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   1git(7)
   2======
   3
   4NAME
   5----
   6git - the stupid content tracker
   7
   8
   9SYNOPSIS
  10--------
  11'git' [--version] [--exec-path[=GIT_EXEC_PATH]] [--help] COMMAND [ARGS]
  12
  13DESCRIPTION
  14-----------
  15Git is a fast, scalable, distributed revision control system with an
  16unusually rich command set that provides both high-level operations
  17and full access to internals.
  18
  19See this link:tutorial.html[tutorial] to get started, then see
  20link:everyday.html[Everyday Git] for a useful minimum set of commands, and
  21"man git-commandname" for documentation of each command.  CVS users may
  22also want to read link:cvs-migration.html[CVS migration].
  23
  24The COMMAND is either a name of a Git command (see below) or an alias
  25as defined in the configuration file (see gitlink:git-repo-config[1]).
  26
  27OPTIONS
  28-------
  29--version::
  30        Prints the git suite version that the 'git' program came from.
  31
  32--help::
  33        Prints the synopsis and a list of the most commonly used
  34        commands.  If a git command is named this option will bring up
  35        the man-page for that command. If the option '--all' or '-a' is
  36        given then all available commands are printed.
  37
  38--exec-path::
  39        Path to wherever your core git programs are installed.
  40        This can also be controlled by setting the GIT_EXEC_PATH
  41        environment variable. If no path is given 'git' will print
  42        the current setting and then exit.
  43
  44
  45FURTHER DOCUMENTATION
  46---------------------
  47
  48See the references above to get started using git.  The following is
  49probably more detail than necessary for a first-time user.
  50
  51The <<Discussion,Discussion>> section below and the
  52link:core-tutorial.html[Core tutorial] both provide introductions to the
  53underlying git architecture.
  54
  55See also the link:howto-index.html[howto] documents for some useful
  56examples.
  57
  58GIT COMMANDS
  59------------
  60
  61We divide git into high level ("porcelain") commands and low level
  62("plumbing") commands.
  63
  64Low-level commands (plumbing)
  65-----------------------------
  66
  67Although git includes its
  68own porcelain layer, its low-level commands are sufficient to support
  69development of alternative porcelains.  Developers of such porcelains
  70might start by reading about gitlink:git-update-index[1] and
  71gitlink:git-read-tree[1].
  72
  73We divide the low-level commands into commands that manipulate objects (in
  74the repository, index, and working tree), commands that interrogate and
  75compare objects, and commands that move objects and references between
  76repositories.
  77
  78Manipulation commands
  79~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  80gitlink:git-apply[1]::
  81        Reads a "diff -up1" or git generated patch file and
  82        applies it to the working tree.
  83
  84gitlink:git-checkout-index[1]::
  85        Copy files from the index to the working tree.
  86
  87gitlink:git-commit-tree[1]::
  88        Creates a new commit object.
  89
  90gitlink:git-hash-object[1]::
  91        Computes the object ID from a file.
  92
  93gitlink:git-index-pack[1]::
  94        Build pack idx file for an existing packed archive.
  95
  96gitlink:git-init-db[1]::
  97        Creates an empty git object database, or reinitialize an
  98        existing one.
  99
 100gitlink:git-merge-index[1]::
 101        Runs a merge for files needing merging.
 102
 103gitlink:git-mktag[1]::
 104        Creates a tag object.
 105
 106gitlink:git-mktree[1]::
 107        Build a tree-object from ls-tree formatted text.
 108
 109gitlink:git-pack-objects[1]::
 110        Creates a packed archive of objects.
 111
 112gitlink:git-prune-packed[1]::
 113        Remove extra objects that are already in pack files.
 114
 115gitlink:git-read-tree[1]::
 116        Reads tree information into the index.
 117
 118gitlink:git-repo-config[1]::
 119        Get and set options in .git/config.
 120
 121gitlink:git-unpack-objects[1]::
 122        Unpacks objects out of a packed archive.
 123
 124gitlink:git-update-index[1]::
 125        Registers files in the working tree to the index.
 126
 127gitlink:git-write-tree[1]::
 128        Creates a tree from the index.
 129
 130
 131Interrogation commands
 132~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 133
 134gitlink:git-cat-file[1]::
 135        Provide content or type/size information for repository objects.
 136
 137gitlink:git-describe[1]::
 138        Show the most recent tag that is reachable from a commit.
 139
 140gitlink:git-diff-index[1]::
 141        Compares content and mode of blobs between the index and repository.
 142
 143gitlink:git-diff-files[1]::
 144        Compares files in the working tree and the index.
 145
 146gitlink:git-diff-stages[1]::
 147        Compares two "merge stages" in the index.
 148
 149gitlink:git-diff-tree[1]::
 150        Compares the content and mode of blobs found via two tree objects.
 151
 152gitlink:git-fsck-objects[1]::
 153        Verifies the connectivity and validity of the objects in the database.
 154
 155gitlink:git-ls-files[1]::
 156        Information about files in the index and the working tree.
 157
 158gitlink:git-ls-tree[1]::
 159        Displays a tree object in human readable form.
 160
 161gitlink:git-merge-base[1]::
 162        Finds as good common ancestors as possible for a merge.
 163
 164gitlink:git-name-rev[1]::
 165        Find symbolic names for given revs.
 166
 167gitlink:git-pack-redundant[1]::
 168        Find redundant pack files.
 169
 170gitlink:git-rev-list[1]::
 171        Lists commit objects in reverse chronological order.
 172
 173gitlink:git-show-index[1]::
 174        Displays contents of a pack idx file.
 175
 176gitlink:git-tar-tree[1]::
 177        Creates a tar archive of the files in the named tree object.
 178
 179gitlink:git-unpack-file[1]::
 180        Creates a temporary file with a blob's contents.
 181
 182gitlink:git-var[1]::
 183        Displays a git logical variable.
 184
 185gitlink:git-verify-pack[1]::
 186        Validates packed git archive files.
 187
 188In general, the interrogate commands do not touch the files in
 189the working tree.
 190
 191
 192Synching repositories
 193~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 194
 195gitlink:git-clone-pack[1]::
 196        Clones a repository into the current repository (engine
 197        for ssh and local transport).
 198
 199gitlink:git-fetch-pack[1]::
 200        Updates from a remote repository (engine for ssh and
 201        local transport).
 202
 203gitlink:git-http-fetch[1]::
 204        Downloads a remote git repository via HTTP by walking
 205        commit chain.
 206
 207gitlink:git-local-fetch[1]::
 208        Duplicates another git repository on a local system by
 209        walking commit chain.
 210
 211gitlink:git-peek-remote[1]::
 212        Lists references on a remote repository using
 213        upload-pack protocol (engine for ssh and local
 214        transport).
 215
 216gitlink:git-receive-pack[1]::
 217        Invoked by 'git-send-pack' to receive what is pushed to it.
 218
 219gitlink:git-send-pack[1]::
 220        Pushes to a remote repository, intelligently.
 221
 222gitlink:git-http-push[1]::
 223        Push missing objects using HTTP/DAV.
 224
 225gitlink:git-shell[1]::
 226        Restricted shell for GIT-only SSH access.
 227
 228gitlink:git-ssh-fetch[1]::
 229        Pulls from a remote repository over ssh connection by
 230        walking commit chain.
 231
 232gitlink:git-ssh-upload[1]::
 233        Helper "server-side" program used by git-ssh-fetch.
 234
 235gitlink:git-update-server-info[1]::
 236        Updates auxiliary information on a dumb server to help
 237        clients discover references and packs on it.
 238
 239gitlink:git-upload-pack[1]::
 240        Invoked by 'git-clone-pack' and 'git-fetch-pack' to push
 241        what are asked for.
 242
 243gitlink:git-upload-tar[1]::
 244        Invoked by 'git-tar-tree --remote' to return the tar
 245        archive the other end asked for.
 246
 247
 248High-level commands (porcelain)
 249-------------------------------
 250
 251We separate the porcelain commands into the main commands and some
 252ancillary user utilities.
 253
 254Main porcelain commands
 255~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 256
 257gitlink:git-add[1]::
 258        Add paths to the index.
 259
 260gitlink:git-am[1]::
 261        Apply patches from a mailbox, but cooler.
 262
 263gitlink:git-applymbox[1]::
 264        Apply patches from a mailbox, original version by Linus.
 265
 266gitlink:git-bisect[1]::
 267        Find the change that introduced a bug by binary search.
 268
 269gitlink:git-branch[1]::
 270        Create and Show branches.
 271
 272gitlink:git-checkout[1]::
 273        Checkout and switch to a branch.
 274
 275gitlink:git-cherry-pick[1]::
 276        Cherry-pick the effect of an existing commit.
 277
 278gitlink:git-clean[1]::
 279        Remove untracked files from the working tree.
 280
 281gitlink:git-clone[1]::
 282        Clones a repository into a new directory.
 283
 284gitlink:git-commit[1]::
 285        Record changes to the repository.
 286
 287gitlink:git-diff[1]::
 288        Show changes between commits, commit and working tree, etc.
 289
 290gitlink:git-fetch[1]::
 291        Download from a remote repository via various protocols.
 292
 293gitlink:git-format-patch[1]::
 294        Prepare patches for e-mail submission.
 295
 296gitlink:git-grep[1]::
 297        Print lines matching a pattern.
 298
 299gitlink:git-log[1]::
 300        Shows commit logs.
 301
 302gitlink:git-ls-remote[1]::
 303        Shows references in a remote or local repository.
 304
 305gitlink:git-merge[1]::
 306        Grand unified merge driver.
 307
 308gitlink:git-mv[1]::
 309        Move or rename a file, a directory, or a symlink.
 310
 311gitlink:git-pull[1]::
 312        Fetch from and merge with a remote repository.
 313
 314gitlink:git-push[1]::
 315        Update remote refs along with associated objects.
 316
 317gitlink:git-rebase[1]::
 318        Rebase local commits to the updated upstream head.
 319
 320gitlink:git-repack[1]::
 321        Pack unpacked objects in a repository.
 322
 323gitlink:git-rerere[1]::
 324        Reuse recorded resolution of conflicted merges.
 325
 326gitlink:git-reset[1]::
 327        Reset current HEAD to the specified state.
 328
 329gitlink:git-resolve[1]::
 330        Merge two commits.
 331
 332gitlink:git-revert[1]::
 333        Revert an existing commit.
 334
 335gitlink:git-rm[1]::
 336        Remove files from the working tree and from the index.
 337
 338gitlink:git-shortlog[1]::
 339        Summarizes 'git log' output.
 340
 341gitlink:git-show[1]::
 342        Show one commit log and its diff.
 343
 344gitlink:git-show-branch[1]::
 345        Show branches and their commits.
 346
 347gitlink:git-status[1]::
 348        Shows the working tree status.
 349
 350gitlink:git-verify-tag[1]::
 351        Check the GPG signature of tag.
 352
 353gitlink:git-whatchanged[1]::
 354        Shows commit logs and differences they introduce.
 355
 356
 357Ancillary Commands
 358~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 359Manipulators:
 360
 361gitlink:git-applypatch[1]::
 362        Apply one patch extracted from an e-mail.
 363
 364gitlink:git-archimport[1]::
 365        Import an arch repository into git.
 366
 367gitlink:git-convert-objects[1]::
 368        Converts old-style git repository.
 369
 370gitlink:git-cvsimport[1]::
 371        Salvage your data out of another SCM people love to hate.
 372
 373gitlink:git-cvsexportcommit[1]::
 374        Export a single commit to a CVS checkout.
 375
 376gitlink:git-cvsserver[1]::
 377        A CVS server emulator for git.
 378
 379gitlink:git-lost-found[1]::
 380        Recover lost refs that luckily have not yet been pruned.
 381
 382gitlink:git-merge-one-file[1]::
 383        The standard helper program to use with `git-merge-index`.
 384
 385gitlink:git-prune[1]::
 386        Prunes all unreachable objects from the object database.
 387
 388gitlink:git-quiltimport[1]::
 389        Applies a quilt patchset onto the current branch.
 390
 391gitlink:git-relink[1]::
 392        Hardlink common objects in local repositories.
 393
 394gitlink:git-svnimport[1]::
 395        Import a SVN repository into git.
 396
 397gitlink:git-sh-setup[1]::
 398        Common git shell script setup code.
 399
 400gitlink:git-symbolic-ref[1]::
 401        Read and modify symbolic refs.
 402
 403gitlink:git-tag[1]::
 404        An example script to create a tag object signed with GPG.
 405
 406gitlink:git-update-ref[1]::
 407        Update the object name stored in a ref safely.
 408
 409
 410Interrogators:
 411
 412gitlink:git-annotate[1]::
 413        Annotate file lines with commit info.
 414
 415gitlink:git-blame[1]::
 416        Blame file lines on commits.
 417
 418gitlink:git-check-ref-format[1]::
 419        Make sure ref name is well formed.
 420
 421gitlink:git-cherry[1]::
 422        Find commits not merged upstream.
 423
 424gitlink:git-count-objects[1]::
 425        Count unpacked number of objects and their disk consumption.
 426
 427gitlink:git-daemon[1]::
 428        A really simple server for git repositories.
 429
 430gitlink:git-fmt-merge-msg[1]::
 431        Produce a merge commit message.
 432
 433gitlink:git-get-tar-commit-id[1]::
 434        Extract commit ID from an archive created using git-tar-tree.
 435
 436gitlink:git-imap-send[1]::
 437        Dump a mailbox from stdin into an imap folder.
 438
 439gitlink:git-mailinfo[1]::
 440        Extracts patch and authorship information from a single
 441        e-mail message, optionally transliterating the commit
 442        message into utf-8.
 443
 444gitlink:git-mailsplit[1]::
 445        A stupid program to split UNIX mbox format mailbox into
 446        individual pieces of e-mail.
 447
 448gitlink:git-merge-tree[1]::
 449        Show three-way merge without touching index.
 450
 451gitlink:git-patch-id[1]::
 452        Compute unique ID for a patch.
 453
 454gitlink:git-parse-remote[1]::
 455        Routines to help parsing `$GIT_DIR/remotes/` files.
 456
 457gitlink:git-request-pull[1]::
 458        git-request-pull.
 459
 460gitlink:git-rev-parse[1]::
 461        Pick out and massage parameters.
 462
 463gitlink:git-send-email[1]::
 464        Send patch e-mails out of "format-patch --mbox" output.
 465
 466gitlink:git-symbolic-ref[1]::
 467        Read and modify symbolic refs.
 468
 469gitlink:git-stripspace[1]::
 470        Filter out empty lines.
 471
 472
 473Commands not yet documented
 474---------------------------
 475
 476gitlink:gitk[1]::
 477        The gitk repository browser.
 478
 479
 480Configuration Mechanism
 481-----------------------
 482
 483Starting from 0.99.9 (actually mid 0.99.8.GIT), `.git/config` file
 484is used to hold per-repository configuration options.  It is a
 485simple text file modelled after `.ini` format familiar to some
 486people.  Here is an example:
 487
 488------------
 489#
 490# A '#' or ';' character indicates a comment.
 491#
 492
 493; core variables
 494[core]
 495        ; Don't trust file modes
 496        filemode = false
 497
 498; user identity
 499[user]
 500        name = "Junio C Hamano"
 501        email = "junkio@twinsun.com"
 502
 503------------
 504
 505Various commands read from the configuration file and adjust
 506their operation accordingly.
 507
 508
 509Identifier Terminology
 510----------------------
 511<object>::
 512        Indicates the object name for any type of object.
 513
 514<blob>::
 515        Indicates a blob object name.
 516
 517<tree>::
 518        Indicates a tree object name.
 519
 520<commit>::
 521        Indicates a commit object name.
 522
 523<tree-ish>::
 524        Indicates a tree, commit or tag object name.  A
 525        command that takes a <tree-ish> argument ultimately wants to
 526        operate on a <tree> object but automatically dereferences
 527        <commit> and <tag> objects that point at a <tree>.
 528
 529<type>::
 530        Indicates that an object type is required.
 531        Currently one of: `blob`, `tree`, `commit`, or `tag`.
 532
 533<file>::
 534        Indicates a filename - almost always relative to the
 535        root of the tree structure `GIT_INDEX_FILE` describes.
 536
 537Symbolic Identifiers
 538--------------------
 539Any git command accepting any <object> can also use the following
 540symbolic notation:
 541
 542HEAD::
 543        indicates the head of the current branch (i.e. the
 544        contents of `$GIT_DIR/HEAD`).
 545
 546<tag>::
 547        a valid tag 'name'
 548        (i.e. the contents of `$GIT_DIR/refs/tags/<tag>`).
 549
 550<head>::
 551        a valid head 'name'
 552        (i.e. the contents of `$GIT_DIR/refs/heads/<head>`).
 553
 554
 555File/Directory Structure
 556------------------------
 557
 558Please see link:repository-layout.html[repository layout] document.
 559
 560Read link:hooks.html[hooks] for more details about each hook.
 561
 562Higher level SCMs may provide and manage additional information in the
 563`$GIT_DIR`.
 564
 565
 566Terminology
 567-----------
 568Please see link:glossary.html[glossary] document.
 569
 570
 571Environment Variables
 572---------------------
 573Various git commands use the following environment variables:
 574
 575The git Repository
 576~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 577These environment variables apply to 'all' core git commands. Nb: it
 578is worth noting that they may be used/overridden by SCMS sitting above
 579git so take care if using Cogito etc.
 580
 581'GIT_INDEX_FILE'::
 582        This environment allows the specification of an alternate
 583        index file. If not specified, the default of `$GIT_DIR/index`
 584        is used.
 585
 586'GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY'::
 587        If the object storage directory is specified via this
 588        environment variable then the sha1 directories are created
 589        underneath - otherwise the default `$GIT_DIR/objects`
 590        directory is used.
 591
 592'GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES'::
 593        Due to the immutable nature of git objects, old objects can be
 594        archived into shared, read-only directories. This variable
 595        specifies a ":" separated list of git object directories which
 596        can be used to search for git objects. New objects will not be
 597        written to these directories.
 598
 599'GIT_DIR'::
 600        If the 'GIT_DIR' environment variable is set then it
 601        specifies a path to use instead of the default `.git`
 602        for the base of the repository.
 603
 604git Commits
 605~~~~~~~~~~~
 606'GIT_AUTHOR_NAME'::
 607'GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL'::
 608'GIT_AUTHOR_DATE'::
 609'GIT_COMMITTER_NAME'::
 610'GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL'::
 611        see gitlink:git-commit-tree[1]
 612
 613git Diffs
 614~~~~~~~~~
 615'GIT_DIFF_OPTS'::
 616'GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF'::
 617        see the "generating patches" section in :
 618        gitlink:git-diff-index[1];
 619        gitlink:git-diff-files[1];
 620        gitlink:git-diff-tree[1]
 621
 622Discussion[[Discussion]]
 623------------------------
 624include::README[]
 625
 626Authors
 627-------
 628* git's founding father is Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>.
 629* The current git nurse is Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>.
 630* The git potty was written by Andres Ericsson <ae@op5.se>.
 631* General upbringing is handled by the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
 632
 633Documentation
 634--------------
 635The documentation for git suite was started by David Greaves
 636<david@dgreaves.com>, and later enhanced greatly by the
 637contributors on the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
 638
 639GIT
 640---
 641Part of the gitlink:git[7] suite
 642