/usr/share/doc/git/RelNotes/1.7.6.txt is in git 1:2.7.4-0ubuntu1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 | Git v1.7.6 Release Notes
========================
Updates since v1.7.5
--------------------
* Various git-svn updates.
* Updates the way content tags are handled in gitweb. Also adds
a UI to choose common timezone for displaying the dates.
* Similar to branch names, tagnames that begin with "-" are now
disallowed.
* Clean-up of the C part of i18n (but not l10n---please wait)
continues.
* The scripting part of the codebase is getting prepared for i18n/l10n.
* Pushing and pulling from a repository with large number of refs that
point to identical commits are optimized by not listing the same commit
during the common ancestor negotiation exchange with the other side.
* Adding a file larger than core.bigfilethreshold (defaults to 1/2 Gig)
using "git add" will send the contents straight to a packfile without
having to hold it and its compressed representation both at the same
time in memory.
* Processes spawned by "[alias] <name> = !process" in the configuration
can inspect GIT_PREFIX environment variable to learn where in the
working tree the original command was invoked.
* A magic pathspec ":/" tells a command that limits its operation to
the current directory when ran from a subdirectory to work on the
entire working tree. In general, ":/path/to/file" would be relative
to the root of the working tree hierarchy.
After "git reset --hard; edit Makefile; cd t/", "git add -u" would
be a no-op, but "git add -u :/" would add the updated contents of
the Makefile at the top level. If you want to name a path in the
current subdirectory whose unusual name begins with ":/", you can
name it by "./:/that/path" or by "\:/that/path".
* "git blame" learned "--abbrev[=<n>]" option to control the minimum
number of hexdigits shown for commit object names.
* "git blame" learned "--line-porcelain" that is less efficient but is
easier to parse.
* Aborting "git commit --interactive" discards updates to the index
made during the interactive session.
* "git commit" learned a "--patch" option to directly jump to the
per-hunk selection UI of the interactive mode.
* "git diff" and its family of commands learned --dirstat=0 to show
directories that contribute less than 0.1% of changes.
* "git diff" and its family of commands learned --dirstat=lines mode to
assess damage to the directory based on number of lines in the patch
output, not based on the similarity numbers.
* "git format-patch" learned "--quiet" option to suppress the output of
the names of generated files.
* "git format-patch" quotes people's names when it has RFC822 special
characters in it, e.g. "Junio C. Hamano" <jch@example.com>. Earlier
it was up to the user to do this when using its output.
* "git format-patch" can take an empty --subject-prefix now.
* "git grep" learned the "-P" option to take pcre regular expressions.
* "git log" and friends learned a new "--notes" option to replace the
"--show-notes" option. Unlike "--show-notes", "--notes=<ref>" does
not imply showing the default notes.
* They also learned a log.abbrevCommit configuration variable to augment
the --abbrev-commit command line option.
* "git ls-remote" learned "--exit-code" option to consider it a
different kind of error when no remote ref to be shown.
* "git merge" learned "-" as a short-hand for "the previous branch", just
like the way "git checkout -" works.
* "git merge" uses "merge.ff" configuration variable to decide to always
create a merge commit (i.e. --no-ff, aka merge.ff=no), refuse to create
a merge commit (i.e. --ff-only, aka merge.ff=only). Setting merge.ff=yes
(or not setting it at all) restores the default behaviour of allowing
fast-forward to happen when possible.
* p4-import (from contrib) learned a new option --preserve-user.
* "git read-tree -m" learned "--dry-run" option that reports if a merge
would fail without touching the index nor the working tree.
* "git rebase" that does not specify on top of which branch to rebase
the current branch now uses @{upstream} of the current branch.
* "git rebase" finished either normally or with --abort did not
update the reflog for HEAD to record the event to come back to
where it started from.
* "git remote add -t only-this-branch --mirror=fetch" is now allowed. Earlier
a fetch-mode mirror meant mirror everything, but now it only means refs are
not renamed.
* "git rev-list --count" used with "--cherry-mark" counts the cherry-picked
commits separately, producing more a useful output.
* "git submodule update" learned "--force" option to get rid of local
changes in submodules and replace them with the up-to-date version.
* "git status" and friends ignore .gitmodules file while the file is
still in a conflicted state during a merge, to avoid using information
that is not final and possibly corrupt with conflict markers.
Also contains various documentation updates and minor miscellaneous
changes.
Fixes since v1.7.5
------------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes in 1.7.5.X maintenance track are
included in this release.
* "git config" used to choke with an insanely long line.
(merge ef/maint-strbuf-init later)
* "git diff --quiet" did not work well with --diff-filter.
(merge jk/diff-not-so-quick later)
* "git status -z" did not default to --porcelain output format.
(merge bc/maint-status-z-to-use-porcelain later)
|