Duy Nguyen wrote:
> On Thu, May 23, 2013 at 10:12 PM, Ramkumar Ramachandra
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Try this now: configure your current branch's pushremote to push to
>> "refs/heads/*:refs/heads/rr/*". Now, type 'git show @{p}'. Voila!
>
> Voila what? Why not avoid guessing game and describe what the patch is for?
If you're on branch master, it'll output refs/heads/rr/master. The
topic is about having a @{push} corresponding to @{upstream}
>> +static void find_push_ref(struct branch *branch) {
>> + struct remote *remote = pushremote_get(NULL);
>> + const struct refspec *pat = NULL;
>> + char raw_ref[PATH_MAX];
>> + struct ref *this_ref;
>> + char *dst_name;
>> + int len;
>> +
>> + sprintf(raw_ref, "refs/heads/%s", branch->name);
>> + len = strlen(raw_ref) + 1;
>> + this_ref = xcalloc(1, sizeof(*this_ref) + len);
>> + memcpy(this_ref->name, raw_ref, len);
>> +
>> + dst_name = get_ref_match(remote->push, remote->push_refspec_nr,
>> + this_ref, MATCH_REFS_ALL, 0, &pat);
>> + printf("dst_name = %s\n", dst_name);
>> +}
>> +
>
> Isn't this an abuse of extended sha-1 syntax? How can I combine this
> with other @{}, ^, ~...?
I'm unsure what you mean. How can I be on branch master^1? Did you
read the cover-letter?
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