From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Junio C Hamano Subject: Re: Where has "git ls-remote" reference pattern matching gone? Date: Sat, 08 Dec 2007 17:34:06 -0800 Message-ID: <7vve78tzw1.fsf@gitster.siamese.dyndns.org> References: <4E5E5B1E-A303-45C9-9944-57D54FD50F80@orakel.ntnu.no> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Cc: git@vger.kernel.org, Daniel Barkalow To: Eyvind Bernhardsen X-From: git-owner@vger.kernel.org Sun Dec 09 02:34:43 2007 Return-path: Envelope-to: gcvg-git-2@gmane.org Received: from vger.kernel.org ([209.132.176.167]) by lo.gmane.org with esmtp (Exim 4.50) id 1J1B45-0003uS-O3 for gcvg-git-2@gmane.org; Sun, 09 Dec 2007 02:34:42 +0100 Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S1751502AbXLIBeU (ORCPT ); Sat, 8 Dec 2007 20:34:20 -0500 Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org id S1751392AbXLIBeU (ORCPT ); Sat, 8 Dec 2007 20:34:20 -0500 Received: from a-sasl-quonix.pobox.com ([208.72.237.25]:64731 "EHLO sasl.smtp.pobox.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1751246AbXLIBeU (ORCPT ); Sat, 8 Dec 2007 20:34:20 -0500 Received: from a-sasl-quonix (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by a-sasl-quonix.pobox.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id DCC684104; Sat, 8 Dec 2007 20:34:14 -0500 (EST) Received: from pobox.com (ip68-225-240-77.oc.oc.cox.net [68.225.240.77]) (using TLSv1 with cipher DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA (256/256 bits)) (No client certificate requested) by a-sasl-quonix.pobox.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 0F70E4101; Sat, 8 Dec 2007 20:34:10 -0500 (EST) In-Reply-To: <4E5E5B1E-A303-45C9-9944-57D54FD50F80@orakel.ntnu.no> (Eyvind Bernhardsen's message of "Sat, 8 Dec 2007 23:05:14 +0100") User-Agent: Gnus/5.110006 (No Gnus v0.6) Emacs/21.4 (gnu/linux) Sender: git-owner@vger.kernel.org Precedence: bulk List-ID: X-Mailing-List: git@vger.kernel.org Archived-At: Eyvind Bernhardsen writes: > ls-remote was recently made a builtin; was reference filtering > deliberately removed, or was it just lost in translation from the > shell script? I suspect that to be the case. Daniel, I think this is yours.