So, it might be called sha1sum, or on some other OS, it might be called
sha1. It might be hidden away off of PATH on that OS. That's just expected
insanity; UNIX has been this way since 1980's. And these days, nobody even
gives the flying flip about standards that we briefly did in the 90's
after the first round of unix wars.
But it's the 2010's now, and we've certainly learned something.
So, let's make it so sometimes sha1 is a crazy program that wants to run as
root so it can lock memory while prompting for a passphrase, and outputting
binary garbage. Yes, that'd be wise. Let's package that in major Linux
distros, too, so users can stumble over it.
Now that this is handled correctly, git-annex can be used in git submodules.
Also, fixed infelicity where Git.CurrentRepo and Git.Config.updateLocation
were both dealing with core.worktree. Now updateLocation handles it for
Local as well as for LocalUnknown repos.
The standalone build does not bundle its own ssh, so should be built
to support as wide an array of ssh versions as possible, so turn off
connection caching.
Unfortunatly, as implemented this forces a full rebuild when building the
standalone binary, and of course it makes it somewhat slower.
This is not ideal, but neither is probing the ssh version every time it's
run (slow), or once when initializing a repo (fragile).
Setting GIT_INDEX_FILE clobbers the rest of the environment, making git
not read ~/.gitconfig, and blow up if GECOS didn't have a name for the
user.
I'm not entirely happy with getEnvironment being run every time now,
that's somewhat expensive. It may make sense to just set GIT_COMMITTER_*
and GIT_AUTHOR_*, but I worry that clobbering the rest could break PATH,
or GIT_PATH, or something else that might be used by a command run in here.
And caching the environment is not a good idea either; it can change..