Here is my situation:
- I'm working in a repo with 40+ submodules
git status
andgit submodule update
take a LONG time (submodule update is several minutes)- If I checkout a different commit and only a couple submodules have been changed, I can see the submodules that need updating using
git status
, then skip the long wait of a fullgit submodule update
by doing
git submodule update <submodule path> <submodule path>
This will only update the submodules listed, taking only a few seconds
Is there a way to have git submodule update
only update the modules that actually need it, instead of every one? I don't mind listing out a couple submodules manually, but when there's 6+, it'd be nice for git to somehow use the git status
result to only run git submodule update
on the ones that need it.
Does anyone know of any git command tricks I can do to achieve this and speed up my submodule updates? If not, is there a trick I can use to make a bash script to extract the necessary information from git status
and build & run a git submodule update <> <> <>
command for me?
Bonus: is there a way to achieve a similar result on submodules that have had their content modified? That is, the submodule needs to be git reset --hard HEAD
, not checked out to a new commit. But doing this without entering EVERY submodule, such as git submodule foreach git reset --hard HEAD
, only ones that need it?
Example git status --porcelain
$ git status --porcelain
M ABC
M XYZ
M XXX
M YYY
M FOO/BAR