Hi, Robert Dailey wrote: > The documentation wasn't 100% clear on this, but I'm assuming by > "remote origin", it says that the relative URL is relative to the > actual remote *named* origin (and it is not using origin as just a > general terminology). Thanks for reporting. The remote used is the default remote that "git fetch" without further arguments would use: get_default_remote () { curr_branch=$(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD) curr_branch="${curr_branch#refs/heads/}" origin=$(git config --get "branch.$curr_branch.remote") echo ${origin:-origin} } The documentation is wrong. git-fetch(1) doesn't provide a name for this thing. Any ideas for wording? > Is there a way to specify (on a per-clone basis) which named remote > will be used to calculate the URL for submodules? Currently there isn't, short of reconfiguring the remote used by default by "git fetch". > Various co-workers use the remote named "central" instead of > "upstream" and "fork" instead of "origin" (because that just makes > more sense to them and it's perfectly valid). > > However if relative submodules require 'origin' to exist AND also > represent the upstream repository (in triangle workflow), then this > breaks on several levels. Can you explain further? In a triangle workflow, "git fetch" will pull from the 'origin' remote by default and will push to the remote named in the '[remote] pushdefault' setting (see "remote.pushdefault" in git-config(1)). So you can do [remote] pushDefault = whereishouldpush and then 'git fetch' and 'git fetch --recurse-submodules' will fetch from "origin" and 'git push' will push to the whereishouldpush remote. It might make sense to introduce a new [remote] default = whereishouldfetch setting to allow the name "origin" above to be replaced, too. Is that what you mean? Meanwhile it is hard to fork a project that uses relative submodule URLs without also forking the submodules (or, conversely, to fork some of the submodules of a project that uses absolute submodule URLs). That's a real and serious problem but I'm not sure how it relates to the names of remotes. My preferred fix involves teaching git to read a refs/meta/git (or similarly named) ref when cloning a project with submodules and let settings from .gitmodules in that ref override .gitmodules in other branches. Is that what you were referring to? Curious, Jonathan -- 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