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authorShawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>2007-01-10 06:39:47 -0500
committerJunio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>2007-01-11 18:05:53 -0800
commit80dbae03b010b1e5c6e0e4f475578d6cadaadecf (patch)
treec7c335d8b79d0a485968bb4e2a397212cc4104cf /builtin-diff.c
parente861ce1692fa9809f3e7b898804f8ddaf7cd8975 (diff)
downloadgit-80dbae03b010b1e5c6e0e4f475578d6cadaadecf.tar.gz
Chose better tag names in git-describe after merges.
Recently git.git itself encountered a situation on its master and next branches where git-describe stopped reporting 'v1.5.0-rc0-gN' and instead started reporting 'v1.4.4.4-gN'. This appeared to be a backward jump in version numbering. maint o-------------------4 \ \ master o-o-o-o-o-o-o-5-o-C-o-W The issue is that commit C in the diagram claims it is version 1.5.0, as the tag v1.5.0 is placed on commit 5. Yet commit W claims it is version 1.4.4.4 as the tag v1.5.0 has an older tag date than the v1.4.4.4 tag. As it turns out this situation is very common. A bug fix applied to maint and later merged into master occurs frequently enough that it should Just Work Right(tm). Rather than taking the first tag that gets found git-describe will now generate a list of all possible tags and select the one which has the most number of commits in common with HEAD (or whatever revision the user requested the description of). This rule is based on the principle shown in the diagram above. There are a large number of commits on the primary development branch 'master' which do not appear in the 'maint' branch, and many of these are already tagged as part of v1.5.0-rc0. Additionally these commits are not in v1.4.4.4, as they are part of the v1.5.0 release still being developed. The v1.5.0-rc0 tag is more descriptive of W than v1.4.4.4 is, and therefore should be used. Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
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