Hi experts
Is there a place record when I run "git pull" the last time
Lei
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I use one repo with develop and release branches for a Yeoman project.
Simplified, my directory tree looks like this:
root git directory
├── app
└── dist (the build folder)
With Grunt.js I build my app straight into dist.
I would like to use git subtree push --prefix dist origin release
I use one repo with develop and release branches for a Yeoman project.
Simplified, my directory tree looks like this:
root git directory
├── app
└── dist (the build folder)
With Grunt.js I build my app straight into dist.
I would like to use git subtree push --prefix dist origin release
Hi,
If I understand correctly what you're asking for, the most reliable
way is to read the modification date of the .git/FETCH_HEAD file.
This SW thread has more precisions:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2993902/how-do-i-check-the-date-and-time-of-the-latest-git-pull-that-was-executed
On 15
Thanks, that's what exactly I want
Lei
On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 4:47 PM, Benoit Person wrote:
> Hi,
>
> If I understand correctly what you're asking for, the most reliable
> way is to read the modification date of the .git/FETCH_HEAD file.
>
> This SW thread has more precisions:
>
> http://stac
Hi,
All the git repositories are on one git server in specific directory.
I would like to know what I need to backup in order to be able to make a
success restore, in case my disk on the git server will crushed.
I would like to understand, after the user run on his local workstation
'git ini
On Tue, 15 Oct 2013 16:24:50 +0800
lei yang wrote:
> Is there a place record when I run "git pull" the last time
Please note that while you've got an answer proposing a semi-working
solution (that is, working until someone calls `touch .git/FETCH_HEAD`),
to me, it seems that you're trying to loo
On Tue, 15 Oct 2013 06:53:17 -0700 (PDT)
shlo.af...@gmail.com wrote:
> All the git repositories are on one git server in specific directory.
> I would like to know what I need to backup in order to be able to
> make a success restore, in case my disk on the git server will
> crushed.
>
> I woul
On Tue, 15 Oct 2013 18:00:42 +0400
Konstantin Khomoutov wrote:
> On Tue, 15 Oct 2013 16:24:50 +0800
> lei yang wrote:
>
> > Is there a place record when I run "git pull" the last time
>
> Please note that while you've got an answer proposing a semi-working
> solution (that is, working until so
I think that you can use a hook instead of sending the dist folder.
Send the app folder and then you run your grunt task in a remote hook. You
can read more about server side hooks here:
http://git-scm.com/book/en/Customizing-Git-Git-Hooks#Server-Side-Hooks
William Seiti Mizuta
@williammizuta
C
Thank you very much :)
On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 7:28 PM, William Seiti Mizuta <
william.miz...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I think that you can use a hook instead of sending the dist folder.
>
> Send the app folder and then you run your grunt task in a remote hook. You
> can read more about server side
> What's pushed when a developer simply runs `git push` or
> `git push ` in their repository is another story completely as
> it depends on a number of details. If you're interested about this, ask
> away.
Yes I do. I new with git and I would like to understand more.
Also I did not understa
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