When I cloned a remote repository, I used the following command-
git clone -b mybranch --single-branch git://sub.domain.com/repo.git
After
Note that:
git branch --list, by default, lists local branches, not remote ones (git branch -r): you can create local branches after those remote ones in order to "see other branches".git branch -l only lists local branches as a side-effect:It is not the same as git branch --list, and '-l' will be deprecated with Git 2.19 (Q3 2019).
The "-l" option in "git branch -l" is an unfortunate short-hand for
"--create-reflog", but many users, both old and new, somehow expect
it to be something else, perhaps "--list".
This step warns when "-l" is used as a short-hand for "--create-reflog" and warns about the future repurposing of the it when it is used.
See commit 055930b, commit 7687f19, commit 6b15595 (22 Jun 2018) by Jeff King (peff).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster -- in commit d18602f, 18 Jul 2018)
branch: deprecate "-l" optionThe "
-l" option is short for "--create-reflog". This has caused much confusion over the years.
Most people expect it to work as "--list", because that would match the other "mode" options like-d/--deleteand-m/--move, as well as the similar-l/--listoption ofgit-tag.Adding to the confusion, using "
-l" appears to work as "--list" in some cases:$ git branch -l * masterbecause the branch command defaults to listing (so even trying to specify
--listin the command above is redundant).
But that may bite the user later when they add a pattern, like:$ git branch -l foowhich does not return an empty list, but in fact creates a new branch (with a reflog, naturally) called "foo".
It's also probably quite uncommon for people to actually use "
-l" to create a reflog. Since 0bee591 (Enable reflogs by default in any repository with a working directory., 2006-12-14 Git v1.5.0), this is the default in non-bare repositories.
So it's rather unfortunate that the feature squats on the short-and-sweet "-l" (which was only added in 3a4b3f2 (Create/delete branch ref logs., 2006-05-19, Git v1.4.0), meaning there were only 7 months where it was actually useful).Let's deprecate "
-l" in hopes of eventually re-purposing it to "--list".
With Git 2.20 (Q2 2018), -l is officially short for --list.
See commit 94a1380 (30 Aug 2018), and commit a15d598 (22 Jun 2018) by Jeff King (peff).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster -- in commit 7dc341c, 17 Sep 2018)