SYNOPSIS
git http-fetch [-c] [-t] [-a] [-d] [-v] [-w <filename>] [--recover] [--stdin | --packfile=<hash> | <commit>] <URL>
DESCRIPTION
Downloads a remote Git repository via HTTP.
This command always gets all objects. Historically, there were three options
-a
, -c
and -t
for choosing which objects to download. They are now
silently ignored.
OPTIONS
- commit-id
-
Either the hash or the filename under [URL]/refs/ to pull.
- -a, -c, -t
-
These options are ignored for historical reasons.
- -v
-
Report what is downloaded.
- -w <filename>
-
Writes the commit-id into the filename under $GIT_DIR/refs/<filename> on the local end after the transfer is complete.
- --stdin
-
Instead of a commit id on the command line (which is not expected in this case), git http-fetch expects lines on stdin in the format
<commit-id>['\t'<filename-as-in--w>]
- --packfile=<hash>
-
For internal use only. Instead of a commit id on the command line (which is not expected in this case), git http-fetch fetches the packfile directly at the given URL and uses index-pack to generate corresponding .idx and .keep files. The hash is used to determine the name of the temporary file and is arbitrary. The output of index-pack is printed to stdout. Requires --index-pack-args.
- --index-pack-args=<args>
-
For internal use only. The command to run on the contents of the downloaded pack. Arguments are URL-encoded separated by spaces.
- --recover
-
Verify that everything reachable from target is fetched. Used after an earlier fetch is interrupted.
GIT
Part of the git(1) suite