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Re: Using GIT to store /etc (Or: How to make GIT store all file permission bits)

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To: <git@...>
Date: Tuesday, January 9, 2007 - 9:39 pm

I want to have a tripwire-like system checking the files to make sure that they 
haven't changed unexpectedly. the program I'm looking at notices inode as well 
as timestamp and content changed.

when you checkout a file from git will it re-write/overwrite a file that hasn't 
changed or will it realize there is no change and leave it as-is?

does this answer change if there is a trigger on checkout (to change permissions 
or otherwise manipulate the file)?

David Lang
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Messages in current thread:
Re: Using git as a general backup mechanism, Junio C Hamano, (Tue Dec 12, 7:43 pm)
Re: Using git as a general backup mechanism, Steven Grimm, (Thu Dec 14, 7:33 pm)
Re: Using git as a general backup mechanism, Junio C Hamano, (Thu Dec 14, 8:33 pm)
Re: Using git as a general backup mechanism (was Re: Using G..., Johannes Schindelin, (Tue Dec 12, 6:57 pm)
Re: Using git as a general backup mechanism (was Re: Using G..., Johannes Schindelin, (Tue Dec 12, 8:01 pm)
Re: Using GIT to store /etc (Or: How to make GIT store all f..., David Lang, (Tue Jan 9, 9:39 pm)
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