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authorWolfgang Müller2021-06-25 18:25:45 +0200
committerWolfgang Müller2021-06-25 18:25:45 +0200
commit66db16b5bbe77503079e40be966b1f414dd138c8 (patch)
tree584c4512982c6f797d2514e9bf29143de16c2334
parentda99d4e9983db31eb0a417c1782ace85f4b78302 (diff)
downloadzunzuncito-66db16b5bbe77503079e40be966b1f414dd138c8.tar.gz
content: Add new post: "Use git-send-email(1) only to send"
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++++
+date = 2021-06-25T18:25:34+02:00
+title = "Use git-send-email(1) only to send"
+
+[taxonomies]
+tags = ["git"]
++++
+
+Even though [`git-send-email(1)`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-send-email) calls
+[`git-format-patch(1)`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch) if you
+provide a revision list, oftentimes when submitting a patch series you should
+instead run `git-format-patch(1)` first, and later use `git-send-email(1)` only
+to submit the files it generated. There's a bunch of reasons for this.
+
+ 1) `send-email` is built chiefly for mail submission, not patch formatting.
+ There is no way to pass options meant for `format-patch`, meaning that
+ you miss out on really good features like
+ [`--cover-letter`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch#Documentation/git-format-patch.txt---no-cover-letter)
+ or
+ [`--interdiff`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch#Documentation/git-format-patch.txt---interdiffltpreviousgt).
+
+ 2) If you use
+ [`--annotate`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-send-email#Documentation/git-send-email.txt---annotate)
+ or decide to edit the mail body, you will lose all changes if you quit before
+ sending. You can't save your work and continue writing the mail later either.
+ Once you call `send-email`, you're committed; It's all or nothing.
+
+ 3) [`--compose`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-send-email#Documentation/git-send-email.txt---compose)
+ gets you a worse version of `format-patch`'s `--cover-letter`. No diffstat is
+ included by default, and the same problems as in 2) apply.
+
+ 4) `format-patch` outputs text files for you to browse and edit. This can be
+ done on your own time and with your own tools, without the `send-email` prompt
+ nagging and stressing you.
+
+Providing a convenient way of quickly sending out small patches makes sense, but
+all in all I think the inclusion of formatting in `git-send-email(1)` is a
+glaring misfeature. Hiding `git-format-patch(1)` away from the user makes
+`git-send-email(1)` intransparent and, worse, really clunky to use for regular
+patch workflows.
+
+Sadly, [git-send-email.io](https://git-send-email.io/) still tells newcomers to
+use **only** `get-send-email(1)`, without even mentioning `git-format-patch(1)`.
+This [won't change](https://lists.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/sr.ht-dev/%3C20200925224503.10032-1-evan.gates%40gmail.com%3E#%3CC5WTCDJYQZGF.22D6HCBBU9T82@homura%3E) any time soon, either.
+
+That is a shame. Guiding people to a worse workflow will not increase the
+standing of mail-based processes. For now I'd recommend linking newcomers [this
+section](https://git-scm.com/docs/MyFirstContribution#howto-git-send-email) of
+Git's own contribution tutorial instead.