> Le 23 mars 2015 à 16:35, kp kirchdoerfer <kap...@users.sourceforge.net> a 
> écrit :
> 
> Hi;
> 
> Am Montag, 23. März 2015, 12:07:35 schrieb Yves Blusseau:
>>> Le 23 mars 2015 à 09:25, Erich Titl <erich.t...@think.ch> a écrit :
>>> 
>>> Hi Yves
>>> 
>>> Am 23.03.2015 um 08:56 schrieb Yves Blusseau:
>>> 
>>> ...
>>> 
>>>> The feature is to clone a repository without downloading all the history
>>>> (several GB)> 
>>> OK so you basically remove the history from a git repository.
>> 
>> No the history stay intact. Only the binaries are replace with symlinks.
>> 
>>>>>> Now with the git-store command you can retrieve any packages you want
>>>>>> using the transport protocol that was used to clone the repository.>>> 
>>>>> That is all fine, but there is no git-store on the leaf boxes (and I
>>>>> doubt there will ever be).
>>>> 
>>>> git-store is only a bash script. The question is: is it good to install
>>>> git command on a Leaf platform ?> 
>>> I don't think so, but it is nice to have a repository without the cruft.
> 
> AFAIR git-store requires git?

Yes

> 
> Generating a git package should be possible, git seems to have no/few 
> requirements, and maybe I'll try to build one in the future.
> 
> But for just doing upgrades Erichs idea to use wget should be fine for the 
> time 
> being.

Yes. But git-store can be use to maintain the http docroot of the server that 
provide the packages.

>>>>>> See the Readme.txt file for information
>>>>>> (https://sourceforge.net/p/leaf/packages-store/ci/master/tree/Readme.t
>>>>>> xt)>>> 
>>>>> Great..... What does it do? Is this an interface to git? What is the
>>>>> difference between a git repository and this git-store built repository
>>>>> and why does git not provide the same functionality?
>>>> 
>>>> Because git is for storing source file not binaries files.
>>> 
>>> Aahhh.... I always thought so and was surprised there was a git
>>> repository to hold our binary packages. Is this arrangement with
>>> sourceforge by accident?
>> 
>> No because it was historic.
> 
> And because we have no other place AFAIK. SF does not provide http space 
> other 
> than the FRS, which IMHO is worse for storing packages than a gt repo.
> 
> Anyway; I've dowloaded git-store but I do not understand how to use it.
> I've been able to clone the symlinked repo, but then my understanding stopped.
Just install the git-store command in the path. The best is to clone my 
git-store repository on github and do a make install to install the command in 
/usr/bin.
> 
> How do I use it to get a package from it, and more important, how can I 
> update 
> a package in the repo, build new directories??
Go into the directory containing the symlinks and use the command "git store 
get" to retrieve one package.
To add a new file or update one use the "git store add" command.
To push the binaries to the repository use the "git store push" command.

> And finally - it seems not help me to shrink the existing repository on SF.
> As I said, I don't bother about history etc. I just want to 
> a) delete remote directories completly (freeing space)
> b) want to shrink the repositories to the bare necessary files aka the latest 
> versions)
> c) looking for a recipe for the future to keep the repository as small as 
> possible
With git store it's easy to see what files are accessible or not in a branch. 
And with one git command we can remove definitively an old binary from the 
repository.

Regards,
Yves


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