On Mac OS X and possibly BSDs, /bin/pwd reads PWD from the environment if
available and shows the logical path by default rather than the physical
one.
Unset PWD before running /bin/pwd in both cd_to_toplevel and its test.
Still use the external /bin/pwd because in my Bash on Linux, the builtin
pwd prints the same result whether or not PWD is set.
Signed-off-by: Marcel M. Cary <marcel@oak.homeunix.org>
Tested-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com> (on Mac OS X 10.5.5)
Tested-by: Marcel Koeppen <git-dev@marzelpan.de> (on Mac OS X 10.5.6)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
..|../*|*/..|*/../*)
# Interpret $cdup relative to the physical, not logical, cwd.
# Probably /bin/pwd is more portable than passing -P to cd or pwd.
- phys="$(/bin/pwd)/$cdup"
+ phys="$(unset PWD; /bin/pwd)/$cdup"
;;
*)
# There's no "..", so no need to make things absolute.
cd '"'$1'"' &&
. git-sh-setup &&
cd_to_toplevel &&
- [ "$(/bin/pwd)" = "$TOPLEVEL" ]
+ [ "$(unset PWD; /bin/pwd)" = "$TOPLEVEL" ]
)
'
}
-TOPLEVEL="$(/bin/pwd)/repo"
+TOPLEVEL="$(unset PWD; /bin/pwd)/repo"
mkdir -p repo/sub/dir
mv .git repo/
SUBDIRECTORY_OK=1