On Fri, Sep 20, 2013 at 07:38:17AM +0200, Francis Moreau wrote: > I'm using notes in my project. I'm wondering if it's possible to save > the state of the notes when I'm releasing/tagging a new version of my > project so I can restore the saved notes state if I checkout back the > old release. > > Therefore I would be able to inspect notes (which may have been > removed or modified after the release) as they were when the release > happened. The notes are stored as git trees, so you can point a "tag" ref at a particular state, just as you would with a normal branch. The "git tag" command expects to create refs under "refs/tags", whereas "git notes" expects to find notes under "refs/notes". The simplest thing is to just use "git update-ref" rather than "git tag" to create the pointer. Like: $ git update-ref refs/notes/v1.0 refs/notes/commits and then you can always view the v1.0 notes as: $ git --notes=v1.0 log You can even set the notes.displayRef config to always show v1.0 notes when they are available for a commit. Though if they are a subset of the current notes, you would expect to see duplicates. Depending on what you are storing in your notes, you may want to clean out your notes tree after the release. -Peff -- 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