Lenz has what you want here! On Saturday, January 2, 2016, Lenz Weber <[email protected]> wrote:
> It's not really nontrivial. I just have > > % cat .password-store/.git/hooks/post-commit > git pull --rebase --recurse-submodules > git push --recurse-submodules=on-demand > > It does not do everything you want, but it is very simple and most > people here use something similar. > > If you are not using submodules, you can skip the recurse-submodules stuff. > > > Regards, > Lenz > > > Am 02.01.2016 um 08:37 schrieb Asheesh Laroia: > > Hi all, > > > > I've been a happy user of "pass" for a few years. > > > > I just set up a private git repository that I now use "pass git push" to > > synchronize with. > > > > One thing I'm concerned about is that I might "pass generate" and then > > forget to "pass git push". Particularly, I'm used to having monitoring > > and/or automation for essential systems. So I'm curious - has anyone set > > up automatic "git push" upon running "pass generate"? > > > > I know I could write some of my own scripts as git hooks, but it seems > > to me it's a little nontrivial, so in the interest of saving time and > > discovering existing best practices, I'm interested in finding out if > > others have done something already. > > > > I'm interested in hearing about all approaches people have set up, even > > ones they're not super thrilled with! > > > > Here's my first thought on how I'd do it (though happy to hear other > > ideas too) > > > > - On "pass generate" (aka on creating a new local commit), do a "pass > > git push", and if it fails, declare that it's OK that it failed > > > > - On "pass" (password copying), if origin/master is behind local master, > > print a warning saying that I should "pass git push". (This handles > > failure from the previous item.) > > > > - On "pass" (password copying), if origin/master and master are in sync > > but origin/master hasn't been fetched in (say) 7 days, then print a > > warning saying "You should probably run 'pass git pull'." Detect the > > last fetch of origin/master by looking at the filesystem mtime of > > .git/FETCH_HEAD, e.g. on my system: > > > > $ ls -l .git/FETCH_HEAD > > -rw-r--r-- 1 paulproteus paulproteus 113 Jan 1 23:32 .git/FETCH_HEAD > > > > > > Curious what others have done! > > > > Cheers, > > > > Asheesh. > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Password-Store mailing list > > [email protected] <javascript:;> > > http://lists.zx2c4.com/mailman/listinfo/password-store > > > _______________________________________________ > Password-Store mailing list > [email protected] <javascript:;> > http://lists.zx2c4.com/mailman/listinfo/password-store > -- Jason A. Donenfeld Deep Space Explorer fr: +33 6 51 90 82 66 us: +1 513 476 1200 www.jasondonenfeld.com www.zx2c4.com zx2c4.com/keys/AB9942E6D4A4CFC3412620A749FC7012A5DE03AE.asc
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