This package defines a git-remote-run command, which allows running custom commands on a git remote.
This can be used, for example, to set up the actual remote repository, as in:
$ git remote add remote-repo user@server:path/to/repo
$ git remote-run remote-repo -c '
mkdir -p $REPO_DIR
git init --bare $REPO_DIR
echo echo it works! > $REPO_DIR/hooks/update
chmod +x $REPO_DIR/hooks/update'
Initialized empty Git repository in /home/user/path/to/repo/
$ git push remote-repo master
...
remote: it works!
See git remote-run -h for more options.
git-remote-run doesn't attempt any parsing of the git remote URL on its own, nor does it make assumptions about the transport used. Instead, it relies on git's built-in ability to run commands on the remote side.
Git uses this ability in its git archive --remote=... command, to create an archive of a remote repository. We abuse this ability a little bit by sending a custom script to run as the --exec parameter.
Radek Czajka
This project is licensed under the MIT License – see the LICENSE file for details.