If there are tags in the remote repository, I'm usually getting them automatically when pulling. When I delete the created local tag (git tag -d <tag-name>) and pull, the deleted tag will be recreated. I can delete remote branches/tags (git push <remote-branch/tag-name>:<branch/tag-name>), but how can I detect that the local tag was created by fetching a remote tag?

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If you're in a friendly place, the tags would be annotaed, and the ones you've fetched from elsewhere would generally have authors that aren't you. – Jefromi Mar 31 '11 at 16:14
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2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

If you're annoyed about these tags being recreated when you run git pull, you turn off the fetching of tags by default with the remote.<remote-name>.tagopt config setting. e.g. if the remote is origin, then you can do:

git config remote.origin.tagopt --no-tags

Update: to address your comment, the reason that I suggest this is that there's not an obvious way to tell the difference between a tag that was created locally and one that was fetched from a remote. There's also no reflog for tags. So, my suggestion is to suppress automatic fetching of tags - you can then fetch them yourself into a different namespace. For example, you could do:

git fetch origin +refs/tags/*:refs/tags/origin/*

... and perhaps create an alias for that. Then when you want to fetch tags, they'll be named, for example, refs/tags/origin/tag1 instead of refs/tags/tag1.


If you want this to happen automatically, you could change your .git/config to list multiple refspecs for fetching, e.g.:

 [remote "origin"]
      url = whoever@whereever:whatever.git
      fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
      fetch = +refs/tags/*:refs/tags/origin/*

... which is suggested in Pro Git.

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I don't want to turn off fetching tags, I want to detect whether a locally available tag was created by fetching or manually. – Mike L. Mar 31 '11 at 12:23
@mklhmnn: my idea was that you can suppress automatic fetching of tags, and then when you want the remote tags, fetch them into a different namespace. I've updated my answer with an example. – Mark Longair Mar 31 '11 at 12:48
@Mark: I find the approach much to the point than mine, separating tags by namespace on fetch. I would +1, but I already did before your edit ;) – VonC Mar 31 '11 at 13:33
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Alternatively, you could simply create local tags in a different namespace. – Jefromi Mar 31 '11 at 16:28
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@mklhmnn: yes, it sounds like it. Sorry... – Mark Longair Mar 31 '11 at 21:34
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a tag isn't "local" or "remote": it is associated to a commit, which can part of multiple branches, including ones in the remotes namespace.

Get tag SHA1 of the commit referenced by a tag

git show -s 'TAG_NAME^{commit}' --format='%H'

, and do a :

git branch -a --contains SHA1

If you see

 remotes/aRemoteRepoName/aBranch

you know that tag references a commit you have fetched from a remote repo.

As Chris mentions:

git branch -a --contains TAGNAME

will dereference the tag and gives the answer in one go.

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Why not all in one command: git branch -a --contains 'TAG_NAME^{commit}? – Chris Johnsen Mar 31 '11 at 7:35
Thinking about it some more, --contains will automatically dereference the named object, so there is no need to manually specify the dereferencing either. Simply git branch -a --contains TAG_NAME works as expected. – Chris Johnsen Mar 31 '11 at 7:42
@Chris: good point, I have included it in the answer. – VonC Mar 31 '11 at 8:02
I don't want to know whether a tag is located in the history of a branch, I want to know whether the tag was created by fetch or manually. – Mike L. Mar 31 '11 at 12:20
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