On Thu, Sep 08, 2005 at 04:30:22PM +1200, Martin Langhoff wrote:
Actually... should get it done. I'll see if I can sneak it in sometime
soon...
This has been done at least twice already.
See e.g., http://www.liacs.nl/~sverdool/gitweb.cgi?p=gitweb.git;a=summary
Check the archives for the other
Yes, this is nice for smaller projects. But I don't think, that we want
to do such a thing on the kernel.org servers.
I think this is a very useful feature for for some, but not all,
repositories. Default it to off and have a magic file (like git-daemon),
or a config variable turn it on.
With Archzoom, when looking at a particular commit/cset you get a
small [tarball] link that does an 'export' of the whole tree at that
patchlevel and tars it up for the user. It's heavy on the server and
bandwidth, but if you can afford it, it is mighty useful to push out
patches immediately to
gitweb feature request: include a timestamp near the top of
the projects page so that I don't have to try to remember when I last
reloaded the page. TZ=UTC preferred.
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On Wed, Aug 10, 2005 at 06:53:40AM +0100, Ian Campbell wrote:
On Tue, 2005-08-09 at 21:58 +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
I was hoping people that want stuff like this would use a RSS reader. :)
I used to subscribe to the kernel RSS feed (using blam) but I found I
was only getting the most
Kay Sievers wrote:
It's 30 now and up to 150 if they are not older than 48 hours.
We can change the numbers, if you hava a better idea...
Is it really hard to just make it purely time-based (git-rev-list --max-age)?
Think of if Linus is merging with a lot of people and then pushes the results
Ian Campbell wrote:
I used to subscribe to the kernel RSS feed (using blam) but I found I
was only getting the most recent 20 commits, which wasn't much good when
a big batch went in because I would miss some.
Yes, I have that problem too. It appears to be just the way that gitweb
works -
Hi Kay.
When browsing http://www.kernel.org/git I often find myself looking for
the most recently changed tree.
For this it is very good that you have the last change in italic and
bolded if newer than a few hours (I think).
A nice additional feature would be the possibility to sort the output
On Tue, Aug 09, 2005 at 09:31:04PM +0200, Sam Ravnborg wrote:
Hi Kay.
When browsing http://www.kernel.org/git I often find myself looking for
the most recently changed tree.
For this it is very good that you have the last change in italic and
bolded if newer than a few hours (I think).
Hi,
On Tue, 9 Aug 2005, Sam Ravnborg wrote:
On Tue, Aug 09, 2005 at 09:58:18PM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
I was hoping people that want stuff like this would use a RSS reader. :)
Some day I will try to use such a beast...
You have Firefox, don't you? Next time you surf to gitweb, right
You have Firefox, don't you? Next time you surf to gitweb, right click on
the funny yellow symbol in the lower right corner of your Firefox. It
should say something like Subscribe to Do it.
Unfortunately not on my firefox. 1.0.6 on gentoo.
Puzzled...
Sam
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Sam Ravnborg wrote:
You have Firefox, don't you? Next time you surf to gitweb, right click on
the funny yellow symbol in the lower right corner of your Firefox. It
should say something like Subscribe to Do it.
Unfortunately not on my
On Tue, Aug 09, 2005 at 03:51:37PM -0500, John Benes wrote:
Sam Ravnborg wrote:
You have Firefox, don't you? Next time you surf to gitweb, right click on
the funny yellow symbol in the lower right corner of your Firefox. It
should say something like Subscribe to Do it.
On Tue, 9 Aug 2005, Johannes Schindelin wrote:
You have Firefox, don't you? Next time you surf to gitweb, right click on
the funny yellow symbol in the lower right corner of your Firefox. It
should say something like Subscribe to Do it.
Left-click. And you need to be inside the
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