DESCRIPTION¶
Usually you would want to use git fetch, which is a higher
level wrapper of this command, instead.
Invokes git-upload-pack on a possibly remote repository and
asks it to send objects missing from this repository, to update the named
heads. The list of commits available locally is found out by scanning the
local refs/ hierarchy and sent to git-upload-pack running on the
other end.
This command degenerates to download everything to complete the
asked refs from the remote side when the local side does not have a common
ancestor commit.
OPTIONS¶
--all
Fetch all remote refs.
--stdin
Take the list of refs from stdin, one per line. If there
are refs specified on the command line in addition to this option, then the
refs from stdin are processed after those on the command line.
If --stateless-rpc is specified together with this option
then the list of refs must be in packet format (pkt-line). Each ref must be
in a separate packet, and the list must end with a flush packet.
-q, --quiet
Pass -q flag to git unpack-objects; this
makes the cloning process less verbose.
-k, --keep
Do not invoke git unpack-objects on received data,
but create a single packfile out of it instead, and store it in the object
database. If provided twice then the pack is locked against repacking.
--thin
Fetch a "thin" pack, which records objects in
deltified form based on objects not included in the pack to reduce network
traffic.
--include-tag
If the remote side supports it, annotated tags objects
will be downloaded on the same connection as the other objects if the object
the tag references is downloaded. The caller must otherwise determine the tags
this option made available.
--upload-pack=<git-upload-pack>
Use this to specify the path to git-upload-pack on
the remote side, if it is not found on your $PATH. Installations of sshd
ignores the user’s environment setup scripts for login shells (e.g.
.bash_profile) and your privately installed git may not be found on the system
default $PATH. Another workaround suggested is to set up your $PATH in
".bashrc", but this flag is for people who do not want to pay the
overhead for non-interactive shells by having a lean .bashrc file (they set
most of the things up in .bash_profile).
--exec=<git-upload-pack>
Same as --upload-pack=<git-upload-pack>.
--depth=<n>
Limit fetching to ancestor-chains not longer than n.
git-upload-pack treats the special depth 2147483647 as infinite even if
there is an ancestor-chain that long.
--shallow-since=<date>
Deepen or shorten the history of a shallow repository to
include all reachable commits after <date>.
--shallow-exclude=<revision>
Deepen or shorten the history of a shallow repository to
exclude commits reachable from a specified remote branch or tag. This option
can be specified multiple times.
--deepen-relative
Argument --depth specifies the number of commits from the
current shallow boundary instead of from the tip of each remote branch
history.
--refetch
Skips negotiating commits with the server in order to
fetch all matching objects. Use to reapply a new partial clone blob/tree
filter.
--no-progress
Do not show the progress.
--check-self-contained-and-connected
Output "connectivity-ok" if the received pack
is self-contained and connected.
-v
Run verbosely.
<repository>
The URL to the remote repository.
<refs>...
The remote heads to update from. This is relative to
$GIT_DIR (e.g. "HEAD", "refs/heads/master"). When
unspecified, update from all heads the remote side has.
If the remote has enabled the options
uploadpack.allowTipSHA1InWant,
uploadpack.allowReachableSHA1InWant, or
uploadpack.allowAnySHA1InWant, they may alternatively be 40-hex sha1s
present on the remote.