Browse Source
There is an implicit assumption that a directory containing only untracked and ignored paths should itself be considered untracked. This makes sense in use cases where we're asking if a directory should be added to the git database, but not when we're asking if a directory can be safely removed from the working tree; as a result, clean -d would assume that an "untracked" directory containing ignored paths could be deleted, even though doing so would also remove the ignored paths. To get around this, we teach clean -d to collect ignored paths and skip an untracked directory if it contained an ignored path, instead just removing the untracked contents thereof. To achieve this, cmd_clean() has to collect all untracked contents of untracked directories, in addition to all ignored paths, to determine which untracked dirs must be skipped (because they contain ignored paths) and which ones should *not* be skipped. For this purpose, correct_untracked_entries() is introduced to prune a given dir_struct of untracked entries containing ignored paths and those untracked entries encompassed by the untracked entries which are not pruned away. A memory leak is also fixed in cmd_clean(). This also fixes the known breakage in t7300, since clean -d now skips untracked directories containing ignored paths. Signed-off-by: Samuel Lijin <sxlijin@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>maint
Samuel Lijin
8 years ago
committed by
Junio C Hamano
2 changed files with 43 additions and 1 deletions
Loading…
Reference in new issue