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authorJeff King <peff@peff.net>2013-10-28 21:19:59 -0400
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2013-10-29 12:41:17 -0700
commitfcb06a8d54e29d12bb8160b978ce78331c95a1bf (patch)
treee82b2c9d67500d7b9cd3936a4b4731cfbdfe6c27 /git-am.sh
parente45bda876ae2e39ac1e11ba1609f2c363ad4959a (diff)
downloadgit-fcb06a8d54e29d12bb8160b978ce78331c95a1bf.tar.gz
use @@PERL@@ in built scriptsjk/replace-perl-in-built-scripts
Several of the built shell commands invoke a bare "perl" to perform some one-liners. This will use the first perl in the PATH rather than the one specified by the user's SHELL_PATH. We are not asking these perl invocations to do anything exotic, so typically any old system perl will do; however, in some cases the system perl may have unexpected behavior (e.g., by handling line endings differently). We should err on the side of using the perl the user pointed us to. The downside of this is that on systems with a sane perl setup, we no longer find the perl at runtime, but instead point to a static perl (like /usr/bin/perl). That means we will not handle somebody moving perl without rebuilding git, whereas before we tracked it just fine. This is probably not a big deal, though, as the built perl scripts already suffered from this. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'git-am.sh')
-rwxr-xr-xgit-am.sh4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/git-am.sh b/git-am.sh
index 202130f888..46e83569aa 100755
--- a/git-am.sh
+++ b/git-am.sh
@@ -302,7 +302,7 @@ split_patches () {
# not starting with Author, From or Date is the
# subject, and the body starts with the next nonempty
# line not starting with Author, From or Date
- perl -ne 'BEGIN { $subject = 0 }
+ @@PERL@@ -ne 'BEGIN { $subject = 0 }
if ($subject > 1) { print ; }
elsif (/^\s+$/) { next ; }
elsif (/^Author:/) { s/Author/From/ ; print ;}
@@ -334,7 +334,7 @@ split_patches () {
# Since we cannot guarantee that the commit message is in
# git-friendly format, we put no Subject: line and just consume
# all of the message as the body
- LANG=C LC_ALL=C perl -M'POSIX qw(strftime)' -ne 'BEGIN { $subject = 0 }
+ LANG=C LC_ALL=C @@PERL@@ -M'POSIX qw(strftime)' -ne 'BEGIN { $subject = 0 }
if ($subject) { print ; }
elsif (/^\# User /) { s/\# User/From:/ ; print ; }
elsif (/^\# Date /) {