Andrei Pelinescu-Onciul schrieb:
You could use git revert <commit_hash> to undo
your original commit.
Hi Andrei!
This leads me to a git question. If I perform the revert, the git log
tells me:
rename {modules => modules_k}/osp/Makefile (100%)
rename {modules => modules_k}/osp/README (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/RELEASE-NOTES.txt (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/destination.c (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/destination.h (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/doc/Makefile (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/doc/osp.xml (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/doc/osp_admin.xml (100%)
rename {modules => modules_k}/osp/doc/osp_devel.xml (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/etc/cacert_0.pem (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/etc/localcert.pem (100%)
...
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/usage.c (100%)
copy {modules => modules_k}/osp/usage.h (100%)
create mode 100644 modules_s/osp/Makefile
create mode 100644 modules_s/osp/README
rename {modules => modules_s}/osp/RELEASE-NOTES.txt (75%)
rename {modules => modules_s}/osp/destination.c (70%)
e.g. the file modules/osp/RELEASE-NOTES.txt is first copied to
modules_k/osp/RELEASE-NOTES.txt and the renamed to
modules_s/osp/RELEASE-NOTES.txt.
That is of course wrong, but if I verify the result, it seems to be ok.
Is this just a strange log-message from git or is there something I have
to be aware?
thanks
Klaus