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After some trial and error I noticed that links created with mklink /D Foo ..\..\Bar\Baz\Foo (pointing to a another file in the same repo) can be commited and cloned without issues even on macOS. Unfortunately when this particular link points to a submodule, then Windows behaves odd when cloning. The reason is most likely, that the links stored in the repo are pulled before cloning the submodules. Since the links point nowhere at this particular time they are broken and will stay broken even after the submodule has been cloned.

One workaround is to del the particular link and git checkout -- * to restore it in a working state. However I'd like to refrain from doing this manually and I'd like to know whether there is any other way. Something like forcing the submodules to be pulled before the repo itself maybe?

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However I'd like to refrain from doing this manually

You could implement some kind of post-clone hook, like the one presented in the GitHub project.

  • Advantage: you can then script in that hook the deletion/recreation of the buggy symlink.
  • Inconvenient: that is a local configuration, meaning anyone else must do the same locally to automate that process.
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  • Please fix kind of post-clone hook link.
    – phd
    Aug 13, 2018 at 5:00
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    For my CI pipeline I just added rd /s /q Assets\Plugins followed by git checkout -- * to recreate the links accordingly. Regarding local repositories I definitely will need to write and add a hook into the repository and some kind of install script to get it hooked up locally. Aug 13, 2018 at 10:23

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