Warner Losh <imp_at_bsdimp.com> writes: > On Wed, Dec 23, 2020, 3:21 PM Alan Somers <asomers_at_freebsd.org> wrote: > >> On Wed, Dec 23, 2020 at 3:16 PM Rick Macklem <rmacklem_at_uoguelph.ca> wrote: >> >> > Hi, >> > >> > So I just did my first git commit. Pretty scary, but it looks ok. >> > >> > Now, how do I reference one commit in another related >> > commit's log? >> > >> > By the long winded hash or ?? >> > >> > I'm not sure if I should ask here or on the git mailing list, >> > but I figured this isn't a technical git question... >> > >> > Thanks for any help with this, rick >> > >> >> Yeah, you should use the full hash. For temporary references, like during >> a code review, you can use the first "several" digits of the hash. For a >> project of FreeBSD's size, "several" is probably 11-13. But in permanent >> contexts, like commit logs, you should use the full hash. When somebody >> views the commit on a platform like Github, Github will automatically turn >> it into a hyperlink, and display only the first "several" digits. >> > > > For MFCs we are recommending the first 11. I think this will likely suffice > and matches the git client behavior. Mercurial defaults to 12 digit abbreviation. Git abbreviates linux, freebsd-legacy, freebsd-ports repos on GitHub to 12 digit.Received on Thu Dec 24 2020 - 00:22:15 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Wed May 19 2021 - 11:41:26 UTC