The current solution using `find` introduces a racecondition, where `find`
and `git mv` get in each others way. While this could be fixed with
more-utils sponge command (or even sort -u) to buffer the output of
find.
However, a much better approach, is to query the git index directly,
which will not change, and is far more accurate.
Signed-off-by: Olliver Schinagl <oliver@schinagl.nl>
done
fi
- find "${_target_dir}" -iname "config-${source_version}" | while read -r _config; do
- _path="${_config%%"/config-${source_version}"}"
- git mv "${_config}" "${_path}/config-${target_version}"
+ for _config in $(git ls-files "${_target_dir}" |
+ sed -n "s|^\(.*config-${source_version}\).*|\1|p" |
+ sort -u); do
+ if [ ! -e "${_config}" ]; then
+ continue
+ fi
+
+ _subtarget="${_config%%"/config-${source_version}"}"
+ git mv "${_config}" "${_subtarget}/config-${target_version}"
done
git commit \