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1. simonw+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-11-28 11:46:44
But wouldn't that dedicated branch, pushed to origin, also work for staying synced across multiple machines?
replies(2): >>wowami+J >>amonks+pI
2. wowami+J[view] [source] 2025-11-28 11:53:59
>>simonw+(OP)
The way I understand this, when the agent runs `bd onboard` at startup, it gets the instructions from beads, which might refer to data files in the beads directory. Keeping them in sync via a separate branch would be an unnecessary overhead. Right?
replies(1): >>simonw+J1
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3. simonw+J1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-11-28 12:02:10
>>wowami+J
I don't see it as extra overhead - it just changes the git one-liner they use to push and pull their issue tracking content by a few characters.

I like the idea of keeping potentially noisy changes out of my main branch history, since I look at that all the time.

replies(1): >>wowami+W3
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4. wowami+W3[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-11-28 12:26:12
>>simonw+J1
You are right. I dug through the document some more. The setup, as mentioned for protected branches [1], should ideally work without much overhead. It does suggest merging back to main, but the FAQ also mentions that the frequency can be decided individually.

[1] https://github.com/steveyegge/beads/blob/main/docs/PROTECTED...

5. amonks+pI[view] [source] 2025-11-28 17:13:03
>>simonw+(OP)
Depends what you mean by “synced”—do you want your beads state to be coupled with commits (eg: checking out an old commit also shows you the beads state at that snapshot)? Using a separate branch would decouple this. I think the coupling is a nice feature, but it isn’t a feature that other bug trackers have, so using a separate branch would make beads more like other bugtrackers. If you see the coupling as noise, though, then it sounds like that is what you want.
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