> On 06/15, Jonathan Tan wrote:
> >
> > Supporting patterns would mean that we would possibly be able to
> > eliminate the ls-refs step, thus saving at least a RTT. (Originally I
> > thought that supporting patterns would also allow us to tolerate refs
> > being removed during the fetch process, b
On 06/15, Jonathan Tan wrote:
>
> Supporting patterns would mean that we would possibly be able to
> eliminate the ls-refs step, thus saving at least a RTT. (Originally I
> thought that supporting patterns would also allow us to tolerate refs
> being removed during the fetch process, but I see tha
[snip]
> > in which we have rarely-updated branches that we still want to fetch
> > (e.g. an annotated tag when we fetch refs/tags/* or a Gerrit
> > refs/changes/* branch), having the ref advertisement first means that we
> > can omit them from our "want" or "want-ref" list. But not having them
>
On 06/15, Jonathan Tan wrote:
> (replying to the original since my e-mail is about design)
>
> > This version of ref-in-want is a bit more restrictive than what Jonathan
> > originally proposed (only full ref names are allowed instead of globs
> > and OIDs), but it is meant to accomplish the same
(replying to the original since my e-mail is about design)
> This version of ref-in-want is a bit more restrictive than what Jonathan
> originally proposed (only full ref names are allowed instead of globs
> and OIDs), but it is meant to accomplish the same goal (solve the issues
> of refs changin
This series adds the ref-in-want feature which was originally proposed
by Jonathan Tan
(https://public-inbox.org/git/cover.1485381677.git.jonathanta...@google.com/).
Back when ref-in-want was first discussed it was decided that we should
first solve the issue of moving to a new wire format and fin
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