Message ID | pull.1424.git.1668972017089.gitgitgadget@gmail.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Superseded |
Headers | show |
Series | var: add GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR variable | expand |
"Sean Allred via GitGitGadget" <gitgitgadget@gmail.com> writes: > From: Sean Allred <allred.sean@gmail.com> > > Provides the same benefits to scripts as exposing GIT_EDITOR, but > allows distinguishing the 'sequence' editor from the 'core' editor. > > See also 44fcb4977cbae67f4698306ccfe982420ceebcbf. Why should we ;-)? If you explain why "git var GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR" is useful in a more direct way, you do not even have to refer to a long hexadecimal string which by itself does not mean anything to sane human beings. The editor program used by Git when editing the sequencer "todo" file is determined by examining a few environment variables and also affected by configuration variables. Introduce "git var GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR" that gives users an access to the final result of the logic without having to know the exact detail. This is very similar in spirit to 44fcb497 (Teach git var about GIT_EDITOR, 2009-11-11) that introduced "git var GIT_EDITOR". or something like that, perhaps? > +GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR:: > + Text editor for use by Git sequencer commands. Like `GIT_EDITOR`, Do our readers know what "Git sequencer commands" are? "rebase -i" of course is the primary one, but "cherry-pick" and "revert" that deals with multiple commits are technically "sequencer commands", as they also use the sequencer machinery. But for them, the users do not get a chance to edit the "todo" list with their sequence editor, unlike "rebase -i". I am wondering if it is easier to understand, without losing technical correctness, to exactly name the command, without pretending as if the sequence editor is used in situations wider than where "rebase -i" is used, e.g. The text editor program used to edit the 'todo' file while running "git rebase -i". or something. > + the value is meant to be interpreted by the shell when it is used. > + The order of preference is the `$GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR` environment > + variable, then `sequence.editor` configuration, and then the value > + of `git var GIT_EDITOR`. OK. > diff --git a/builtin/var.c b/builtin/var.c > index 491db274292..9a2d31dc4aa 100644 > --- a/builtin/var.c > +++ b/builtin/var.c > @@ -19,6 +19,16 @@ static const char *editor(int flag) > return pgm; > } > > +static const char *sequence_editor(int flag) > +{ > + const char *pgm = git_sequence_editor(); > + > + if (!pgm && flag & IDENT_STRICT) > + die("Terminal is dumb, but EDITOR unset"); I know this was copied from editor(), but the message does not make much sense. It's not like the caller of read_var() is not prepared to see a NULL returned, so letting it return NULL would make more sense. Since the ancient past back when editor() function was written, launch_editor() and the logic to die with "on dumb terminal you must specify an EDITOR" have migrated to editor.c and there is no strong reason to keep the corresponding die() even in editor() function (I do not recommend removing it as part of this topic, though), and adding a new one makes even less sense.
Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> writes: >> Provides the same benefits to scripts as exposing GIT_EDITOR, but >> allows distinguishing the 'sequence' editor from the 'core' editor. >> >> See also 44fcb4977cbae67f4698306ccfe982420ceebcbf. > > Why should we ;-)? I must admit I struggled quite a bit with a useful commit message, so I greatly appreciate the suggestion :-) I've incorporated your suggestion for a future v2. >> +GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR:: >> + Text editor for use by Git sequencer commands. Like `GIT_EDITOR`, > > Do our readers know what "Git sequencer commands" are? "rebase -i" > of course is the primary one, but "cherry-pick" and "revert" that > deals with multiple commits are technically "sequencer commands", as > they also use the sequencer machinery. But for them, the users do > not get a chance to edit the "todo" list with their sequence editor, > unlike "rebase -i". That's a good point; I hadn't considered that as a potential source of confusion -- prefering instead to future-proof the docs at the cost of understandability :-) > I am wondering if it is easier to understand, without losing > technical correctness, to exactly name the command, without > pretending as if the sequence editor is used in situations wider > than where "rebase -i" is used, e.g. > > The text editor program used to edit the 'todo' file while > running "git rebase -i". I've incorporated your suggestion. It's possibly worth noting that I had wanted to prefer prose ('interactive rebase') over a specific invocation ('git rebase -i'), but I see existing precedent for referring to it as the latter in documentation (and release notes especially). I suppose this practice is intended (either consciously or otherwise) to make it more straightforward to cross-reference different pieces of the documentation? >> diff --git a/builtin/var.c b/builtin/var.c >> index 491db274292..9a2d31dc4aa 100644 >> --- a/builtin/var.c >> +++ b/builtin/var.c >> @@ -19,6 +19,16 @@ static const char *editor(int flag) >> return pgm; >> } >> >> +static const char *sequence_editor(int flag) >> +{ >> + const char *pgm = git_sequence_editor(); >> + >> + if (!pgm && flag & IDENT_STRICT) >> + die("Terminal is dumb, but EDITOR unset"); > > I know this was copied from editor(), but the message does not make > much sense. It's not like the caller of read_var() is not prepared > to see a NULL returned, so letting it return NULL would make more > sense. Since the ancient past back when editor() function was > written, launch_editor() and the logic to die with "on dumb terminal > you must specify an EDITOR" have migrated to editor.c and there is > no strong reason to keep the corresponding die() even in editor() > function (I do not recommend removing it as part of this topic, > though), and adding a new one makes even less sense. I'm glad you brought this up. To be perfectly honest, I'm not confident I know what IDENT_STRICT is even supposed to mean -- it looks to be undocumented in cache.h. Here's what I *think* I've been able to piece together based on what you've said and some commit history: f9bc573fdaeaf8621008f3f49aaaa64869791691 suggests that setting IDENT_STRICT is intended to be 'more upset' about 'things' (the commit I mention is specifically talking about identities -- which explains the IDENT_* prefix) that aren't well-defined. In porcelain code, we want to quit immediately if there's nothing available since you can't really open up COMMIT_MSG, e.g., without a well-defined editor. Better to die early with a semi-useful message than to let the issue propagate downstream. This does not apply to git-var since the purpose of this command is not to invoke an editor, but to inspect configuration state via well-defined API. In this context, it's not necessary/appropriate to die early since, for the purposes of git-var, 'no configuration' is a perfectly valid (albeit confusing) state to be in. I'd like to confirm this / understand more about what's going on here before making the code change on this one. If I can understand what's going on here well enough to write an informed commit message, I can remove this vestigial code from editor() in a separate patch. -- Sean Allred
diff --git a/Documentation/git-var.txt b/Documentation/git-var.txt index 6aa521fab23..764a94b2a1f 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-var.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-var.txt @@ -49,6 +49,13 @@ ifdef::git-default-editor[] The build you are using chose '{git-default-editor}' as the default. endif::git-default-editor[] +GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR:: + Text editor for use by Git sequencer commands. Like `GIT_EDITOR`, + the value is meant to be interpreted by the shell when it is used. + The order of preference is the `$GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR` environment + variable, then `sequence.editor` configuration, and then the value + of `git var GIT_EDITOR`. + GIT_PAGER:: Text viewer for use by Git commands (e.g., 'less'). The value is meant to be interpreted by the shell. The order of preference diff --git a/builtin/var.c b/builtin/var.c index 491db274292..9a2d31dc4aa 100644 --- a/builtin/var.c +++ b/builtin/var.c @@ -19,6 +19,16 @@ static const char *editor(int flag) return pgm; } +static const char *sequence_editor(int flag) +{ + const char *pgm = git_sequence_editor(); + + if (!pgm && flag & IDENT_STRICT) + die("Terminal is dumb, but EDITOR unset"); + + return pgm; +} + static const char *pager(int flag) { const char *pgm = git_pager(1); @@ -41,6 +51,7 @@ static struct git_var git_vars[] = { { "GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT", git_committer_info }, { "GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT", git_author_info }, { "GIT_EDITOR", editor }, + { "GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR", sequence_editor }, { "GIT_PAGER", pager }, { "GIT_DEFAULT_BRANCH", default_branch }, { "", NULL }, diff --git a/t/t0007-git-var.sh b/t/t0007-git-var.sh index e56f4b9ac59..3199285fa7b 100755 --- a/t/t0007-git-var.sh +++ b/t/t0007-git-var.sh @@ -47,6 +47,44 @@ test_expect_success 'get GIT_DEFAULT_BRANCH with configuration' ' ) ' +test_expect_success 'get GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR without configuration' ' + ( + sane_unset GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR && + git var GIT_EDITOR >expect && + git var GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR >actual && + test_cmp expect actual + ) +' + +test_expect_success 'get GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR with configuration' ' + test_config sequence.editor foo && + ( + sane_unset GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR && + echo foo >expect && + git var GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR >actual && + test_cmp expect actual + ) +' + +test_expect_success 'get GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR with environment variable' ' + ( + sane_unset GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR && + echo bar >expect && + GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR=bar git var GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR >actual && + test_cmp expect actual + ) +' + +test_expect_success 'get GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR with configuration and environment variable' ' + test_config sequence.editor foo && + ( + sane_unset GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR && + echo bar >expect && + GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR=bar git var GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR >actual && + test_cmp expect actual + ) +' + # For git var -l, we check only a representative variable; # testing the whole output would make our test too brittle with # respect to unrelated changes in the test suite's environment.