Hi!
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On 14. 07. 21, 10:15, Holger Kiehl wrote:
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Yes, will try to do that. I think it will take some time ...
Hmm, I am doing something wrong?
No, you are not: -rcs are not tagged.
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git clone
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux-stable-rc.git
linux-5.13.y
cd linux-5.13.y/
git tag|grep v5.13
v5.13
v5.13-rc1
v5.13-rc2
v5.13-rc3
v5.13-rc4
v5.13-rc5
v5.13-rc6
v5.13-rc7
v5.13.1
There is no v5.13.2-rc1. It is my first time with 'git bisect'. Must be
doing something wrong. How can I get the correct git kernel rc version?
So just bisect v5.13.1..linux-5.13.y.
But what do I say for bad?
git bisect bad linux-5.13.y
error: Bad rev input: linux-5.13.y
Just saying:
git bisect bad
git bisect good v5.13.1
Bisecting: a merge base must be tested
[62fb9874f5da54fdb243003b386128037319b219] Linux 5.13
If I read this correctly it now set v5.13 as bad and v5.13.1 as good.
How to set the correct bad?
You can use hashes instead of symbolic revisions, and that may be
easier. I suspect you want to say "git bisect bad
origin/linux-5.13.y". You can also just do git show and note the hash.
There's other option: git bisect can be quite confusing, but you are
searching for a bug in linear history, so you can just git log
--pretty=oneline into a file, then do the binary search
manually. Should be 10 steps or so...
Best regards,
Pavel
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