
Simon,
I think the issue was a missing entry in the .gitignore file. Ryan
fixed something to with that in this MR
(https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/merge_requests/3222) but he says
it was the dist-boot rather than dist-install directory.
Matt
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 4:03 PM Simon Peyton Jones via ghc-devs
Thanks. It does have a directory dist-install/ in it – but that’s put there by the build system, so if I remove it, it’ll just come back. And other libraries (like deepseq) has dist-install too but does not complain. So mysterious.
On the other hand git submodule update –recursive *did* fix it. Seems odd. I’m already saying “submodules” and I don’ think any submodules have further submodules – or do they?
Simon
From: ghc-devs
On Behalf Of Hécate Sent: 15 May 2020 15:37 To: ghc-devs@haskell.org Subject: Re: Strange library git glitch My bad, it seems like this is another issue.
I found this StackOverflow page quite helpful in explaining the hows and whys: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4873980/git-diff-says-subproject-is-dirt...
Cheers,
Hécate
Le 15/05/2020 à 16:30, Hécate a écrit :
Hi Simon,
I usually manage to get it to disappear by using `git submodule update --recursive`. Is it a flag you've used in your previous attempts?
Cheers,
Hécate.
Le 15/05/2020 à 16:24, Simon Peyton Jones via ghc-devs a écrit :
No amount of git submodule update makes it go away. Any ideas?
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