Whenever a repository is cloned, author information (user.email, user.name, user.signingkey) is set according defined patterns. No longer pushing commits with your corporate email address by accident.
In case you do not already have a git template directory, create and register one:
mkdir -p ~/.git-templates/hooks
git config --global init.templatedir ~/.git-templatesCopy the file "post-checkout" to your registered git template directory:
git clone https://github.com/DrVanScott/git-clone-init.git /tmp/git-clone-init
cp /tmp/git-clone-init/post-checkout ~/.git-templates/hooks/Copy a configuration template:
cp /tmp/git-clone-init/.git-clone-init ~/You can use the file ".git-clone-init" as a starting point. Keep in mind to create a pattern for each protocol you are using, normally ssh and https.
Example:
case "$url" in
*@github.com:* ) email="my-public@email"; name="public name"; gpgid="GPG ID";;
*//github.com/* ) email="my-public@email"; name="public name"; gpgid="GPG ID";;
*@corp.com:* ) email="my-corporate@email"; name="real name"; gpgid="GPG same/other ID";;
*//corp.com/* ) email="my-corporate@email"; name="real name"; gpgid="GPG same/other ID";;
esacJust do a normal "git clone" as usual.
git-clone-init won't work if you clone using "-n" or clone an empty repository.