Dear Git Developers, First of all, thanks for this great project, it has made my life a lot easier as a developer! I'm writing this email to suggest some improvements to git submodules. In my eyes how git handles submodules could be improved to be more intuitive to a novice and require less manual management. Right now updating a submodule in a topic branch and merging it into master will not change the submodule index in master leading to at least two commit for the same change (one in any active branch). This happened to me quite a few times. To a newcomer this behavior is confusing and it leads to unnecessary commits. The proposed change would be to have a submodule either ignored or tracked by the .gitmodules file. If it is ignored, as for instance after a clone of the superproject, git simply ignores all files in the submodule directory. The content of the gitmodules file is then also not updated by git. If it is not ignored, the .gitmodules is updated every time a commit happens in the submodule. On branch switches the revision shown in the gitmodules from that branch is checked out. This change would have submodules conceptually behave more like files to the superproject. Like current behavior, git status would display whether the submodule has uncommitted changes or is at a new commit. A repository is in a dirty state if there are changes to the gitmodules file or any tracked submodule is in a dirty state. Every time a commit happens in a submodule, the parents gitmodules is updated. Uncommitted changes are not reflected in the parent's gitmodules file. When the user manually edits the .gitmodules, git switches to that revision after commit. But the user would have to stash or commit all uncommitted changes in the submodule first. When checking out a commit in a submodule, if there is currently a branch pointing to that commit, HEAD could point to that branch instead (Is there a case where that doesn't make sense? What about multiple branches pointing to the commit?). It could also support branch names as references where the branch (or tag) would be checked out instead. With git submodule init you could have the submodule tracked. Using deinit would put the submodule into the ignored state. And while we're at it, it is quite some work to completely delete a submodule. You have to manually remove all the associated files in the git repository (StackOverflow lists 7 steps). Obviously it's not encouraged, as everything that removes data without recovery method, but it should be possible. git submodule rm --force could remove the repository and the associated nested .git tree. git submodule rm could keep the .git directory but move it to another location. The behavior of git submodule sync and git submodule update would stay the same. Migrating existing repositories to the new behavior should be quite straight forward. Submodules that are not init'ed yet would be ignored. All others behave accordingly to the new rules. Maybe a message with a note about the changes could be displayed by the appropriate git-submodule commands or even by git status. An alternative considered was to have submodules decoupled stronger from the superproject. That would mean having the .gitmodules only tracked by master and leaving the other behaviors unchanged. For consistency one could do the same thing for the .gitignore. The drawback of this option are obviously no per branch submodules, if you want to experiment with external libraries, topic branches would not be the place to go. Also there would be a lot of intricacies that would have to be worked out. I couldn't find any discussions on the initial implementation of git-submodule or any previous proposals related to this in nature due to gmane being down right now and the mailing list archives on the other sites are not great for searching. So please excuse me if I'm bringing up already discussed stuff. Until now I only worked on projects with few submodules. I expect the proposed changes to have a larger effect on projects containing lots of submodules. So it would be nice if maybe somebody with experience working on projects with lots of submodules could weigh into the discussion. Best Regards, Alexander Hedges -- 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