Git: clone succeeded, but checkout failed

Have you ever faced any issues with git clone? Personally, I can’t recall any significant or memorable problems I’ve encountered while cloning remote repositories. Typically, the issues were related to authentication or network connectivity. Therefore, there was nothing particularly special to write about. However, as you work with different environments, the chances of coming across something interesting enough to share increase, even though it might be obvious to some.

Let’s take a simple example: you’re trying to clone an existing repository, which was created by someone else. The repository had already been filled out with files you need. Assuming you have credentials in place, you run git clone <repo’s url> on your Windows machine and get the following:

I hid the error message. I’ll reveal it later

What could go wrong? The cloning process succeeded, indicating that the issue is not related to Git credentials or network connectivity. However, the checkout process failed. What does this mean? It means that if you navigate to the folder of the cloned repository in the explorer, you won’t find any files written to the disk. Now, let me reveal the full error message, which is straightforward:

error: invalid path 'config/app1/application-staging.yml '
fatal: unable to checkout working tree

Found a “root cause”? There is the whitespace at the end of the filename.

However, you may wonder, since the repository was pre-created and used by other people, how did this happen? You’re correct to question that.

The reason is that Windows doesn’t support trailing space characters and automatically removes them when saving a file (you can read more about it here). On the other hand, Linux does support both leading and trailing whitespaces in filenames.

“file1.txt” and “file1.txt ” are two different files actually

Git knows about these limitations and has a special config setting to control it:

core.protectNTFS

If set to true, do not allow checkout of paths that would cause problems with the NTFS filesystem, e.g. conflict with 8.3 “short” names. Defaults to true on Windows, and false elsewhere.

The reason why other people can clone the repo without issues is that core.protectNTFS is set to false (manually or because of underlying OS)

So, to clone the repo on Windows you can use the following command:

get clone -c core.protectNTFS=false <repo url>
and now you can fix the wrong filename and sync with remote repo

As a summary, I would advise all developers and DevOps engineers to strictly avoid using trailing or leading spaces in filenames altogether. By doing so, we can eliminate the potential conflicts and issues that may arise from incompatible behaviors between different operating systems.

Announcing my GitHub repositories

Howdy, I decided to share some scripts and configuration files via GitHub. This approach has many advantages – user-friendly code (easy to read, easy to use), you can commit changes via pull requests, easier to update the code, you can follow me to instantly receive updates.

PowerShell scripts to automate application deployments

PowerShell DSC scripts to automate software configurations

Terraform and Packer configurations

  • terraform-k8s-aks: automates Azure Kubernetes and Container Registry services deployment. See the blog post.
  • terraform-globalazure-2019: source code from my session at Global Azure BootCamp 2019 Russia. The main configuration file automates deployment of VMs, availability set, load balancer, NSGs and registers VMs with Azure DevOps Deployment Group to make possible CD.
  • packer-iis: packer sample json to create a custom image in Azure. See the blog post.

Azure and Kubernetes

Miscellaneous

I will keep this post updated. If new repos added, I’ll describe them here as well. Thanks for following. Cheers.

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