@@ -1595,16 +1595,20 @@ static void infer_range_diff_ranges(struct strbuf *r1,
struct commit *head)
{
const char *head_oid = oid_to_hex(&head->object.oid);
+ int prev_is_range = !!strstr(prev, "..");
- if (!strstr(prev, "..")) {
+ if (prev_is_range)
+ strbuf_addstr(r1, prev);
+ else
strbuf_addf(r1, "%s..%s", head_oid, prev);
+
+ if (origin)
+ strbuf_addf(r2, "%s..%s", oid_to_hex(&origin->object.oid), head_oid);
+ else if (prev_is_range)
+ die(_("failed to infer range-diff origin of current series"));
+ else {
+ warning(_("using '%s' as range-diff origin of current series"), prev);
strbuf_addf(r2, "%s..%s", prev, head_oid);
- } else if (!origin) {
- die(_("failed to infer range-diff ranges"));
- } else {
- strbuf_addstr(r1, prev);
- strbuf_addf(r2, "%s..%s",
- oid_to_hex(&origin->object.oid), head_oid);
}
}
When formatting a patch series over `origin..HEAD`, one would expect that range to be used as the current-series-range when computing a range-diff between the previous and current versions of a patch series. However, infer_range_diff_ranges() ignores `origin..HEAD` when --range-diff=<prev> specifies a single revision rather than a range, and instead unexpectedly computes the current-series-range based upon <prev>. Address this anomaly by unconditionally using `origin..HEAD` as the current-series-range regardless of <prev> as long as `origin` is known, and only fall back to basing current-series-range on <prev> when `origin` is not known. Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> --- Notes: Suggested by Junio[1] during review. I had some difficulty composing the commit message and am not convinced that it does a good job of explaining the change or justifying it. If anyone can suggest improvements, I'd appreciate the help. I'm also not sure if this change deserves a test. If it does, it isn't clear to me exactly how to craft one. So, again, assistance would be appreciated. [1]: https://lore.kernel.org/git/xmqqva93t4u7.fsf@gitster-ct.c.googlers.com/ builtin/log.c | 18 +++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)