diff options
-rw-r--r-- | git-rebase--am.sh | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | git-rebase--interactive.sh | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | git-rebase--merge.sh | 4 |
3 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/git-rebase--am.sh b/git-rebase--am.sh index 9ae898bc1d..375239341f 100644 --- a/git-rebase--am.sh +++ b/git-rebase--am.sh @@ -9,8 +9,8 @@ # below were not inside any function, and expected to return # to the function that dot-sourced us. # -# However, FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehaves on such a construct and -# continues to run the statements that follow such a "return". +# However, older (9.x) versions of FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehave on such a +# construct and continue to run the statements that follow such a "return". # As a work-around, we introduce an extra layer of a function # here, and immediately call it after defining it. git_rebase__am () { diff --git a/git-rebase--interactive.sh b/git-rebase--interactive.sh index 0564ad41f2..56d99662f4 100644 --- a/git-rebase--interactive.sh +++ b/git-rebase--interactive.sh @@ -838,8 +838,8 @@ add_exec_commands () { # below were not inside any function, and expected to return # to the function that dot-sourced us. # -# However, FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehaves on such a construct and -# continues to run the statements that follow such a "return". +# However, older (9.x) versions of FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehave on such a +# construct and continue to run the statements that follow such a "return". # As a work-around, we introduce an extra layer of a function # here, and immediately call it after defining it. git_rebase__interactive () { diff --git a/git-rebase--merge.sh b/git-rebase--merge.sh index d3fb67d75b..327b575d84 100644 --- a/git-rebase--merge.sh +++ b/git-rebase--merge.sh @@ -107,8 +107,8 @@ finish_rb_merge () { # below were not inside any function, and expected to return # to the function that dot-sourced us. # -# However, FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehaves on such a construct and -# continues to run the statements that follow such a "return". +# However, older (9.x) versions of FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehave on such a +# construct and continue to run the statements that follow such a "return". # As a work-around, we introduce an extra layer of a function # here, and immediately call it after defining it. git_rebase__merge () { |