Thanks to everybody for your help.
I will setup an alias to always use "git push --thin".
For the reverse direction, I don't see a --thin for "git pull",
My understanding is that "git pull" is optimal,
and does what --thin does for push anyway, right?
On 10/31/08, Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org> wrote:
quoted text > On Fri, 31 Oct 2008, Matthieu Moy wrote:
>
>> Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> writes:
>>
>> > Thanassis Tsiodras wrote:
>> >
>> >> So I have to git-gc on my side (after the commits), git-gc on the
>> >> remote,
>> >> and then git-push?
>> >
>> > Perhaps I haven't made myself clear.
>> >
>> > On the local side: git-commit creates loose (compressed, but not
>> > deltified) objects. git-gc packs and deltifies.
>> >
>> > On the remote side (for smart protocols, i.e. git and ssh): git
>> > creates _thin_ pack, deltified;
>>
>> I don't understand this point: the OP talks about pushing, so isn't
>> the pack created on the _local_ machine (and then sent to the remote)?
>
> Yes, the pack is created on the fly when pushing, regardless if the repo
> is already packed or not locally. The only difference a locally packed
> repo provides is a shorter "Compressing objects" phase when pushing
> that's all. The packedness of the remote has no effect at all.
>
>
> Nicolas
>
--
What I gave, I have; what I spent, I had; what I kept, I lost. -Old Epitaph
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