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lorentz15247160d@saucyatom It's not that I lost it, it's that the state of the repo at that time makes no sense at all compared to anything else. I edited a bunch of code to break a cyclical dependency just so I can rename some symbols and then reconnect the cycle because the project demands it.
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lorentz15247160dAzure DevOps actually holds onto the commit even though no branches reference it, it's actually accessible from the release run.
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lorentz15247160d@saucyatom it's incredibly fucked, NuGet shouldn't allow cycles at all but somehow by mixing modern dependency declarations with obsolete formats from 7 years ago we managed to bend it into a pretzel so now if we need to update the types on the boundary we have to create a stub release that doesn't work (and thus doesn't call the cyclical codependency) but all the types and methods are in place.
Related Rants
I played around with Git Rebase today to learn a bit about it, and it was fun, but in the process I completely obscured my process and erased a commit that has a published artifact associated with it. What remains is a few incremental preparation commits hoisted up from today's cleanup, then a pair of commits on two projects both of which only compile against the version of the other repo built from the other commit.
rant
git
history bending
rebase