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-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-fast-import.txt18
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/git-fast-import.txt b/Documentation/git-fast-import.txt
index 6603a7ab73..68bca1a29d 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-fast-import.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-fast-import.txt
@@ -427,7 +427,7 @@ they made it.
Here `<name>` is the person's display name (for example
``Com M Itter'') and `<email>` is the person's email address
-(``cm@example.com''). `LT` and `GT` are the literal less-than (\x3c)
+(``\cm@example.com''). `LT` and `GT` are the literal less-than (\x3c)
and greater-than (\x3e) symbols. These are required to delimit
the email address from the other fields in the line. Note that
`<name>` and `<email>` are free-form and may contain any sequence
@@ -442,7 +442,9 @@ their syntax.
^^^^^^
The `from` command is used to specify the commit to initialize
this branch from. This revision will be the first ancestor of the
-new commit.
+new commit. The state of the tree built at this commit will begin
+with the state at the `from` commit, and be altered by the content
+modifications in this commit.
Omitting the `from` command in the first commit of a new branch
will cause fast-import to create that commit with no ancestor. This
@@ -492,7 +494,9 @@ existing value of the branch.
`merge`
^^^^^^^
-Includes one additional ancestor commit. If the `from` command is
+Includes one additional ancestor commit. The additional ancestry
+link does not change the way the tree state is built at this commit.
+If the `from` command is
omitted when creating a new branch, the first `merge` commit will be
the first ancestor of the current commit, and the branch will start
out with no files. An unlimited number of `merge` commands per
@@ -558,8 +562,12 @@ A `<path>` string must use UNIX-style directory separators (forward
slash `/`), may contain any byte other than `LF`, and must not
start with double quote (`"`).
-If an `LF` or double quote must be encoded into `<path>` shell-style
-quoting should be used, e.g. `"path/with\n and \" in it"`.
+A path can use C-style string quoting; this is accepted in all cases
+and mandatory if the filename starts with double quote or contains
+`LF`. In C-style quoting, the complete name should be surrounded with
+double quotes, and any `LF`, backslash, or double quote characters
+must be escaped by preceding them with a backslash (e.g.,
+`"path/with\n, \\ and \" in it"`).
The value of `<path>` must be in canonical form. That is it must not: