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[[!comment format=mdwn
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username="http://www.joachim-breitner.de/"
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nickname="nomeata"
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subject="comment 9"
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date="2011-12-19T22:56:26Z"
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content="""
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Another option that would please the naive user without hindering the more advanced user: \"git annex init\", by default, creates a synced/master branch. \"git annex sync\" will pull from every <remote>/sync/master branch it finds, and also push to any <remote>/sync/master branch it finds, but will not create any. So by default (at least for new users), this provides simple one-step syncing.
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Advanced users can disable this per-repo by just deleting the synced/master branch. Presumably the logic will be: Every repo that should not be pushed to, because it has access to some central repo, should not have a synced/master branch. Every other repo, including the (or one of the few) central repos, will have the branch.
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This is not the most expressive solution, as it does not allow configuring syncing between arbitrary pairs of repos, but it feels like a good compromise between that and simplicity and transparency.
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I think it's about time that I provide less talk and more code. I’ll see when I find the time :-)
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"""]]
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