On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 01:05:54PM +0200, SZEDER Gábor wrote: > The initial fetch during a clone doesn't transfer refs matching > additional fetch refspecs given on the command line as configuration > variables. This contradicts to the documentation stating that Minor gramm-o: s/to the/the/ > @@ -989,6 +994,10 @@ int cmd_clone(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) > strbuf_reset(&value); > > remote = remote_get(option_origin); > + REALLOC_ARRAY(remote->fetch, remote->fetch_refspec_nr + 1); > + memcpy(remote->fetch+remote->fetch_refspec_nr, refspec, > + sizeof(*refspec)); Here we append to remote->fetch. We are assuming then that remote->fetch_refspec has already been parsed into remote->fetch. Which I think it always is by remote_get(), but given that it lazy-parses in some cases, it feels a little dangerous. I also notice that you don't touch remote->fetch_refspec_nr, nor fetch_refspec_alloc. So the remote struct doesn't actually know about this entry. It would probably be wrong if you _did_ update them, because remote->fetch_refspec (the list of refspec strings) would not have a matching entry, and would potentially access uninitialized memory. I think the whole thing would be a lot less messy if "struct remote" let you add a new refspec (as a string) after the initial parse, and it would handle the details. Just making the existing add_fetch_refspec() public isn't quite enough, because you'd need to invalidate and re-parse the matching "fetch" array, too. Something like: diff --git a/remote.c b/remote.c index 9c8912ab1..0881ed32c 100644 --- a/remote.c +++ b/remote.c @@ -2319,3 +2319,17 @@ void apply_push_cas(struct push_cas_option *cas, for (ref = remote_refs; ref; ref = ref->next) apply_cas(cas, remote, ref); } + +void remote_add_fetch_refspec(struct remote *remote, const char *refspec) +{ + add_fetch_refspec(remote, refspec); + if (remote->fetch) { + struct refspec *parsed; + + parsed = parse_refspec_internal(1, &refspec, 1, 0); + REALLOC_ARRAY(remote->fetch, remote->fetch_refspec_nr); + remote->fetch[remote->fetch_refspec_nr - 1] = *parsed; + /* Not free_refspec, as we copied its pointers above */ + free(parsed); + } +} That feels a bit dirty, too, but at least it's not reaching across module boundaries. I think the cleanest thing would be to actually add it to the config before calling remote_get(). I think in the earlier discussion you mentioned there are some ordering problems with writing out the new on-disk config. But could we add it to the temporary environment, like: strbuf_addf(&key, "remote.%s.fetch=%s", option_origin, refspec_pattern); git_config_push_parameter(key.buf); ? Come to think of it, though, I thought the reason we weren't using remote_get() in the first place is that some code paths (like single-branch) needed to actually get the remote ref list before we knew the refspec? So how does this approach work at all? :) I guess that doesn't apply here. We always feed the transport code with a broad refspec, and then narrow it down later. It's only that we can't write the final config to disk until we've computed the correct branch based on the remote refs. gotten the branch. If all that's correct, then I think the push_parameter() thing would work. It does feel like a round-a-bout way to solve the problem, but it's at least manipulating solid, public APIs. -Peff