I have the impression that the underlying model of a git repository is made
of a .git archive plus a work
directory in which (some version of, e.g. the latest) the files are
present. I.e. at least one version of
the files are stored twice.
E.g. suppose I create a new project and initialize git
On Wednesday, July 11, 2012 11:35:11 AM UTC+5:30, Thomas Ferris Nicolaisen
wrote:
ok still no luck, i've cloned the tree to my local hard disk running
ubuntu in vmplayer on windows.
i see the performance has become worse, now git status it is taking
more than
two minutes. this is a
So to reproduce what I have done besides reinstalling a bunch of times:
- I have uninstalled Git and all its GUI frontends from the system that I
have installed (git extensions, github for windows etc ect)
- I have deleted *GIT_SSH * environmental variable
- uninstalled whole putty package
-
On Friday, July 13, 2012 1:48:06 PM UTC+2, Patryk Małek wrote:
So to reproduce what I have done besides reinstalling a bunch of times:
- I have uninstalled Git and all its GUI frontends from the system that I
have installed (git extensions, github for windows etc ect)
- I have deleted
On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 5:38 AM, Angelo Borsotti
angelo.borso...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I guess that a tarball would be the distro of the project, i.e. what is
deployed,
while a released project should contain the .git repo, with all the history
in it
so as to let future developers have all
*احلي شات عربي*
*مجانا بكاميرات من
هنــاhttp://online-edu2all.blogspot.com/2012/07/e-learning-based-computer.html
*
*http://online-edu2all.blogspot.com/2012/07/e-learning-based-computer.html*
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