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authorMark Levedahl <mlevedahl@gmail.com>2025-04-04 23:08:35 -0400
committerMark Levedahl <mlevedahl@gmail.com>2025-07-21 18:22:33 -0400
commit6dfdf7bdcdcf735787e3d3dfcf3415fea1a81f8a (patch)
treef25fb321b65d650c131a63a7f814a462d135ea80 /lib/diff.tcl
parent3ce650f4c93f9f3aacdb6a1d8cef21bb2009bfa3 (diff)
git-gui: use dashless 'git cmd' form for read/write
git-gui implements its own approach to locating and running various git subcommands, bypassing git's capabilities for running git-*. This was written in 2007: at that time, many git commands were shell-scripts stored in $(git --exec-path), git's run-command api was not well adapted to Windows and had serious performance issues when it worked at all, and running subcommand 'git foo' as 'git-foo' was common and fully supported. On Windows, git-gui searches $(git --exec-path) for builtin commands, then attempts to find an interpreter on PATH to run those, invoking these differently than on other platforms. For instance, the explicit shebang #!/usr/bin/perl found in a script will be run by the first Perl interpreter found on $PATH, which might not be at that specific location so could be different than what git would run. The various issues leading to the current implemention no longer exist. Most git commands are now builtins, links to run those are not installed in $(git --exec-path) by default (the "dashless" form is recommended instead), and git's run-command api works well everywhere. So, let's use git to launch its subcommands on all platforms. Do so by modifying procs git_read and git_write to use the "dashless" form for invoking git commands, avoiding the search for git-<foo>. This leaves _git_cmd unused with cleanup in a later patch. Signed-off-by: Mark Levedahl <mlevedahl@gmail.com>
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