Jeff King da66b2743c remote.c: provide per-branch pushremote name
When remote.c loads its config, it records the
branch.*.pushremote for the current branch along with the
global remote.pushDefault value, and then binds them into a
single value: the default push for the current branch. We
then pass this value (which may be NULL) to remote_get_1
when looking up a remote for push.

This has a few downsides:

  1. It's confusing. The early-binding of the "current
     value" led to bugs like the one fixed by 98b406f
     (remote: handle pushremote config in any order,
     2014-02-24). And the fact that pushremotes fall back to
     ordinary remotes is not explicit at all; it happens
     because remote_get_1 cannot tell the difference between
     "we are not asking for the push remote" and "there is
     no push remote configured".

  2. It throws away intermediate data. After read_config()
     finishes, we have no idea what the value of
     remote.pushDefault was, because the string has been
     overwritten by the current branch's
     branch.*.pushremote.

  3. It doesn't record other data. We don't note the
     branch.*.pushremote value for anything but the current
     branch.

Let's make this more like the fetch-remote config. We'll
record the pushremote for each branch, and then explicitly
compute the correct remote for the current branch at the
time of reading.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 11:03:58 -07:00
2014-02-27 14:01:48 -08:00
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2015-03-15 17:25:02 +11:00
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2015-03-23 11:27:27 -07:00
2014-09-15 11:29:46 -07:00
2015-02-11 13:44:07 -08:00
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2014-09-02 13:28:44 -07:00
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2014-09-02 13:28:44 -07:00
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2015-01-07 13:28:10 -08:00
2014-12-17 11:04:39 -08:00

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

	Git - the stupid content tracker

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

"git" can mean anything, depending on your mood.

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