Am Dienstag, 2. Oktober 2012, 20:53:28 schrieben Sie: > Hi, > > Today I learnt that a gitlink is a commit object embedded in a tree. > However, I can't seem to be able to cat it. > > $ git ls-tree HEAD > 100644 blob 5a91f388f3648b98ae34a19ec42ba9acc7852ef4 .gitmodules > 160000 commit 8daa12004db8862b22f6c7dd244a88ac6108b194 dotfiles > $ git cat-file 8daa12004db8862b22f6c7dd244a88ac6108b194 > fatal: git cat-file 8daa12004db8862b22f6c7dd244a88ac6108b194: bad file > > Why is this? Does the object not exist in the object store at all? Correct. The tree entry is a pointer to the commit inside your submodule that shall be checked out. Obviously the submodule's commit is not part of the superproject. IOW: There are are actually 2 object stores: the superproject's and the submodule's. This tree entry makes a (perstiable) connection between the two. > Then how was it embedded in the toplevel tree object in the first > place? The .gitlink for submodules has quite some special handling associated to it. You can commit (and diff) it like any other blob. > Also, why (how) does 'git diff' give me the impression that > it's a blob? > $ git diff > diff --git a/dotfiles b/dotfiles > index 8daa120..ff61f40 160000 > --- a/dotfiles > +++ b/dotfiles > @@ -1 +1 @@ > -Subproject commit 8daa12004db8862b22f6c7dd244a88ac6108b194 > +Subproject commit ff61f40e0938024aa3b748eb733a974b17082ec2 See above. Git smartly converts the "state" of the submodule into a one line text, allowing you to "diff 2 states of the submodule" cd dotfiles git pull # pulls some updates cd .. git add dotfiles && git commit -m"Update dot files to Version xxx" git push This will record the dotfiles submodule's new HEAD SHA1 as the current one inside the superproject. When you now checkout the superproject to another location and do: a "git submodule update --init" it will clone the dotfiles submodule and checkout the exact same version that you just commited with the above commit. > If it is really a blob, I should be able to stage and unstage it > normally, but the following command is a no-op: > > $ git checkout -- dotfiles > > What is going on? Shouldn't we get rid of these ugly inconsistencies? HTH, Sascha -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html