge-only" thing may be useful, but it's not what you'd normally expect) - make "git-rev-parse" show the default revision control before it shows any pathnames. This was a real bug, but nobody would ever have noticed, because the default thing tends to only make sense for git-rev-list, and git-rev-list didn't use to take pathnames. - it changes "git-rev-list" to match the other commands that take a mix of revisions and filenames - it no longer requires the "--" before filenames (although you still need to do it if a filename could be confused with a revision name, eg "gitk" in the git archive) This all just makes for much more pleasant and obvous usage. Just doing a gitk t/ does the obvious thing: it will show the history as it concerns the "t/" subdirectory. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
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