@@ -1726,34 +1726,25 @@ static int allow_empty(struct repository *r,
int index_unchanged, originally_empty;
/*
- * Four cases:
+ * For a commit that is initially empty, allow_empty determines if it
+ * should be kept or not
*
- * (1) we do not allow empty at all and error out.
- *
- * (2) we allow ones that were initially empty, and
- * just drop the ones that become empty
- *
- * (3) we allow ones that were initially empty, but
- * halt for the ones that become empty;
- *
- * (4) we allow both.
+ * For a commit that becomes empty, keep_redundant_commits and
+ * drop_redundant_commits determine whether the commit should be kept or
+ * dropped. If neither is specified, halt.
*/
- if (!opts->allow_empty)
- return 0; /* let "git commit" barf as necessary */
-
index_unchanged = is_index_unchanged(r);
if (index_unchanged < 0)
return index_unchanged;
if (!index_unchanged)
return 0; /* we do not have to say --allow-empty */
- if (opts->keep_redundant_commits)
- return 1;
-
originally_empty = is_original_commit_empty(commit);
if (originally_empty < 0)
return originally_empty;
if (originally_empty)
+ return opts->allow_empty;
+ else if (opts->keep_redundant_commits)
return 1;
else if (opts->drop_redundant_commits)
return 2;
A consumer of the sequencer that wishes to take advantage of either the `keep_redundant_commits` or `drop_redundant_commits` feature must also specify `allow_empty`. However, these refer to two distinct types of empty commits: - `allow_empty` refers specifically to commits which start empty - `keep_redundant_commits` refers specifically to commits that do not start empty, but become empty due to the content already existing in the target history Conceptually, there is no reason that the behavior for handling one of these should be entangled with the other. It is particularly unintuitive to require `allow_empty` in order for `drop_redundant_commits` to have an effect: in order to prevent redundant commits automatically, initially-empty commits would need to be kept automatically as well. Instead, rewrite the `allow_empty()` logic to remove the over-arching requirement that `allow_empty` be specified in order to reach any of the keep/drop behaviors. Only if the commit was originally empty will `allow_empty` have an effect. Note that no behavioral changes should result from this commit -- it merely sets the stage for future commits. In one such future commit, an `--empty` option will be added to git-cherry-pick(1), meaning that `drop_redundant_commits` will be used by that command. Signed-off-by: Brian Lyles <brianmlyles@gmail.com> --- sequencer.c | 23 +++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)