What to expect after 0.99.5 =========================== This is written in a form of to-do list for me, so if I say "accept patch", it means I do not currently plan to do that myself. People interested in seeing it materialize please take a hint. Documentation ------------- * Accept patches from people who actually have done CVS migration and update the cvs-migration documentation. Link the documentation from the main git.txt page. * Link howto docs from the git.txt page. [DONE] * Update the SubmittingPatches document to add MUA specific hints on how to disable unwanted MIME and flowed-text by collecting past list postings [DONE]. Accept patches from people who were hit by shiny blue bat to update the same [IN PROGRESS]. * Talk about using rsync just once at the beginning when initializing a remote repository so that local packs do not need to be expanded. I personally do not think we need tool support for this. * Update tutorial to cover shared repository style a bit more, maybe with a toy project that involves two or three repositories. * Update tutorial to cover setting up repository hooks to do common tasks. [IN PROGRESS] * Get help to properly use asciidoc in tutorial. * Maybe justify and demonstrate an Octopus in the tutorial. Add it to the glossary. Technical (heavier) ------------------- * Tony Luck reported an unfortunate glitch in the 3-way merge. Encourage discussions to come up with a not-so-expensive way to catch the kind of ambiguities that led to his misery. [Underway. Thanks Daniel and Fredrik for taking an initiative.] * We might want to optimize cloning with GIT native transport not to explode the pack, and store it in objects/pack instead. We would need a tool to generate an idx file out of a pack file for this. Also this itself may turn out to be a bad idea, making the set of packs in repositories everybody has different from each other. * Maybe a pack optimizer. I am not convinced that packing all objects into a single pack and removing all the existing pack is the right way to go, since that would work against people who already have those packs. Technical (milder) ------------------ * When the branch head pointed by $GIT_DIR/HEAD changes while the index file and working tree are looking the other way (e.g. somebody pushed into your repository, or you ran "git fetch" to update the ref your working tree is on), "git checkout" without -f gets confused. Figure out a good way to handle this. [DONE] We still have the same issue with "git fetch". Fetching into the branch one is on _may_ need to do the same thing as fetching into anonymous head and then do the resolve. At least it needs a warning. [DONE] * "git commit -m" should work for initial commits and perhaps merge commits as well. Warning about merge is still a good thing to do, while -m is useful in scripted non-interactive use, so we need to be careful. [DONE] * Encourage concrete proposals to commit log message templates we discussed some time ago. * Bug Ryan and work with him to update send-email easier to use. [Resurrected it for Debian build.] * Look at portability fixes from Jason Riedy http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~ejr/gits/git.git#portable [Looked at it. Still undecided.] * Accept patches to cause "read-tree -u" delete a directory when it makes it empty. * Perhaps accept patches to introduce the concept of "patch flow expressed as ref mappings" Josef has been advocating about. * Perhaps accept patches to do undo/redo. * MIMEified applymbox to grok B and Q encodings in headers and turn them into UTF-8; unwrap QP; explode multipart. [DONE. waiting for a bug to happen ;-) ] * "git cherry-pick" that applies the patch an existing commit introduces in its ancestry chain, possibly using the 3-way merge machinery. [DONE] * Update rebase using the cherry-pick command. [DONE] * Redo "git revert" using 3-way merge machinery. [DONE] * A tool to detect, show and prune already merged topic branches. * Set up an automated documentation rebuilding procedure at kernel.org, using update hook mechanism. [DONE] Describe it in a howto form [DONE]. * Enhance "git repack" to not always use --all; this would be handy if the repository contains wagging heads like "pu" in git.git repository. * Accept and apply "git repack --all" patch, except the part that removes the existing packs. [Undecided] * Internally split the project into non-doc and doc parts; add an extra root for the doc part and merge from it; move the internal doc source to a separate repository, like the +Meta repository; experiment if this results in a reasonable workflow, and document it in howto form if it does. * Add names to all nodes in show-branch. * Option to limit rename detection for more than N paths. Technical (trivial) ------------------- * Look at and merge Debian fixes from Tommi [Done]. * Perhaps "git branch -d" to delete a branch. * Remove "git clone-dumb-http". * We would want test scripts for the relative directory path stuff Linus has been working on. So far, the following commands should be usable with relative directory paths: update-cache ls-files diff-files diff-cache diff-tree rev-list Local Variables: mode: text End: