Discussion:
Can a git repository be initialized with a bundle?
Tom Koelman
2008-02-13 08:21:42 UTC
Permalink
Hi,

I got some repository from which I created a bundle like so:

$ git bundle create all.bundle --all

Now I want to recreate this repository somewhere else:

$ mkdir tmp ; cd tmp ; git init
Initialized empty Git repository in .git/
$ git fetch all.bundle
fatal: Couldn't find remote ref HEAD

It doesn't matter whether I try to fetch, pull, or add -f to the command
line, I always get this response.

Am I trying to accomplish something that can't be done or am I doing it
wrong?

I am running git version 1.5.4.1 under Linux.

Regards,
Tom Koelman
Santi Béjar
2008-02-13 09:02:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tom Koelman
Hi,
$ git bundle create all.bundle --all
--all does not imply HEAD, so:

$ git bundle create all.bundle --all HEAD
Post by Tom Koelman
$ mkdir tmp ; cd tmp ; git init
Initialized empty Git repository in .git/
$ git fetch all.bundle
fatal: Couldn't find remote ref HEAD
you have to say explicitly the branches you want as:

$ git fetch all.bundle master:bundle/master

or with a remote:

$ git remote add bundle all.bundle
$ git fetch bundle
Post by Tom Koelman
It doesn't matter whether I try to fetch, pull, or add -f to the command
line, I always get this response.
The same happens with a normal remote repository without a HEAD.
Post by Tom Koelman
Am I trying to accomplish something that can't be done or am I doing it
wrong?
I sent a path to support bundles in clone, but it was late for 1.5.4
and at some point "git clone" will be converted to C (now it is a
script). For now you have to do the "git init ; git remote add -f
...", or similar.

Santi

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