commit | acbfae32a31180d781357028af9aff8928672d4b | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Damien Robert <damien.olivier.robert@gmail.com> | Mon Apr 06 15:57:09 2020 +0200 |
committer | Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> | Mon Apr 06 13:42:43 2020 -0700 |
tree | bc737ce26e99375e3f6adbc5cbb0093f35ed906b | |
parent | 4da9e99e6eaab24ef86c44642b0692669adacfeb [diff] |
doc: --recurse-submodules mostly applies to active submodules The documentation refers to "initialized" or "populated" submodules, to explain which submodules are affected by '--recurse-submodules', but the real terminology here is 'active' submodules. Update the documentation accordingly. Some terminology: - Active is defined in gitsubmodules(7), it only involves the configuration variables 'submodule.active', 'submodule.<name>.active' and 'submodule.<name>.url'. The function submodule.c::is_submodule_active checks that a submodule is active. - Populated means that the submodule's working tree is present (and the gitfile correctly points to the submodule repository), i.e. either the superproject was cloned with ` --recurse-submodules`, or the user ran `git submodule update --init`, or `git submodule init [<path>]` and `git submodule update [<path>]` separately which populated the submodule working tree. This does not involve the 3 configuration variables above. - Initialized (at least in the context of the man pages involved in this patch) means both "populated" and "active" as defined above, i.e. what `git submodule update --init` does. The --recurse-submodules option mostly affects active submodules. An exception is `git fetch` where the option affects populated submodules. As a consequence, in `git pull --recurse-submodules` the fetch affects populated submodules, but the resulting working tree update only affects active submodules. In the documentation of `git-pull`, let's distinguish between the fetching part which affects populated submodules, and the updating of worktrees, which only affects active submodules. Signed-off-by: Damien Robert <damien.olivier.robert+git@gmail.com> Helped-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Git is a fast, scalable, distributed revision control system with an unusually rich command set that provides both high-level operations and full access to internals.
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See Documentation/gittutorial.txt to get started, then see Documentation/giteveryday.txt for a useful minimum set of commands, and Documentation/git-<commandname>.txt
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or git help cvs-migration
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