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#!/bin/sh
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#
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# Copyright (c) 2005, Linus Torvalds
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# Copyright (c) 2005, Junio C Hamano
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#
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# Clone a repository into a different directory that does not yet exist.
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# See git-sh-setup why.
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unset CDPATH
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usage() {
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echo >&2 "Usage: $0 [--template=<template_directory>] [--use-separate-remote] [--reference <reference-repo>] [--bare] [-l [-s]] [-q] [-u <upload-pack>] [--origin <name>] [-n] <repo> [<dir>]"
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exit 1
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}
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get_repo_base() {
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(cd "$1" && (cd .git ; pwd)) 2> /dev/null
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}
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if [ -n "$GIT_SSL_NO_VERIFY" ]; then
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curl_extra_args="-k"
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fi
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http_fetch () {
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# $1 = Remote, $2 = Local
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curl -nsfL $curl_extra_args "$1" >"$2"
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}
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clone_dumb_http () {
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# $1 - remote, $2 - local
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cd "$2" &&
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clone_tmp="$GIT_DIR/clone-tmp" &&
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mkdir -p "$clone_tmp" || exit 1
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if [ -n "$GIT_CURL_FTP_NO_EPSV" -o \
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"`git-repo-config --bool http.noEPSV`" = true ]; then
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curl_extra_args="${curl_extra_args} --disable-epsv"
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fi
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http_fetch "$1/info/refs" "$clone_tmp/refs" || {
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echo >&2 "Cannot get remote repository information.
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Perhaps git-update-server-info needs to be run there?"
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exit 1;
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}
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while read sha1 refname
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do
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name=`expr "z$refname" : 'zrefs/\(.*\)'` &&
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case "$name" in
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*^*) continue;;
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esac
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if test -n "$use_separate_remote" &&
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branch_name=`expr "z$name" : 'zheads/\(.*\)'`
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then
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tname="remotes/$origin/$branch_name"
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else
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tname=$name
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fi
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git-http-fetch -v -a -w "$tname" "$name" "$1/" || exit 1
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done <"$clone_tmp/refs"
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rm -fr "$clone_tmp"
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git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
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http_fetch "$1/HEAD" "$GIT_DIR/REMOTE_HEAD" ||
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rm -f "$GIT_DIR/REMOTE_HEAD"
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}
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# Read git-fetch-pack -k output and store the remote branches.
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copy_refs='
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use File::Path qw(mkpath);
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use File::Basename qw(dirname);
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my $git_dir = $ARGV[0];
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my $use_separate_remote = $ARGV[1];
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my $origin = $ARGV[2];
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my $branch_top = ($use_separate_remote ? "remotes/$origin" : "heads");
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my $tag_top = "tags";
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sub store {
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my ($sha1, $name, $top) = @_;
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$name = "$git_dir/refs/$top/$name";
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mkpath(dirname($name));
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open O, ">", "$name";
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print O "$sha1\n";
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close O;
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}
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open FH, "<", "$git_dir/CLONE_HEAD";
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while (<FH>) {
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my ($sha1, $name) = /^([0-9a-f]{40})\s(.*)$/;
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next if ($name =~ /\^\173/);
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if ($name eq "HEAD") {
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open O, ">", "$git_dir/REMOTE_HEAD";
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print O "$sha1\n";
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close O;
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next;
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}
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if ($name =~ s/^refs\/heads\///) {
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store($sha1, $name, $branch_top);
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next;
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}
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if ($name =~ s/^refs\/tags\///) {
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store($sha1, $name, $tag_top);
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next;
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}
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}
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close FH;
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'
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quiet=
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local=no
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use_local=no
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local_shared=no
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unset template
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no_checkout=
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upload_pack=
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bare=
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reference=
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origin=
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origin_override=
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use_separate_remote=
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while
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case "$#,$1" in
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0,*) break ;;
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*,-n|*,--no|*,--no-|*,--no-c|*,--no-ch|*,--no-che|*,--no-chec|\
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*,--no-check|*,--no-checko|*,--no-checkou|*,--no-checkout)
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no_checkout=yes ;;
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*,--na|*,--nak|*,--nake|*,--naked|\
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*,-b|*,--b|*,--ba|*,--bar|*,--bare) bare=yes ;;
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*,-l|*,--l|*,--lo|*,--loc|*,--loca|*,--local) use_local=yes ;;
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*,-s|*,--s|*,--sh|*,--sha|*,--shar|*,--share|*,--shared)
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local_shared=yes; use_local=yes ;;
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1,--template) usage ;;
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*,--template)
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shift; template="--template=$1" ;;
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*,--template=*)
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template="$1" ;;
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*,-q|*,--quiet) quiet=-q ;;
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*,--use-separate-remote)
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use_separate_remote=t ;;
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1,--reference) usage ;;
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*,--reference)
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shift; reference="$1" ;;
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*,--reference=*)
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reference=`expr "z$1" : 'z--reference=\(.*\)'` ;;
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*,-o|*,--or|*,--ori|*,--orig|*,--origi|*,--origin)
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case "$2" in
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'')
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usage ;;
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*/*)
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echo >&2 "'$2' is not suitable for an origin name"
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exit 1
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esac
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git-check-ref-format "heads/$2" || {
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echo >&2 "'$2' is not suitable for a branch name"
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exit 1
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}
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test -z "$origin_override" || {
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echo >&2 "Do not give more than one --origin options."
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exit 1
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}
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origin_override=yes
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origin="$2"; shift
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;;
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1,-u|1,--upload-pack) usage ;;
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*,-u|*,--upload-pack)
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shift
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upload_pack="--exec=$1" ;;
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*,-*) usage ;;
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*) break ;;
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esac
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do
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shift
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done
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repo="$1"
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if test -z "$repo"
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then
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echo >&2 'you must specify a repository to clone.'
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exit 1
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fi
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# --bare implies --no-checkout
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if test yes = "$bare"
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then
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if test yes = "$origin_override"
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then
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echo >&2 '--bare and --origin $origin options are incompatible.'
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exit 1
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fi
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if test t = "$use_separate_remote"
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then
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echo >&2 '--bare and --use-separate-remote options are incompatible.'
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exit 1
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fi
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no_checkout=yes
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fi
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if test -z "$origin"
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then
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origin=origin
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fi
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# Turn the source into an absolute path if
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# it is local
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if base=$(get_repo_base "$repo"); then
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repo="$base"
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local=yes
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fi
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dir="$2"
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# Try using "humanish" part of source repo if user didn't specify one
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[ -z "$dir" ] && dir=$(echo "$repo" | sed -e 's|/$||' -e 's|:*/*\.git$||' -e 's|.*[/:]||g')
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[ -e "$dir" ] && echo "$dir already exists." && usage
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mkdir -p "$dir" &&
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D=$(cd "$dir" && pwd) &&
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trap 'err=$?; cd ..; rm -rf "$D"; exit $err' 0
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case "$bare" in
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yes)
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GIT_DIR="$D" ;;
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*)
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GIT_DIR="$D/.git" ;;
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esac && export GIT_DIR && git-init-db ${template+"$template"} || usage
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if test -n "$reference"
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then
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if test -d "$reference"
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then
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if test -d "$reference/.git/objects"
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then
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reference="$reference/.git"
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fi
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reference=$(cd "$reference" && pwd)
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echo "$reference/objects" >"$GIT_DIR/objects/info/alternates"
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(cd "$reference" && tar cf - refs) |
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(cd "$GIT_DIR/refs" &&
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mkdir reference-tmp &&
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cd reference-tmp &&
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tar xf -)
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else
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echo >&2 "$reference: not a local directory." && usage
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fi
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fi
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rm -f "$GIT_DIR/CLONE_HEAD"
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# We do local magic only when the user tells us to.
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case "$local,$use_local" in
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yes,yes)
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( cd "$repo/objects" ) || {
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echo >&2 "-l flag seen but $repo is not local."
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exit 1
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}
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case "$local_shared" in
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no)
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# See if we can hardlink and drop "l" if not.
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sample_file=$(cd "$repo" && \
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find objects -type f -print | sed -e 1q)
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# objects directory should not be empty since we are cloning!
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test -f "$repo/$sample_file" || exit
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l=
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if ln "$repo/$sample_file" "$GIT_DIR/objects/sample" 2>/dev/null
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then
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l=l
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fi &&
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rm -f "$GIT_DIR/objects/sample" &&
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cd "$repo" &&
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find objects -depth -print | cpio -pumd$l "$GIT_DIR/" || exit 1
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;;
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yes)
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mkdir -p "$GIT_DIR/objects/info"
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echo "$repo/objects" >> "$GIT_DIR/objects/info/alternates"
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;;
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esac
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git-ls-remote "$repo" >"$GIT_DIR/CLONE_HEAD" || exit 1
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;;
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*)
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case "$repo" in
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rsync://*)
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rsync $quiet -av --ignore-existing \
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--exclude info "$repo/objects/" "$GIT_DIR/objects/" ||
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exit
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# Look at objects/info/alternates for rsync -- http will
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# support it natively and git native ones will do it on the
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# remote end. Not having that file is not a crime.
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rsync -q "$repo/objects/info/alternates" \
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"$GIT_DIR/TMP_ALT" 2>/dev/null ||
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rm -f "$GIT_DIR/TMP_ALT"
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if test -f "$GIT_DIR/TMP_ALT"
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then
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( cd "$D" &&
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. git-parse-remote &&
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resolve_alternates "$repo" <"$GIT_DIR/TMP_ALT" ) |
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while read alt
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do
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case "$alt" in 'bad alternate: '*) die "$alt";; esac
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case "$quiet" in
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'') echo >&2 "Getting alternate: $alt" ;;
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esac
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rsync $quiet -av --ignore-existing \
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--exclude info "$alt" "$GIT_DIR/objects" || exit
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done
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rm -f "$GIT_DIR/TMP_ALT"
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fi
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git-ls-remote "$repo" >"$GIT_DIR/CLONE_HEAD" || exit 1
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;;
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https://*|http://*|ftp://*)
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if test -z "@@NO_CURL@@"
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then
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clone_dumb_http "$repo" "$D"
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else
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echo >&2 "http transport not supported, rebuild Git with curl support"
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exit 1
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fi
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;;
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*)
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cd "$D" && case "$upload_pack" in
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'') git-fetch-pack --all -k $quiet "$repo" ;;
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*) git-fetch-pack --all -k $quiet "$upload_pack" "$repo" ;;
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esac >"$GIT_DIR/CLONE_HEAD" || {
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echo >&2 "fetch-pack from '$repo' failed."
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exit 1
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}
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;;
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esac
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;;
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esac
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test -d "$GIT_DIR/refs/reference-tmp" && rm -fr "$GIT_DIR/refs/reference-tmp"
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if test -f "$GIT_DIR/CLONE_HEAD"
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then
|
git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
|
|
|
# Read git-fetch-pack -k output and store the remote branches.
|
|
|
|
@@PERL@@ -e "$copy_refs" "$GIT_DIR" "$use_separate_remote" "$origin" ||
|
|
|
|
exit
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
cd "$D" || exit
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if test -z "$bare" && test -f "$GIT_DIR/REMOTE_HEAD"
|
|
|
|
then
|
|
|
|
# Figure out which remote branch HEAD points at.
|
|
|
|
case "$use_separate_remote" in
|
|
|
|
'') remote_top=refs/heads ;;
|
|
|
|
*) remote_top="refs/remotes/$origin" ;;
|
|
|
|
esac
|
|
|
|
|
git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
|
|
|
head_sha1=`cat "$GIT_DIR/REMOTE_HEAD"`
|
|
|
|
case "$head_sha1" in
|
|
|
|
'ref: refs/'*)
|
|
|
|
# Uh-oh, the remote told us (http transport done against
|
|
|
|
# new style repository with a symref HEAD).
|
|
|
|
# Ideally we should skip the guesswork but for now
|
|
|
|
# opt for minimum change.
|
|
|
|
head_sha1=`expr "z$head_sha1" : 'zref: refs/heads/\(.*\)'`
|
git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
|
|
|
head_sha1=`cat "$GIT_DIR/$remote_top/$head_sha1"`
|
|
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
esac
|
|
|
|
|
git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
|
|
|
# The name under $remote_top the remote HEAD seems to point at.
|
|
|
|
head_points_at=$(
|
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
echo "master"
|
|
|
|
cd "$GIT_DIR/$remote_top" &&
|
|
|
|
find . -type f -print | sed -e 's/^\.\///'
|
|
|
|
) | (
|
|
|
|
done=f
|
|
|
|
while read name
|
|
|
|
do
|
|
|
|
test t = $done && continue
|
|
|
|
branch_tip=`cat "$GIT_DIR/$remote_top/$name"`
|
|
|
|
if test "$head_sha1" = "$branch_tip"
|
|
|
|
then
|
|
|
|
echo "$name"
|
|
|
|
done=t
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
done
|
|
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
|
|
|
# Write out remotes/$origin file, and update our "$head_points_at".
|
|
|
|
case "$head_points_at" in
|
|
|
|
?*)
|
|
|
|
mkdir -p "$GIT_DIR/remotes" &&
|
git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
|
|
|
git-symbolic-ref HEAD "refs/heads/$head_points_at" &&
|
|
|
|
case "$use_separate_remote" in
|
git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
|
|
|
t) origin_track="$remote_top/$head_points_at"
|
|
|
|
git-update-ref HEAD "$head_sha1" ;;
|
|
|
|
*) origin_track="$remote_top/$origin"
|
|
|
|
git-update-ref "refs/heads/$origin" "$head_sha1" ;;
|
|
|
|
esac &&
|
git-clone: fix handling of upsteram whose HEAD does not point at master.
When cloning from a remote repository that has master, main, and
origin branches _and_ with the HEAD pointing at main branch, we
did quite confused things during clone. So this cleans things
up. The behaviour is a bit different between separate remotes/
layout and the mixed branches layout.
The newer layout with $GIT_DIR/refs/remotes/$origin/, things are
simpler and more transparent:
- remote branches are copied to refs/remotes/$origin/.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches, and merge the branch HEAD pointed at at the time of
the cloning.
Everything-in-refs/heads layout was the more confused one, but
cleaned up like this:
- remote branches are copied to refs/heads, but the branch
"$origin" is not copied, instead a copy of the branch the
remote HEAD points at is created there.
- HEAD points at the branch with the same name as the remote
HEAD points at, and starts at where the remote HEAD points at.
- $GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin file is set up to fetch all remote
branches except "$origin", and merge the branch HEAD pointed
at at the time of the cloning.
With this, the remote has master, main and origin, and its HEAD
points at main, you could:
git clone $URL --origin upstream
to use refs/heads/upstream as the tracking branch for remote
"main", and your primary working branch will also be "main".
"master" and "origin" are used to track the corresponding remote
branches and with this setup they do not have any special meaning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
19 years ago
|
|
|
echo >"$GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin" \
|
|
|
|
"URL: $repo
|
|
|
|
Pull: refs/heads/$head_points_at:$origin_track" &&
|
|
|
|
(cd "$GIT_DIR/$remote_top" && find . -type f -print) |
|
|
|
|
while read dotslref
|
|
|
|
do
|
|
|
|
name=`expr "$dotslref" : './\(.*\)'`
|
|
|
|
if test "z$head_points_at" = "z$name"
|
|
|
|
then
|
|
|
|
continue
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
if test "$use_separate_remote" = '' &&
|
|
|
|
test "z$origin" = "z$name"
|
|
|
|
then
|
|
|
|
continue
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
echo "Pull: refs/heads/${name}:$remote_top/${name}"
|
|
|
|
done >>"$GIT_DIR/remotes/$origin" &&
|
|
|
|
case "$use_separate_remote" in
|
|
|
|
t)
|
|
|
|
rm -f "refs/remotes/$origin/HEAD"
|
|
|
|
git-symbolic-ref "refs/remotes/$origin/HEAD" \
|
|
|
|
"refs/remotes/$origin/$head_points_at"
|
|
|
|
esac
|
|
|
|
esac
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
case "$no_checkout" in
|
|
|
|
'')
|
|
|
|
git-read-tree -m -u -v HEAD HEAD
|
|
|
|
esac
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
rm -f "$GIT_DIR/CLONE_HEAD" "$GIT_DIR/REMOTE_HEAD"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
trap - 0
|
|
|
|
|