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Version 2.0.5
▾ git-http-fetch last updated in 2.43.0Changes in the git-http-fetch manual
Setup and Config
Getting and Creating Projects
Basic Snapshotting
Branching and Merging
Sharing and Updating Projects
Inspection and Comparison
Patching
Debugging
External Systems
Server Admin
- 2.43.1 → 2.46.1 no changes
- 2.43.0 11/20/23
- 2.35.1 → 2.42.3 no changes
- 2.35.0 01/24/22
- 2.31.1 → 2.34.8 no changes
- 2.31.0 03/15/21
- 2.28.1 → 2.30.9 no changes
- 2.28.0 07/27/20
- 2.18.1 → 2.27.1 no changes
- 2.18.0 06/21/18
- 2.1.4 → 2.17.6 no changes
- 2.0.5 12/17/14
DESCRIPTION
Downloads a remote Git repository via HTTP.
NOTE: use of this command without -a is deprecated. The -a behaviour will become the default in a future release.
OPTIONS
- commit-id
Either the hash or the filename under [URL]/refs/ to pull.
- -c
Get the commit objects.
- -t
Get trees associated with the commit objects.
- -a
Get all the objects.
- -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>]
- --recover
Verify that everything reachable from target is fetched. Used after an earlier fetch is interrupted.
GIT
Part of the git[1] suite