"Yi, EungJun" <semtlenori@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > Hello. I am serving a git hosting service for my company. > > Sometimes I want to send a warning message to users who use my > service; e.g. the service will be shutdown tomorrow for a while > temporary. > > I know it is possible to a remote message by hooks or HTTP body if an > error occured. But it seems that there is no hooks for git-fetch and > git does not print HTTP body if there is no error. > > I want a way to response a remote message when a client send any kind > of request. Is it possible? I do not offhand know if there are such hooks, but I would imagine that I'd be mightily annoyed if I were forced to interact with such a server. I may not have a need to pull anything for a few days, working on my changes, and then I'd find out when the service is already down. I may pull many times a day, and for a few days of pre-announcement period, I'd be forced to see the same message over and over. I may have a cron job to fetch down the changes made by coworkers in other timezones while I am sleeping so that I can start my day from an up-to-date state, but it is very likely I would say "fetch --quiet" in the cron job because I want it to be quiet unless there is an error. I'd appreciate if the Gitmasters at the company sent an e-mail addressed to git-users@xxxxxxxxxxxx instead. -- 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