The git clone --depth
command option says
--depth <depth> Create a shallow clone with a history truncated to the specified number of revisions. A shallow repository has a number of limitations (you cannot clone or fetch from it, nor push from nor into it), but is adequate if you are only interested in the recent history of a large project with a long history, and would want to send in fixes as patches.
Why do shallow clones have this limitation? Why is it a patches only workflow?
For some project workflows I need to pass just the latest commit from a single branch to a coder, and then have them be able to push
their (fast forward) developments to the main server. This partly for security, IP protection and repo size, and partly to reduce the confusion that a big repo would bring to a naive coder. Is there a git workflow that allows this?
Update: Based on Karl Bielefeldt's answer the git checkout --orphan
should be the right answer. But one still needs to 'clone' that branch alone to the new user, and be able to push it effectively.
The man page states:
git checkout [-q] [-f] [-m] [[-b|-B|--orphan] <new_branch>] [<start_point>] --orphan
Create a new orphan branch, named
<new_branch>
, started from<start_point>
and switch to it. The first commit made on this new branch will have no parents and it will be the root of a new history totally disconnected from all the other branches and commits.The index and the working tree are adjusted as if you had previously run
git checkout <start_point>
. This allows you to start a new history that records a set of paths similar to<start_point>
by easily runninggit commit -a
to make the root commit.This can be useful when you want to publish the tree from a commit without exposing its full history. You might want to do this to publish an open source branch of a project whose current tree is "clean", but whose full history contains proprietary or otherwise encumbered bits of code.
If you want to start a disconnected history that records a set of paths that is totally different from the one of
<start_point>
, then you should clear the index and the working tree right after creating the orphan branch by runninggit rm -rf .
from the top level of the working tree. Afterwards you will be ready to prepare your new files, repopulating the working tree, by copying them from elsewhere, extracting a tarball, etc.
VonC's link to Junio's comments is interesting. I think the manual should provide the guidance in this case, and allow the right command [e.g. clone <branch> --options
] to extract just the relevant part of the repo. Obviously the probability of push
success is increased by having a few linked commits and SHA1s at the bottom of the history that will lock down the repo matching.
Update Git 1.9.0 : release notes 14 Feb '14.
"Fetching from a shallowly-cloned repository used to be forbidden, primarily because the codepaths involved were not carefully vetted and we did not bother supporting such usage. This release attempts to allow object transfer out of a shallowly-cloned repository in a more controlled way (i.e. the receiver becomes a shallow repository with a truncated history)."
This is good news for the shallow cloners. Next - Narrow clones possibly.
Git shallow clone can save time while cloning large repositories. However, if you push commit from a shallow clone it can take more time due to the difference calculations to be done between remote and shallow copies of your repository. So it is advisable to start with a shallow clone but eventually do a full clone.
As Junio C. Hamano (main Git maintainer) puts it:
Isn't the rule more or less like:
If your shallow repository's history does not extend long enough and the other repository forked before your truncated history, wyou cannot compute the common ancestor and you cannot push out.
Update 2014: see "Is git clone --depth 1 (shallow clone) more useful than it makes out?": that limitation will be lifted with Git 1.9!
Update 2015: with Git 2.5+, you will even be able to fetch a single commit. See "Pull a specific commit from a remote git repository"
Original answer (August 2011):
Actually, come to think of it, it is a lot stronger than "cannot compute the common".
The history may look like this:
R---R---R / --R---R---X---X---S---S---S
where
S
are the commits you have in your shallow repository, andR
are the commits that exist in the repository that receives your push.
Because your history is shallow, neither repository has 'X
' that are the commits that need to exist in order to keep the history of recipient repository complete; the recipient is not shallow to begin with, and we do not want to make it shallow.If you cloned shallowly some time ago, worked without communicating with the other side while the other side progressed, AND if the other side's progress included a rewind & rebuild of the history, you would see a similar topology.
The leftmost 'S
' in the above picture might have been the tip of the branch when you shallowly cloned with depth 1, and since then the remote end may have discarded topmost three commits and have rebuilt its history that leads to the rightmost 'R
'.
In such a case pushing to the remote'sHEAD
will fail.
So it could work in some case, but it is not supported:
If I have to say something on this...
I think "is not supported" is a succinct way to give good enough information, but it would only work for intelligent people.
Not everybody is intelligent; some try it out themselves, see that the operation seems to work for their limited number of trials, and would conclude it would work most of the time.
And they congratulate their own intelligence for saying "most of the time", not "always".
And they get upset when they see it does not work, even though they have been warned.
For more on the shallow clone update process, see "How to update a git shallow clone?".
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