| GIT v1.5.3.2 Release Notes |
| ========================== |
| |
| Fixes since v1.5.3.1 |
| -------------------- |
| |
| * git-push sent thin packs by default, which was not good for |
| the public distribution server (no point in saving transfer |
| while pushing; no point in making the resulting pack less |
| optimum). |
| |
| * git-svn sometimes terminated with "Malformed network data" when |
| talking over svn:// protocol. |
| |
| * git-send-email re-issued the same message-id about 10% of the |
| time if you fired off 30 messages within a single second. |
| |
| * git-stash was not terminating the log message of commits it |
| internally creates with LF. |
| |
| * git-apply failed to check the size of the patch hunk when its |
| beginning part matched the remainder of the preimage exactly, |
| even though the preimage recorded in the hunk was much larger |
| (therefore the patch should not have applied), leading to a |
| segfault. |
| |
| * "git rm foo && git commit foo" complained that 'foo' needs to |
| be added first, instead of committing the removal, which was a |
| nonsense. |
| |
| * git grep -c said "/dev/null: 0". |
| |
| * git-add -u failed to recognize a blob whose type changed |
| between the index and the work tree. |
| |
| * The limit to rename detection has been tightened a lot to |
| reduce performance problems with a huge change. |
| |
| * cvsimport and svnimport barfed when the input tried to move |
| a tag. |
| |
| * "git apply -pN" did not chop the right number of directories. |
| |
| * "git svnimport" did not like SVN tags with funny characters in them. |
| |
| * git-gui 0.8.3, with assorted fixes, including: |
| |
| - font-chooser on X11 was unusable with large number of fonts; |
| - a diff that contained a deleted symlink made it barf; |
| - an untracked symbolic link to a directory made it fart; |
| - a file with % in its name made it vomit; |
| |
| |
| Documentation updates |
| --------------------- |
| |
| User manual has been somewhat restructured. I think the new |
| organization is much easier to read. |