This is only done for correctness sake; I don't see any way that it
would have caused a problem here. The jlog file escaped withOtherTmp
so another process could swoop in and delete it, but the file is only
used as a buffer for a list of filenames, and its handle gets rewound
and they're read back out, which will still work even if it's already
been deleted.
The only reason I didn't just pre-delete the file and keep the handle
open is I'm not sure that works on all OS's (eg Windows). If there was
a problem that this fixed it might involve an OS that doesn't support
deleting an open file or something like that.
Needed for the --quiet to actually shut it up. The extra verification
this makes it do should be fine, as this is supposed to really return a
single tree's sha.
git rev-parse --quiet avoids "fatal: Invalid object name" when the
branch does not exist. Git.Ref.tree already returned a Maybe, so callers
already handle those cases themselves.
bf7ecd6892 went too far and broke
importing, the old tree was used on the remote tracking branch and not
the newly imported tree.
Test suite noticed the problem luckily.
Fix reversion in last release that caused wrong tree to be written to
remote tracking branch after an export of a subtree.
The invariant "commitsha should have the treesha as its tree"
was not met due to a bug. Guarantee it's met by catting the commitsha
to find its actual tree. A little bit slower, but this is not run often.