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-rw-r--r--_tils/2020-11-12-git-bisect-automation.md33
-rw-r--r--_tils/2020-11-12-useful-bash-variables.md2
2 files changed, 34 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/_tils/2020-11-12-git-bisect-automation.md b/_tils/2020-11-12-git-bisect-automation.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ff3ed34
--- /dev/null
+++ b/_tils/2020-11-12-git-bisect-automation.md
@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
+---
+
+title: Git bisect automation
+
+date: 2020-11-12 2
+
+layout: post
+
+lang: en
+
+ref: git-bisect-automation
+
+---
+
+It is good to have an standardized way to run builds and tests on the repository
+of a project, so that you can find when a bug was introduced by using
+`git bisect run`.
+
+I've already been in the situation when a bug was introduced and I didn't know
+how it even was occurring, and running Git bisect over hundreds of commits to
+pinpoint the failing commit was very empowering:
+
+```
+$ GOOD_COMMIT_SHA=e1fd0a817d192c5a5df72dd7422e36558fa78e46
+$ git bisect start HEAD $GOOD_COMMIT_SHA
+$ git bisect run sn -c './build.sh && ./run-failing-case.sh'
+```
+
+Git will than do a binary search between the commits, and run the commands you
+provide it with to find the failing commit.
+
+Instead of being afraid of doing a bisect, you should instead leverage it, and
+make Git help you dig through the history of the repository to find the bad code.
diff --git a/_tils/2020-11-12-useful-bash-variables.md b/_tils/2020-11-12-useful-bash-variables.md
index af83015..d0849ce 100644
--- a/_tils/2020-11-12-useful-bash-variables.md
+++ b/_tils/2020-11-12-useful-bash-variables.md
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
title: Useful Bash variables
-date: 2020-11-12
+date: 2020-11-12 1
layout: post