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Welcome to GitGitGadget

Hi @pasteley, and welcome to GitGitGadget, the GitHub App to send patch series to the Git mailing list from GitHub Pull Requests.

Please make sure that either:

  • Your Pull Request has a good description, if it consists of multiple commits, as it will be used as cover letter.
  • Your Pull Request description is empty, if it consists of a single commit, as the commit message should be descriptive enough by itself.

You can CC potential reviewers by adding a footer to the PR description with the following syntax:

CC: Revi Ewer <[email protected]>, Ill Takalook <[email protected]>

NOTE: DO NOT copy/paste your CC list from a previous GGG PR's description,
because it will result in a malformed CC list on the mailing list. See
example.

Also, it is a good idea to review the commit messages one last time, as the Git project expects them in a quite specific form:

  • the lines should not exceed 76 columns,
  • the first line should be like a header and typically start with a prefix like "tests:" or "revisions:" to state which subsystem the change is about, and
  • the commit messages' body should be describing the "why?" of the change.
  • Finally, the commit messages should end in a Signed-off-by: line matching the commits' author.

It is in general a good idea to await the automated test ("Checks") in this Pull Request before contributing the patches, e.g. to avoid trivial issues such as unportable code.

Contributing the patches

Before you can contribute the patches, your GitHub username needs to be added to the list of permitted users. Any already-permitted user can do that, by adding a comment to your PR of the form /allow. A good way to find other contributors is to locate recent pull requests where someone has been /allowed:

Both the person who commented /allow and the PR author are able to /allow you.

An alternative is the channel #git-devel on the Libera Chat IRC network:

<newcontributor> I've just created my first PR, could someone please /allow me? https://github.com/gitgitgadget/git/pull/12345
<veteran> newcontributor: it is done
<newcontributor> thanks!

Once on the list of permitted usernames, you can contribute the patches to the Git mailing list by adding a PR comment /submit.

If you want to see what email(s) would be sent for a /submit request, add a PR comment /preview to have the email(s) sent to you. You must have a public GitHub email address for this. Note that any reviewers CC'd via the list in the PR description will not actually be sent emails.

After you submit, GitGitGadget will respond with another comment that contains the link to the cover letter mail in the Git mailing list archive. Please make sure to monitor the discussion in that thread and to address comments and suggestions (while the comments and suggestions will be mirrored into the PR by GitGitGadget, you will still want to reply via mail).

If you do not want to subscribe to the Git mailing list just to be able to respond to a mail, you can download the mbox from the Git mailing list archive (click the (raw) link), then import it into your mail program. If you use GMail, you can do this via:

curl -g --user "<EMailAddress>:<Password>" \
    --url "imaps://imap.gmail.com/INBOX" -T /path/to/raw.txt

To iterate on your change, i.e. send a revised patch or patch series, you will first want to (force-)push to the same branch. You probably also want to modify your Pull Request description (or title). It is a good idea to summarize the revision by adding something like this to the cover letter (read: by editing the first comment on the PR, i.e. the PR description):

Changes since v1:
- Fixed a typo in the commit message (found by ...)
- Added a code comment to ... as suggested by ...
...

To send a new iteration, just add another PR comment with the contents: /submit.

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You may also be able to find help in real time in the developer IRC channel, #git-devel on Libera Chat. Remember that IRC does not support offline messaging, so if you send someone a private message and log out, they cannot respond to you. The scrollback of #git-devel is archived, though.

@Ikke
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Ikke commented Dec 21, 2025

/allow

@gitgitgadget-git
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User pasteley is now allowed to use GitGitGadget.

WARNING: pasteley has no public email address set on GitHub; GitGitGadget needs an email address to Cc: you on your contribution, so that you receive any feedback on the Git mailing list. Go to https://github.com/settings/profile to make your preferred email public to let GitGitGadget know which email address to use.

@pasteley pasteley force-pushed the remote-branch-template branch 2 times, most recently from 66286fa to 48d8872 Compare December 21, 2025 13:55
@pasteley
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/preview

@gitgitgadget-git
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Error: Could not determine full name of pasteley

@pasteley
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/preview

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Preview email sent as [email protected]

@pasteley pasteley force-pushed the remote-branch-template branch from 48d8872 to 2772529 Compare December 21, 2025 14:17
Add checkout.remoteBranchTemplate to apply a template pattern when
searching for remote branches during checkout DWIM and when creating
remote branches with push.autoSetupRemote.

Template uses printf-style placeholders (%s for branch name). For
example, with "feature/%s", checking out "foo"
searches for "origin/feature/foo" and creates local "foo"
tracking it. Pushing with autoSetupRemote creates "origin/feature/bar"
from local "bar".

Useful when remote branches use prefixes but local branches don't.

Works with git-checkout, git-worktree --guess-remote, and git-push.

Signed-off-by: pasteley <[email protected]>
@pasteley pasteley force-pushed the remote-branch-template branch from 2772529 to 0ff8ebc Compare December 21, 2025 15:22
@pasteley
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/submit

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Submitted as [email protected]

To fetch this version into FETCH_HEAD:

git fetch https://github.com/gitgitgadget/git/ pr-git-2136/pasteley/remote-branch-template-v1

To fetch this version to local tag pr-git-2136/pasteley/remote-branch-template-v1:

git fetch --no-tags https://github.com/gitgitgadget/git/ tag pr-git-2136/pasteley/remote-branch-template-v1

@gitgitgadget-git
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On the Git mailing list, Junio C Hamano wrote (reply to this):

"Pasteley Absurda via GitGitGadget" <[email protected]> writes:

> From: pasteley <[email protected]>
>
> Add checkout.remoteBranchTemplate to apply a template pattern when
> searching for remote branches during checkout DWIM and when creating
> remote branches with push.autoSetupRemote.
>
> Template uses printf-style placeholders (%s for branch name). For
> example, with "feature/%s", checking out "foo"
> searches for "origin/feature/foo" and creates local "foo"
> tracking it. Pushing with autoSetupRemote creates "origin/feature/bar"
> from local "bar".
>
> Useful when remote branches use prefixes but local branches don't.

It fells that this is presented backwards.  The usefulness of the
layout that names local branches deliberately differently from their
remote counterparts needs to be justified first.  Only after that,
we can consider adding extra mechanism to support such a layout.


Once "git checkout foo" is taught to do the same as "git checkout -b
extra-foo -t origin/foo", it would create

	[branch "extra-foo"] 
		remote = origin
		merge = refs/heads/foo

but the push side would need extra work, and that is why you needed
to muck with the push refspec.  But then what should happen when the
user is using "we do not bother remembering what branches to push
there; the remote repository remembers that for us", aka "matching
push"?

Most of the problems is what you are creating by using an unusual
layout to name local branches differently from the remote
counterpart.  You do not have to, and then all the problems you
created with that layout goes away, without this patch.

So, I am not sure if this is a good idea to begin with.  At least, I
am not yet convinced.

Thanks.

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