contrib / subtree / git-subtree.txton commit Merge branch 'pb/stash-refuse-to-kill' (d26792a)
   1git-subtree(1)
   2==============
   3
   4NAME
   5----
   6git-subtree - Merge subtrees together and split repository into subtrees
   7
   8
   9SYNOPSIS
  10--------
  11[verse]
  12'git subtree' add   -P <prefix> <refspec>
  13'git subtree' add   -P <prefix> <repository> <refspec>
  14'git subtree' pull  -P <prefix> <repository> <refspec...>
  15'git subtree' push  -P <prefix> <repository> <refspec...>
  16'git subtree' merge -P <prefix> <commit>
  17'git subtree' split -P <prefix> [OPTIONS] [<commit>]
  18
  19
  20DESCRIPTION
  21-----------
  22Subtrees allow subprojects to be included within a subdirectory
  23of the main project, optionally including the subproject's
  24entire history.
  25
  26For example, you could include the source code for a library
  27as a subdirectory of your application.
  28
  29Subtrees are not to be confused with submodules, which are meant for
  30the same task. Unlike submodules, subtrees do not need any special
  31constructions (like .gitmodule files or gitlinks) be present in
  32your repository, and do not force end-users of your
  33repository to do anything special or to understand how subtrees
  34work. A subtree is just a subdirectory that can be
  35committed to, branched, and merged along with your project in
  36any way you want.
  37
  38They are also not to be confused with using the subtree merge
  39strategy. The main difference is that, besides merging
  40the other project as a subdirectory, you can also extract the
  41entire history of a subdirectory from your project and make it
  42into a standalone project. Unlike the subtree merge strategy
  43you can alternate back and forth between these
  44two operations. If the standalone library gets updated, you can
  45automatically merge the changes into your project; if you
  46update the library inside your project, you can "split" the
  47changes back out again and merge them back into the library
  48project.
  49
  50For example, if a library you made for one application ends up being
  51useful elsewhere, you can extract its entire history and publish
  52that as its own git repository, without accidentally
  53intermingling the history of your application project.
  54
  55[TIP]
  56In order to keep your commit messages clean, we recommend that
  57people split their commits between the subtrees and the main
  58project as much as possible.  That is, if you make a change that
  59affects both the library and the main application, commit it in
  60two pieces.  That way, when you split the library commits out
  61later, their descriptions will still make sense.  But if this
  62isn't important to you, it's not *necessary*.  git subtree will
  63simply leave out the non-library-related parts of the commit
  64when it splits it out into the subproject later.
  65
  66
  67COMMANDS
  68--------
  69add::
  70        Create the <prefix> subtree by importing its contents
  71        from the given <refspec> or <repository> and remote <refspec>.
  72        A new commit is created automatically, joining the imported
  73        project's history with your own.  With '--squash', imports
  74        only a single commit from the subproject, rather than its
  75        entire history.
  76
  77merge::
  78        Merge recent changes up to <commit> into the <prefix>
  79        subtree.  As with normal 'git merge', this doesn't
  80        remove your own local changes; it just merges those
  81        changes into the latest <commit>.  With '--squash',
  82        creates only one commit that contains all the changes,
  83        rather than merging in the entire history.
  84
  85        If you use '--squash', the merge direction doesn't
  86        always have to be forward; you can use this command to
  87        go back in time from v2.5 to v2.4, for example.  If your
  88        merge introduces a conflict, you can resolve it in the
  89        usual ways.
  90        
  91pull::
  92        Exactly like 'merge', but parallels 'git pull' in that
  93        it fetches the given commit from the specified remote
  94        repository.
  95        
  96push::
  97        Does a 'split' (see below) using the <prefix> supplied
  98        and then does a 'git push' to push the result to the 
  99        repository and refspec. This can be used to push your
 100        subtree to different branches of the remote repository.
 101
 102split::
 103        Extract a new, synthetic project history from the
 104        history of the <prefix> subtree.  The new history
 105        includes only the commits (including merges) that
 106        affected <prefix>, and each of those commits now has the
 107        contents of <prefix> at the root of the project instead
 108        of in a subdirectory.  Thus, the newly created history
 109        is suitable for export as a separate git repository.
 110        
 111        After splitting successfully, a single commit id is
 112        printed to stdout.  This corresponds to the HEAD of the
 113        newly created tree, which you can manipulate however you
 114        want.
 115        
 116        Repeated splits of exactly the same history are
 117        guaranteed to be identical (ie. to produce the same
 118        commit ids).  Because of this, if you add new commits
 119        and then re-split, the new commits will be attached as
 120        commits on top of the history you generated last time,
 121        so 'git merge' and friends will work as expected.
 122        
 123        Note that if you use '--squash' when you merge, you
 124        should usually not just '--rejoin' when you split.
 125
 126
 127OPTIONS
 128-------
 129-q::
 130--quiet::
 131        Suppress unnecessary output messages on stderr.
 132
 133-d::
 134--debug::
 135        Produce even more unnecessary output messages on stderr.
 136
 137-P <prefix>::
 138--prefix=<prefix>::
 139        Specify the path in the repository to the subtree you
 140        want to manipulate.  This option is mandatory
 141        for all commands.
 142
 143-m <message>::
 144--message=<message>::
 145        This option is only valid for add, merge and pull (unsure).
 146        Specify <message> as the commit message for the merge commit.
 147
 148
 149OPTIONS FOR add, merge, push, pull
 150----------------------------------
 151--squash::
 152        This option is only valid for add, merge, push and pull
 153        commands.
 154
 155        Instead of merging the entire history from the subtree
 156        project, produce only a single commit that contains all
 157        the differences you want to merge, and then merge that
 158        new commit into your project.
 159        
 160        Using this option helps to reduce log clutter. People
 161        rarely want to see every change that happened between
 162        v1.0 and v1.1 of the library they're using, since none of the
 163        interim versions were ever included in their application.
 164        
 165        Using '--squash' also helps avoid problems when the same
 166        subproject is included multiple times in the same
 167        project, or is removed and then re-added.  In such a
 168        case, it doesn't make sense to combine the histories
 169        anyway, since it's unclear which part of the history
 170        belongs to which subtree.
 171        
 172        Furthermore, with '--squash', you can switch back and
 173        forth between different versions of a subtree, rather
 174        than strictly forward.  'git subtree merge --squash'
 175        always adjusts the subtree to match the exactly
 176        specified commit, even if getting to that commit would
 177        require undoing some changes that were added earlier.
 178        
 179        Whether or not you use '--squash', changes made in your
 180        local repository remain intact and can be later split
 181        and send upstream to the subproject.
 182
 183
 184OPTIONS FOR split
 185-----------------
 186--annotate=<annotation>::
 187        This option is only valid for the split command.
 188
 189        When generating synthetic history, add <annotation> as a
 190        prefix to each commit message.  Since we're creating new
 191        commits with the same commit message, but possibly
 192        different content, from the original commits, this can help
 193        to differentiate them and avoid confusion.
 194        
 195        Whenever you split, you need to use the same
 196        <annotation>, or else you don't have a guarantee that
 197        the new re-created history will be identical to the old
 198        one.  That will prevent merging from working correctly. 
 199        git subtree tries to make it work anyway, particularly
 200        if you use --rejoin, but it may not always be effective.
 201
 202-b <branch>::
 203--branch=<branch>::
 204        This option is only valid for the split command.
 205
 206        After generating the synthetic history, create a new
 207        branch called <branch> that contains the new history. 
 208        This is suitable for immediate pushing upstream. 
 209        <branch> must not already exist.
 210
 211--ignore-joins::
 212        This option is only valid for the split command.
 213
 214        If you use '--rejoin', git subtree attempts to optimize
 215        its history reconstruction to generate only the new
 216        commits since the last '--rejoin'.  '--ignore-join'
 217        disables this behaviour, forcing it to regenerate the
 218        entire history.  In a large project, this can take a
 219        long time.
 220
 221--onto=<onto>::
 222        This option is only valid for the split command.
 223
 224        If your subtree was originally imported using something
 225        other than git subtree, its history may not match what
 226        git subtree is expecting.  In that case, you can specify
 227        the commit id <onto> that corresponds to the first
 228        revision of the subproject's history that was imported
 229        into your project, and git subtree will attempt to build
 230        its history from there.
 231        
 232        If you used 'git subtree add', you should never need
 233        this option.
 234
 235--rejoin::
 236        This option is only valid for the split command.
 237
 238        After splitting, merge the newly created synthetic
 239        history back into your main project.  That way, future
 240        splits can search only the part of history that has
 241        been added since the most recent --rejoin.
 242        
 243        If your split commits end up merged into the upstream
 244        subproject, and then you want to get the latest upstream
 245        version, this will allow git's merge algorithm to more
 246        intelligently avoid conflicts (since it knows these
 247        synthetic commits are already part of the upstream
 248        repository).
 249        
 250        Unfortunately, using this option results in 'git log'
 251        showing an extra copy of every new commit that was
 252        created (the original, and the synthetic one).
 253        
 254        If you do all your merges with '--squash', don't use
 255        '--rejoin' when you split, because you don't want the
 256        subproject's history to be part of your project anyway.
 257
 258
 259EXAMPLE 1. Add command
 260----------------------
 261Let's assume that you have a local repository that you would like
 262to add an external vendor library to. In this case we will add the
 263git-subtree repository as a subdirectory of your already existing
 264git-extensions repository in ~/git-extensions/:
 265
 266        $ git subtree add --prefix=git-subtree --squash \
 267                git://github.com/apenwarr/git-subtree.git master
 268
 269'master' needs to be a valid remote ref and can be a different branch
 270name
 271
 272You can omit the --squash flag, but doing so will increase the number
 273of commits that are incldued in your local repository.
 274
 275We now have a ~/git-extensions/git-subtree directory containing code
 276from the master branch of git://github.com/apenwarr/git-subtree.git
 277in our git-extensions repository.
 278
 279EXAMPLE 2. Extract a subtree using commit, merge and pull
 280---------------------------------------------------------
 281Let's use the repository for the git source code as an example.
 282First, get your own copy of the git.git repository:
 283
 284        $ git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git test-git
 285        $ cd test-git
 286
 287gitweb (commit 1130ef3) was merged into git as of commit
 2880a8f4f0, after which it was no longer maintained separately. 
 289But imagine it had been maintained separately, and we wanted to
 290extract git's changes to gitweb since that time, to share with
 291the upstream.  You could do this:
 292
 293        $ git subtree split --prefix=gitweb --annotate='(split) ' \
 294                0a8f4f0^.. --onto=1130ef3 --rejoin \
 295                --branch gitweb-latest
 296        $ gitk gitweb-latest
 297        $ git push git@github.com:whatever/gitweb.git gitweb-latest:master
 298        
 299(We use '0a8f4f0^..' because that means "all the changes from
 3000a8f4f0 to the current version, including 0a8f4f0 itself.")
 301
 302If gitweb had originally been merged using 'git subtree add' (or
 303a previous split had already been done with --rejoin specified)
 304then you can do all your splits without having to remember any
 305weird commit ids:
 306
 307        $ git subtree split --prefix=gitweb --annotate='(split) ' --rejoin \
 308                --branch gitweb-latest2
 309
 310And you can merge changes back in from the upstream project just
 311as easily:
 312
 313        $ git subtree pull --prefix=gitweb \
 314                git@github.com:whatever/gitweb.git master
 315
 316Or, using '--squash', you can actually rewind to an earlier
 317version of gitweb:
 318
 319        $ git subtree merge --prefix=gitweb --squash gitweb-latest~10
 320
 321Then make some changes:
 322
 323        $ date >gitweb/myfile
 324        $ git add gitweb/myfile
 325        $ git commit -m 'created myfile'
 326
 327And fast forward again:
 328
 329        $ git subtree merge --prefix=gitweb --squash gitweb-latest
 330
 331And notice that your change is still intact:
 332        
 333        $ ls -l gitweb/myfile
 334
 335And you can split it out and look at your changes versus
 336the standard gitweb:
 337
 338        git log gitweb-latest..$(git subtree split --prefix=gitweb)
 339
 340EXAMPLE 3. Extract a subtree using branch
 341-----------------------------------------
 342Suppose you have a source directory with many files and
 343subdirectories, and you want to extract the lib directory to its own
 344git project. Here's a short way to do it:
 345
 346First, make the new repository wherever you want:
 347
 348        $ <go to the new location>
 349        $ git init --bare
 350
 351Back in your original directory:
 352
 353        $ git subtree split --prefix=lib --annotate="(split)" -b split
 354
 355Then push the new branch onto the new empty repository:
 356
 357        $ git push <new-repo> split:master
 358
 359
 360AUTHOR
 361------
 362Written by Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>
 363
 364
 365GIT
 366---
 367Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite