
Hi Wolfgang,
On 12/19/2011 09:57 AM, Wolfgang Denk wrote:
In message 4EEEF0D3.5040302@keymile.com you wrote:
+Last change: 24.11.2011
Does this really make any sense? Which date are you recording here/ When you (think) you last edited the file? When you applied the patch to your local tree? When you submitted it for mainline? When it actually got applied?
What I want to record is to track the version of the scripts and this makes sense for me. In the end the scripts are copied into /tftpboot on each developers machine and is therefore not under git control. It is an easy indication wether the scripts are uptodate or not, without starting a diff tool and compare them with the latest git tree. Inside the git tree the information is useless, I agree.
You can insert such information when you export the files from git, say by adding a line like:
Last commit date: $Format:%H %cD$
That would IMO make much more sense.
See what we do with "snapshot.commit" in U-Boot [see also the entry in .git/info/attributes].
After reading the doc I don't know how it could be used in my usecase. Please correct me if I am wrong, but this does only work in combination with the "git archive" command. And I don't want to do an archive, I want to export/copy some files out of the git tree into /tftpboot.
Best regards Holger