On August 26, 2019 11:28 AM, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> "Randall S. Becker" <[email protected]> writes:
> 
> >> Sometimes I clone a repo just to grep for an error string and then I
> >> don't need it anymore, or I clone several repos until I find the one
> >> that contains what I want and delete the rest. Sometimes I want to
> >> write a patch for some software I don't develop regularly so I don't
need
> to keep a clone of it.
> >>
> >> In any case, it would be useful to know the reason those files are
> >> read-only in the first place. Do you guys know who might know?
> >
> > Why don't you wrap your clone in a script that calls chmod -R u+w .git
> > after the clone? This seems like a pretty trivial approach regardless
> > of your workflow. This works in Linux, Mac, Windows (under
> > cygwin-bash) and anything else POSIX-ish.
> 
> But on anything POSIX-ish, is it a problem for some files (but not any
> directory) in .git is made read-only?

Not for me or anyone I personally support. As I suggested to Albert,
wrapping a clone in a script with a chmod would solve the problem with
minimal work.

My own personal issue is convincing people not to clone for every topic
branch, but that's unrelated.

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