This is CC'ed to the kernel list as well because the "master"
update is rather large.
On the "maint" front, I've been wanting to cut 1.4.2.1 for some
time, but various time constraints prevented me doing so so far.
I have a vague suspicion that 1.4.3 might happen before that.
Also I have been sort-of waiting for the x86-32 machine at
kernel.org to become available again so that I can do an RPM for
end users, which unfortunately hasn't happened yet.
* The 'maint' branch has these fixes since the last announcement.
Johannes Schindelin:
git-mv: special case destination "."
git-mv: fix off-by-one error
builtin-mv: readability patch
* The 'master' branch has these since the last announcement.
- Johannes's reimplementation of merge-recursive in C is in
'master' for early adopter testing. Currently it is called
'merge-recur', so you either (1) invoke it explicitly with
the -s option to 'git pull' and/or 'git merge', or (2) have
an environment variable GIT_USE_RECUR_FOR_RECURSIVE set to
non-empty string, in which case places that call
'git-merge-recursive' would use 'git-merge-recur' instead.
This has been tested in 'next' for some time, and Johannes
ran tests to reproduce all merges in post 2.6.12-rc2 kernel
history to validate it produces the same result as the
current merge-recursive. The only difference is that it is
about 6x-10x faster and you do not have to have Python
installed.
I intend to retire the current merge-recursive.py and
replace it with merge-recur before 1.4.3 happens.
- Various calls to memcmp/memcpy/memset with length '20' to
compare, copy and clear object names have been abstracted
out to hashcmp/hashcpy/hashclr wrappers, spearheaded by
David Rientjes. This would make it easier to migrate the
code to hashes of other lengths if it is ever needed.
Obviously migrating the existing data is another story.
- Updates to git-svn by Eric Wong.
- git-apply can be given --reject to produce *.rej files,
instead of failing the whole patch atomically. It also can
be given --verbose to report what it is doing.
- Rene Scharfe helped git-tar-tree find its soulmate
git-zip-tree.
- Tilman Sauerbeck taught git-daemon to setuid/setgid before
serving the clients.
- Various small fixes and clean-ups by Haavard Skinnemoen, Jakub
Narebski, Jonas Fonseca, Pierre Habouzit, Rene Scharfe,
Shawn Pearce, and Tilman Sauerbeck.
- Various documentation clean-ups by Jonas Fonseca, and Rene
Scharfe.
- The internal is readied to be able to say "32 hours ago" in
"git log" and friends by Linus; we do not have an UI to
enable it yet.
* The 'next' branch, in addition, has these.
- Various gitweb updates by Jakub Narebski with help from
Aneesh Kumar, Luben Tuikov, and Martin Waitz. The most
attractive thing these updates have is that we finally got
rid of having to use temporary files to show diffs.
I'd like to push this out to "master" soonish. You can get
a taste of how it works at the site Jakub maintains
http://front.fuw.edu.pl/cgi-bin/jnareb/gitweb.cgi
- Git.pm by Pasky with help from Dennis Stosberg, Eric Wong,
Johannes, and Pavel Roskin. During the next round I'd like
to push this out to "master" to see who screams ;-).
- upload-pack has a bit of updates still held back.
- git-daemon is taught to optionally serve git-tar-tree
output.
* In the 'pu' branch, I have my WIP of a library to walk the
index, the working tree, and zero or more tree objects in
parallel. Its test program does something that vaguely looks
like diff-index with and without --cached in parallel, but it
is not polished enough for public testing/consumption yet.
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