Re: diffstat wierdness with 'git format-patch' output

From: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Date: 2006-02-14 17:09:30
Greg KH <greg@kroah.com> writes:

> Hm, in looking at it closer, it's probably the last two lines of the
> file, the signature that git format-patch adds to the message:
> 	-- 
> 	1.2.0

If that is the case, it's unfortunate that diffstat is broken
and is not properly counting lines to tell which lines are part
of the patch and which lines are not.

Have you tried "git apply --stat" instead?

> Any way to suppress these?

Sorry, there is no option to disable that, but the stuff is
GPLv2 so you can do whatever ;-).

The string "-- \n" is an established convention to mark the
beginning of the signature (or whatever inmaterial stuff that
follow the message contents), so changing the marker is
pointless -- if we want the option it should be to delete those
two lines altogether.

I personally find it useful to see the trend of version of tools
people use on the public mailing list, and that was the primary
reason it is there.

Have you tried "git apply --stat --summary" instead?

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Received on Tue Feb 14 17:10:49 2006

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