The git-clone manual page, both [1] and my local copy coming with Git for Windows 1.8.1, say about the --depth command-line option: --depth <depth> Create a shallow clone with a history truncated to the specified number of revisions. A shallow repository has a number of limitations (you cannot clone or fetch from it, nor push from nor into it), but is adequate if you are only interested in the recent history of a large project with a long history, and would want to send in fixes as patches. But having done a shallow clone (--depth=1) of one of my repositories, I was able to record a new commit, push it out to a "reference" bare repository and then fetch back to another clone of the same repository just fine. I have then killed my test commit doing a forced push from another clone and subsequently was able to do `git fetch` in my shallow clone just fine. So I observe pushing/fetching works OK at least for a simple case like this one. Hence I'd like to ask: if the manual page is wrong or I'm observing some corner case? -- 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