2

I am trying to formalize a patch workflow for our org. We have an internal project where we don't mind white-spaces(would like to keep them same for each user if possible), EOF/EOL characters etc. We have developers working on both Mac and Windows platform. AT both places we use git with Cygwin.

I read here that core.autocrlf true does the trick or you can use --keep-cr. But here VonC suggests core.autocrlf false is a better strategy.

My Questions are:

  1. When to use true and when false? (I just don't want git to bug me and patches should apply smooth).
  2. When was --keep-cr introduced? I use git 1.7.2 and am man page does not have this option?
  3. What Ignore-whitespace options to use so as to have smooth patch workflow?

1 Answer 1

3

1.7.2 should have --keep-cr for git am, since it was introduced in commit ad2c928 by Stefan-W. Hahn, included in Git 1.7.1.

when you know you are feeding output from "git format-patch" directly to "git am", and especially when your contents have CR at the end of line, such stripping is undesirable. To help such a use case, teach --keep-cr option to "git am" and pass that to "git mailinfo".

However, on Windows, I always use the latest Git For Windows release, not the cygwin one (even though you can have both).

The issue with core.autocrlf is that it is a repository-wide setting which can affect all files (even non-text ones).
I prefer core.eol directives.

For whitespace, you can try "git: patch does not apply":

git apply --ignore-space-change --ignore-whitespace mychanges.patch
6
  • What is the difference between apply and am. Coz I have noticed some patches apply seamlessly using apply but create problem on using am. Jun 12, 2014 at 7:48
  • 1
    @MudassirRazvi Git am is more for patches coming from mails
    – VonC
    Jun 12, 2014 at 7:50
  • That brings to my next question. What difference does it make? I create patch using format-patch. Send it to my colleague via Outlook. he downloads and applies patch using am. Anything wrong here? Jun 12, 2014 at 7:52
  • @MudassirRazvi nothing wrong, the end result is the same. I will have more when I get back (I am outside, typing from my phone)
    – VonC
    Jun 12, 2014 at 7:54
  • Will be waiting..! :) Jun 12, 2014 at 7:59

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.