It used to make sense to have git-send-pack talk about the things it sent
when (a) it was a new program and (b) nobody had a lot of tags and
branches.
These days, it's just distracting to see tons of
'refs/tags/xyz': up-to-date
...
when updating a remote repo.
So shut it up by default, and add a "--verbose" flag for those who really
want to see it.
Also, since this makes he case of everything being up-to-date just totally
silent, make it say "Everything up-to-date" if no refs needed updating.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
"git-send-pack [--all] [--exec=git-receive-pack] <remote> [<head>...]\n"
" --all and explicit <head> specification are mutually exclusive.";
static const char *exec = "git-receive-pack";
"git-send-pack [--all] [--exec=git-receive-pack] <remote> [<head>...]\n"
" --all and explicit <head> specification are mutually exclusive.";
static const char *exec = "git-receive-pack";
static int send_all = 0;
static int force_update = 0;
static int send_all = 0;
static int force_update = 0;
if (!ref->peer_ref)
continue;
if (!memcmp(ref->old_sha1, ref->peer_ref->new_sha1, 20)) {
if (!ref->peer_ref)
continue;
if (!memcmp(ref->old_sha1, ref->peer_ref->new_sha1, 20)) {
- fprintf(stderr, "'%s': up-to-date\n", ref->name);
+ if (verbose)
+ fprintf(stderr, "'%s': up-to-date\n", ref->name);
packet_flush(out);
if (new_refs)
pack_objects(out, remote_refs);
packet_flush(out);
if (new_refs)
pack_objects(out, remote_refs);
+ else
+ fprintf(stderr, "Everything up-to-date\n");
close(out);
return ret;
}
close(out);
return ret;
}
force_update = 1;
continue;
}
force_update = 1;
continue;
}
+ if (!strcmp(arg, "--verbose")) {
+ verbose = 1;
+ continue;
+ }
usage(send_pack_usage);
}
if (!dest) {
usage(send_pack_usage);
}
if (!dest) {