commit | 31990f009719730c8be9d33b8d6cc94048f6d54b | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com> | Mon Feb 17 01:35:18 2020 -0500 |
committer | Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com> | Tue Feb 18 03:31:33 2020 +0000 |
tree | 369ca676378b902dba89918a0a0bca7103892301 | |
parent | 16f2fae16f37d0ff77c7ba1ba58ccca036f6358b [diff] |
project: move successful fetch output behind verbose Syncing projects works fine the majority of the time. So rather than dump all of that noisy output to stdout, lets capture it and only show when things fail or in verbose mode. This tidies up the default `repo sync` output. Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11293 Change-Id: I8314dd92e1e6aadeb26e36a8c92610da419684e6 Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255413 Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net> Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
Repo is a tool built on top of Git. Repo helps manage many Git repositories, does the uploads to revision control systems, and automates parts of the development workflow. Repo is not meant to replace Git, only to make it easier to work with Git. The repo command is an executable Python script that you can put anywhere in your path.
Many distros include repo, so you might be able to install from there.
# Debian/Ubuntu. $ sudo apt-get install repo # Gentoo. $ sudo emerge dev-vcs/repo
You can install it manually as well as it's a single script.
$ mkdir -p ~/.bin $ PATH="${HOME}/.bin:${PATH}" $ curl https://storage.googleapis.com/git-repo-downloads/repo > ~/.bin/repo $ chmod a+rx ~/.bin/repo