Thank you Robert.  That did get me usable perfmon3 kernel source.

Regards,

- Corey

Corey Ashford
Software Engineer
IBM Linux Technology Center, Linux Toolchain
Beaverton, OR 
503-578-3507 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Robert Richter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 10/27/2008 05:30:59 PM:

> On 28.10.08 01:18:18, Robert Richter wrote:
> > That you did is as expected. Do this:
> > 
> >  git fetch origin # updates the remote repository
> >  git checkout -b perfmon3 origin/perfmon3 # creates a new branch 
> from perfmon3
> 
> To update your existing perfmon3 branch you could do:
> 
> If you have no local commits:
> 
>  git fetch origin
>  git checkout perfmon3
>  git reset --hard origin/perfmon3
> 
> or:
> 
>  git fetch origin perfmon3:perfmon3
> 
> With local changes you have to rebase or merge. If you plan to submit
> your patches you have to use rebase:
> 
>  git rebase origin/perfmon3 perfmon3
> 
> or
> 
>  git checkout perfmon3
>  git merge origin/perfmon3
> 
> In both cases this may result in merge conflicts. You can see them
> with git diff or git status. Edit the changes not yet in the index,
> add them with git add, then run git rebase --continue or if you do a
> merge git commit.
> 
> -Robert
> 
> -- 
> Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
> Operating System Research Center
> email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 


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