Definition: shallow git clones are just like regular clones, but do not contain any of the past commit history. It is virtually the same thing as doing a regular clone, then doing a rebase to squash all commits into a single commit. Many people who do not understand git dismiss shallow clones because they wrongly believe that shallow clones are incapable of pulling in changes going forward from the remote. This is not the case! You can still do pulls from the master remote repo in the future to update the shallow clone, just like a regular clone! Now, when doing an inital clone, we should *always* encourage PKGBUILD authors to do a shallow clone. This will save time (less downloading) and disk space (e.g., yaourt users). The savings can be hundreds of MiB for large git repos. Advanced PKGBUILD authors who need to pull in an older version of the remote repo will already have the knowledge to remove the "--depth 1" to suit their needs. This change will also help AUR packagers out there who do not understand git at all to make this change themselves. Signed-off-by: Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com> --- prototypes/PKGBUILD-git.proto | 2 +- 1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-) diff --git a/prototypes/PKGBUILD-git.proto b/prototypes/PKGBUILD-git.proto index 75edb8b..22ff371 100644 --- a/prototypes/PKGBUILD-git.proto +++ b/prototypes/PKGBUILD-git.proto @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ build() { msg "The local files are updated." cd .. else - git clone "$_gitroot" "$_gitname" + git clone --depth 1 "$_gitroot" "$_gitname" fi msg "GIT checkout done or server timeout" -- 1.7.7.1