On Friday, January 31, 2014 7:36:52 AM UTC+1, Philipp Kraus wrote:
>
> Hello,
> sorry for the late answer.
>
> Am Mittwoch, 22. Januar 2014 21:27:18 UTC+1 schrieb Magnus Therning:
>>
>> I'm not 100% sure I understand what you wish to do, but you might want
>> to look at `git clean`. By default it
Hello,
I don't know of any method built into git, but how about denying commits
that modify the .gitignore file(s)? This way your hook must only check if
the commit has modifications to any files called .gitignore.
Cheers,
Gergely
On 31 January 2014 08:25, Philipp Kraus wrote:
> Hello,
>
> ca
On Friday, January 31, 2014 8:25:00 AM UTC+1, Philipp Kraus wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> can I define on my server repository, that the ignored file patterns are
> hard defined. My problem is, that each use can modify the gitignore, but I
> get with this modification
> files into the server repo, which
From: Eric Reischer
To: git-users@googlegroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2014 11:16 PM
Subject: [git-users] Submodules and clobbering history
I have a fairly esoteric situation, but I suspect I'm probably not the only
one who is attempting to do something along these lines. I hav
Op donderdag 30 januari 2014 11:40:13 UTC+1 schreef Konstantin Khomoutov:
>
> Still, could you please disclose what is the full pathname of your
> repository and what is the pathname of the offending file in the
> repository? If you can't detect the offending file, you could try to
> infer what
Am Freitag, 31. Januar 2014 08:28:03 UTC+1 schrieb Konstantin Khomoutov:
>
> On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 22:59:12 -0800 (PST)
> Tom Wieczorek > wrote:
>
> > I'd like to sign git commits with my GPG key after they have been
> > committed. I know that I can sign them at commit time using git -S.
> > But,
On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 10:04 PM, Zk W wrote:
> Hi All
>
> We are tasked to move a code branch named "A" within SVN repo to Git.
> We also have trunk merges going on between "A" and trunk in SVN.
> Is it possible to set up with Git and SVN such that
> 1) Trunk changes in SVN could be propagated to
Hi,
i'm using the .gitattributes with a script filter to expand the SHA1 and
last commit date with the smudge and clean actions of the filter.
The clean filter removes this changes and makes the file exactly like the
one already in the repository.
This makes the git commit action to return
On Fri, 31 Jan 2014 08:16:05 -0800 (PST)
GS_gitnew wrote:
> i'm using the .gitattributes with a script filter to expand the SHA1
> and last commit date with the smudge and clean actions of the filter.
>
> The clean filter removes this changes and makes the file exactly like
> the one already in
Not exactly.
There are indeed changes in the files since we use an attribute filter to
modify the file ( smudge action of the filter).
The clean action of the filter however clean the file to restore it to its
original state ( as in the repository) so basically we have a modification
notifica
I would like to know the difference between repository and project because
I am having a hard time setting a Solaris box with SSH access to be a
repository for several projects I have. The thing is, I do a init --bare
on a folder to hold a project. I make the changes, add, commit, push to
the
> From: Gergely Polonkai
> I don't know of any method built into git, but how about denying commits
> that modify the .gitignore file(s)? This way your hook must only check if
> the commit has modifications to any files called .gitignore.
My understanding is that you can write such a hook, one t
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