Honor --depth during repo init

If a user is asking for a shallow clone of the repos, they probably
expect a shallow clone of the manifest repo too. For very large
manifest repos, this can be a huge space and time savings. For one real-world
repo, a 'repo init --no-tags --current-branch' used 350MB of disk space and
took 7 minutes. Adding --depth 1 and this change reduced it to 10MB and 2.5
minutes.

Change-Id: I6fa662e174e623ede8861efc862ce26d65d4958d
1 file changed
tree: d778df2591fccac94717a17b43fb6d7bd8520075
  1. docs/
  2. hooks/
  3. subcmds/
  4. tests/
  5. .flake8
  6. .gitattributes
  7. .gitignore
  8. .mailmap
  9. .project
  10. .pydevproject
  11. color.py
  12. command.py
  13. COPYING
  14. editor.py
  15. error.py
  16. event_log.py
  17. git_command.py
  18. git_config.py
  19. git_refs.py
  20. git_ssh
  21. gitc_utils.py
  22. main.py
  23. manifest_xml.py
  24. pager.py
  25. platform_utils.py
  26. platform_utils_win32.py
  27. progress.py
  28. project.py
  29. pyversion.py
  30. README.md
  31. repo
  32. SUBMITTING_PATCHES.md
  33. trace.py
  34. wrapper.py
README.md

repo

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.