From f99e269c44a7f07699a92c7e31d31ed93dafb409 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Michael Haggerty Date: Thu, 14 Jan 2010 06:54:50 +0100 Subject: rebase -i: Simplify commit counting for generated commit messages Read the old count from the first line of the old commit message rather than counting the number of commit message blocks in the file. This is simpler, faster, and more robust (e.g., it cannot be confused by strange commit message contents). Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano diff --git a/git-rebase--interactive.sh b/git-rebase--interactive.sh index 702c979..d60e059 100755 --- a/git-rebase--interactive.sh +++ b/git-rebase--interactive.sh @@ -349,11 +349,9 @@ nth_string () { make_squash_message () { if test -f "$SQUASH_MSG"; then - # We want to be careful about matching only the commit - # message comment lines generated by this function. - # "[snrt][tdh]" matches the nth_string endings. - COUNT=$(($(sed -n "s/^# Th[^0-9]*\([1-9][0-9]*\)[snrt][tdh] commit message.*:/\1/p" \ - < "$SQUASH_MSG" | sed -ne '$p')+1)) + COUNT=$(($(sed -n \ + -e "1s/^# This is a combination of \(.*\) commits\./\1/p" \ + -e "q" < "$SQUASH_MSG")+1)) echo "# This is a combination of $COUNT commits." sed -e 1d -e '2,/^./{ /^$/d @@ -376,9 +374,6 @@ make_squash_message () { echo echo "# The $(nth_string $COUNT) commit message will be skipped:" echo - # Comment the lines of the commit message out using - # "# " rather than "# " to make them less likely to - # confuse the sed regexp above. git cat-file commit $2 | sed -e '1,/^$/d' -e 's/^/# /' ;; esac -- cgit v0.10.2-6-g49f6