remote: run "remote rm" argv through parse_options()
The "git remote rm" command's option parsing is fairly primitive: it insists on a single argument, which it treats as the remote name, and displays a usage message otherwise. This is OK, and maybe even convenient, as you could run: git remote rm --foo to drop a remote named "--foo". But it's also weirdly unlike most of the rest of Git, which would complain that there is no option "--foo". The right way to spell it by our conventions is: git remote rm -- --foo but this doesn't currently work. So let's bring the command in line with the rest of Git (including its sibling subcommands!) by feeding argv to parse_options(). We already have an empty options array for the usage helper. Note that we have to adjust the argc index down by one, as parse_options() eats the program name from the start of the array. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>maint
parent
0d330a53f3
commit
8f9d80f6c0
builtin
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@ -862,12 +862,14 @@ static int rm(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix)
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cb_data.skipped = &skipped;
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cb_data.keep = &known_remotes;
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if (argc != 2)
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argc = parse_options(argc, argv, prefix, options,
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builtin_remote_rm_usage, 0);
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if (argc != 1)
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usage_with_options(builtin_remote_rm_usage, options);
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remote = remote_get(argv[1]);
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remote = remote_get(argv[0]);
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if (!remote_is_configured(remote, 1)) {
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error(_("No such remote: '%s'"), argv[1]);
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error(_("No such remote: '%s'"), argv[0]);
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exit(2);
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}
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