Force Git submodules to always stay current
As I mention in "git submodule tracking latest", you can since git 1.8.2 (March 2013) make a submodule track the HEAD of branch:
git submodule add -b <branch> <repository> [<path>]
A submodule SHA1 is still recorded in the parent repo as a gitlink (special entry in the index)
But a git submodule update --remote
will update that entry to the SHA1 matching the HEAD of a branch of the submodule remote repo.
If you have an existing submodule, you can make it follow a branch with:
cd /path/to/your/parent/repo
git config -f .gitmodules submodule.<path>.branch <branch>
cd path/to/your/submodule
git checkout -b branch --track origin/branch
# if the master branch already exist:
git branch -u origin/master master
cd /path/to/your/parent/repo
git add path/to/your/submodule
git commit -m "Make submodule tracking a branch"
UPDATE: As of git 1.8.2, there seems to be a solution. Please see VonC's answer down below. The original answer is left here for the users of git < 1.8.2.
No, and this is by design. If there were a way to point a submodule to the "current head" of some other repository, then it would be impossible to retrieve a historical version (such as a tagged version) from the main repository. It wouldn't know which version of the submodule to check out.
Having said that, you may be interested in the git subtree script. This offers a different way of working with submodules that may be more compatible with your workflow. I was just reminded of this by the recent post on HN.