Documentation / git.txton commit Remove "octopus". (e32faa8)
   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-----------
  15'git' is both a program and a directory content tracker system.
  16The program 'git' is just a wrapper to reach the core git programs
  17(or a potty if you like, as it's not exactly porcelain but still
  18brings your stuff to the plumbing).
  19
  20OPTIONS
  21-------
  22--version::
  23        prints the git suite version that the 'git' program came from.
  24
  25--help::
  26        prints the synopsis and a list of available commands.
  27        If a git command is named this option will bring up the
  28        man-page for that command.
  29
  30--exec-path::
  31        path to wherever your core git programs are installed.
  32        This can also be controlled by setting the GIT_EXEC_PATH
  33        environment variable. If no path is given 'git' will print
  34        the current setting and then exit.
  35
  36
  37NOT LEARNING CORE GIT COMMANDS
  38------------------------------
  39
  40This manual is intended to give complete background information
  41and internal workings of git, which may be too much for most
  42people.  The <<Discussion>> section below contains much useful
  43definition and clarification - read that first.
  44
  45If you are interested in using git to manage (version control)
  46projects, use link:everyday.html[Everyday GIT] as a guide to the
  47minimum set of commands you need to know for day-to-day work.
  48Most likely, that will get you started, and you can go a long
  49way without knowing the low level details too much.
  50
  51The link:tutorial.html[tutorial] document covers how things
  52internally work.
  53
  54If you are migrating from CVS, link:cvs-migration.html[cvs
  55migration] document may be helpful after you finish the
  56tutorial.
  57
  58After you get the general feel from the tutorial and this
  59overview page, you may want to take a look at the
  60link:howto-index.html[howto] documents.
  61
  62
  63CORE GIT COMMANDS
  64-----------------
  65
  66If you are writing your own Porcelain, you need to be familiar
  67with most of the low level commands --- I suggest starting from
  68gitlink:git-update-index[1] and gitlink:git-read-tree[1].
  69
  70
  71Commands Overview
  72-----------------
  73The git commands can helpfully be split into those that manipulate
  74the repository, the index and the files in the working tree, those that
  75interrogate and compare them, and those that moves objects and
  76references between repositories.
  77
  78In addition, git itself comes with a spartan set of porcelain
  79commands.  They are usable but are not meant to compete with real
  80Porcelains.
  81
  82There are also some ancillary programs that can be viewed as useful
  83aids for using the core commands but which are unlikely to be used by
  84SCMs layered over git.
  85
  86Manipulation commands
  87~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  88gitlink:git-apply[1]::
  89        Reads a "diff -up1" or git generated patch file and
  90        applies it to the working tree.
  91
  92gitlink:git-checkout-index[1]::
  93        Copy files from the index to the working tree.
  94
  95gitlink:git-commit-tree[1]::
  96        Creates a new commit object.
  97
  98gitlink:git-hash-object[1]::
  99        Computes the object ID from a file.
 100
 101gitlink:git-index-pack[1]::
 102        Build pack idx file for an existing packed archive.
 103
 104gitlink:git-init-db[1]::
 105        Creates an empty git object database, or reinitialize an
 106        existing one.
 107
 108gitlink:git-merge-index[1]::
 109        Runs a merge for files needing merging.
 110
 111gitlink:git-mktag[1]::
 112        Creates a tag object.
 113
 114gitlink:git-pack-objects[1]::
 115        Creates a packed archive of objects.
 116
 117gitlink:git-prune-packed[1]::
 118        Remove extra objects that are already in pack files.
 119
 120gitlink:git-read-tree[1]::
 121        Reads tree information into the index.
 122
 123gitlink:git-repo-config[1]::
 124        Get and set options in .git/config.
 125
 126gitlink:git-unpack-objects[1]::
 127        Unpacks objects out of a packed archive.
 128
 129gitlink:git-update-index[1]::
 130        Registers files in the working tree to the index.
 131
 132gitlink:git-write-tree[1]::
 133        Creates a tree from the index.
 134
 135
 136Interrogation commands
 137~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 138
 139gitlink:git-cat-file[1]::
 140        Provide content or type/size information for repository objects.
 141
 142gitlink:git-diff-index[1]::
 143        Compares content and mode of blobs between the index and repository.
 144
 145gitlink:git-diff-files[1]::
 146        Compares files in the working tree and the index.
 147
 148gitlink:git-diff-stages[1]::
 149        Compares two "merge stages" in the index.
 150
 151gitlink:git-diff-tree[1]::
 152        Compares the content and mode of blobs found via two tree objects.
 153
 154gitlink:git-fsck-objects[1]::
 155        Verifies the connectivity and validity of the objects in the database.
 156
 157gitlink:git-ls-files[1]::
 158        Information about files in the index and the working tree.
 159
 160gitlink:git-ls-tree[1]::
 161        Displays a tree object in human readable form.
 162
 163gitlink:git-merge-base[1]::
 164        Finds as good common ancestors as possible for a merge.
 165
 166gitlink:git-name-rev[1]::
 167        Find symbolic names for given revs.
 168
 169gitlink:git-pack-redundant[1]::
 170        Find redundant pack files.
 171
 172gitlink:git-rev-list[1]::
 173        Lists commit objects in reverse chronological order.
 174
 175gitlink:git-show-index[1]::
 176        Displays contents of a pack idx file.
 177
 178gitlink:git-tar-tree[1]::
 179        Creates a tar archive of the files in the named tree object.
 180
 181gitlink:git-unpack-file[1]::
 182        Creates a temporary file with a blob's contents.
 183
 184gitlink:git-var[1]::
 185        Displays a git logical variable.
 186
 187gitlink:git-verify-pack[1]::
 188        Validates packed git archive files.
 189
 190In general, the interrogate commands do not touch the files in
 191the working tree.
 192
 193
 194Synching repositories
 195~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 196
 197gitlink:git-clone-pack[1]::
 198        Clones a repository into the current repository (engine
 199        for ssh and local transport).
 200
 201gitlink:git-fetch-pack[1]::
 202        Updates from a remote repository (engine for ssh and
 203        local transport).
 204
 205gitlink:git-http-fetch[1]::
 206        Downloads a remote git repository via HTTP by walking
 207        commit chain.
 208
 209gitlink:git-local-fetch[1]::
 210        Duplicates another git repository on a local system by
 211        walking commit chain.
 212
 213gitlink:git-peek-remote[1]::
 214        Lists references on a remote repository using
 215        upload-pack protocol (engine for ssh and local
 216        transport).
 217
 218gitlink:git-receive-pack[1]::
 219        Invoked by 'git-send-pack' to receive what is pushed to it.
 220
 221gitlink:git-send-pack[1]::
 222        Pushes to a remote repository, intelligently.
 223
 224gitlink:git-http-push[1]::
 225        Push missing objects using HTTP/DAV.
 226
 227gitlink:git-shell[1]::
 228        Restricted shell for GIT-only SSH access.
 229
 230gitlink:git-ssh-fetch[1]::
 231        Pulls from a remote repository over ssh connection by
 232        walking commit chain.
 233
 234gitlink:git-ssh-upload[1]::
 235        Helper "server-side" program used by git-ssh-fetch.
 236
 237gitlink:git-update-server-info[1]::
 238        Updates auxiliary information on a dumb server to help
 239        clients discover references and packs on it.
 240
 241gitlink:git-upload-pack[1]::
 242        Invoked by 'git-clone-pack' and 'git-fetch-pack' to push
 243        what are asked for.
 244
 245
 246Porcelain-ish Commands
 247----------------------
 248
 249gitlink:git-add[1]::
 250        Add paths to the index.
 251
 252gitlink:git-am[1]::
 253        Apply patches from a mailbox, but cooler.
 254
 255gitlink:git-applymbox[1]::
 256        Apply patches from a mailbox, original version by Linus.
 257
 258gitlink:git-bisect[1]::
 259        Find the change that introduced a bug by binary search.
 260
 261gitlink:git-branch[1]::
 262        Create and Show branches.
 263
 264gitlink:git-checkout[1]::
 265        Checkout and switch to a branch.
 266
 267gitlink:git-cherry-pick[1]::
 268        Cherry-pick the effect of an existing commit.
 269
 270gitlink:git-clone[1]::
 271        Clones a repository into a new directory.
 272
 273gitlink:git-commit[1]::
 274        Record changes to the repository.
 275
 276gitlink:git-diff[1]::
 277        Show changes between commits, commit and working tree, etc.
 278
 279gitlink:git-fetch[1]::
 280        Download from a remote repository via various protocols.
 281
 282gitlink:git-format-patch[1]::
 283        Prepare patches for e-mail submission.
 284
 285gitlink:git-grep[1]::
 286        Print lines matching a pattern.
 287
 288gitlink:git-log[1]::
 289        Shows commit logs.
 290
 291gitlink:git-ls-remote[1]::
 292        Shows references in a remote or local repository.
 293
 294gitlink:git-merge[1]::
 295        Grand unified merge driver.
 296
 297gitlink:git-mv[1]::
 298        Move or rename a file, a directory, or a symlink.
 299
 300gitlink:git-pull[1]::
 301        Fetch from and merge with a remote repository.
 302
 303gitlink:git-push[1]::
 304        Update remote refs along with associated objects.
 305
 306gitlink:git-rebase[1]::
 307        Rebase local commits to the updated upstream head.
 308
 309gitlink:git-repack[1]::
 310        Pack unpacked objects in a repository.
 311
 312gitlink:git-reset[1]::
 313        Reset current HEAD to the specified state.
 314
 315gitlink:git-resolve[1]::
 316        Merge two commits.
 317
 318gitlink:git-revert[1]::
 319        Revert an existing commit.
 320
 321gitlink:git-shortlog[1]::
 322        Summarizes 'git log' output.
 323
 324gitlink:git-show-branch[1]::
 325        Show branches and their commits.
 326
 327gitlink:git-status[1]::
 328        Shows the working tree status.
 329
 330gitlink:git-verify-tag[1]::
 331        Check the GPG signature of tag.
 332
 333gitlink:git-whatchanged[1]::
 334        Shows commit logs and differences they introduce.
 335
 336
 337Ancillary Commands
 338------------------
 339Manipulators:
 340
 341gitlink:git-applypatch[1]::
 342        Apply one patch extracted from an e-mail.
 343
 344gitlink:git-archimport[1]::
 345        Import an arch repository into git.
 346
 347gitlink:git-convert-objects[1]::
 348        Converts old-style git repository.
 349
 350gitlink:git-cvsimport[1]::
 351        Salvage your data out of another SCM people love to hate.
 352
 353gitlink:git-cvsexportcommit[1]::
 354        Export a single commit to a CVS checkout.
 355
 356gitlink:git-lost-found[1]::
 357        Recover lost refs that luckily have not yet been pruned.
 358
 359gitlink:git-merge-one-file[1]::
 360        The standard helper program to use with `git-merge-index`.
 361
 362gitlink:git-prune[1]::
 363        Prunes all unreachable objects from the object database.
 364
 365gitlink:git-relink[1]::
 366        Hardlink common objects in local repositories.
 367
 368gitlink:git-svnimport[1]::
 369        Import a SVN repository into git.
 370
 371gitlink:git-sh-setup[1]::
 372        Common git shell script setup code.
 373
 374gitlink:git-symbolic-ref[1]::
 375        Read and modify symbolic refs.
 376
 377gitlink:git-tag[1]::
 378        An example script to create a tag object signed with GPG.
 379
 380gitlink:git-update-ref[1]::
 381        Update the object name stored in a ref safely.
 382
 383
 384Interrogators:
 385
 386gitlink:git-check-ref-format[1]::
 387        Make sure ref name is well formed.
 388
 389gitlink:git-cherry[1]::
 390        Find commits not merged upstream.
 391
 392gitlink:git-count-objects[1]::
 393        Count unpacked number of objects and their disk consumption.
 394
 395gitlink:git-daemon[1]::
 396        A really simple server for git repositories.
 397
 398gitlink:git-get-tar-commit-id[1]::
 399        Extract commit ID from an archive created using git-tar-tree.
 400
 401gitlink:git-mailinfo[1]::
 402        Extracts patch and authorship information from a single
 403        e-mail message, optionally transliterating the commit
 404        message into utf-8.
 405
 406gitlink:git-mailsplit[1]::
 407        A stupid program to split UNIX mbox format mailbox into
 408        individual pieces of e-mail.
 409
 410gitlink:git-patch-id[1]::
 411        Compute unique ID for a patch.
 412
 413gitlink:git-parse-remote[1]::
 414        Routines to help parsing `$GIT_DIR/remotes/` files.
 415
 416gitlink:git-request-pull[1]::
 417        git-request-pull.
 418
 419gitlink:git-rev-parse[1]::
 420        Pick out and massage parameters.
 421
 422gitlink:git-send-email[1]::
 423        Send patch e-mails out of "format-patch --mbox" output.
 424
 425gitlink:git-symbolic-refs[1]::
 426        Read and modify symbolic refs.
 427
 428gitlink:git-stripspace[1]::
 429        Filter out empty lines.
 430
 431
 432Commands not yet documented
 433---------------------------
 434
 435gitlink:gitk[1]::
 436        The gitk repository browser.
 437
 438
 439Configuration Mechanism
 440-----------------------
 441
 442Starting from 0.99.9 (actually mid 0.99.8.GIT), `.git/config` file
 443is used to hold per-repository configuration options.  It is a
 444simple text file modelled after `.ini` format familiar to some
 445people.  Here is an example:
 446
 447------------
 448#
 449# A '#' or ';' character indicates a comment.
 450#
 451
 452; core variables
 453[core]
 454        ; Don't trust file modes
 455        filemode = false
 456
 457; user identity
 458[user]
 459        name = "Junio C Hamano"
 460        email = "junkio@twinsun.com"
 461
 462------------
 463
 464Various commands read from the configuration file and adjust
 465their operation accordingly.
 466
 467
 468Identifier Terminology
 469----------------------
 470<object>::
 471        Indicates the object name for any type of object.
 472
 473<blob>::
 474        Indicates a blob object name.
 475
 476<tree>::
 477        Indicates a tree object name.
 478
 479<commit>::
 480        Indicates a commit object name.
 481
 482<tree-ish>::
 483        Indicates a tree, commit or tag object name.  A
 484        command that takes a <tree-ish> argument ultimately wants to
 485        operate on a <tree> object but automatically dereferences
 486        <commit> and <tag> objects that point at a <tree>.
 487
 488<type>::
 489        Indicates that an object type is required.
 490        Currently one of: `blob`, `tree`, `commit`, or `tag`.
 491
 492<file>::
 493        Indicates a filename - almost always relative to the
 494        root of the tree structure `GIT_INDEX_FILE` describes.
 495
 496Symbolic Identifiers
 497--------------------
 498Any git command accepting any <object> can also use the following
 499symbolic notation:
 500
 501HEAD::
 502        indicates the head of the current branch (i.e. the
 503        contents of `$GIT_DIR/HEAD`).
 504
 505<tag>::
 506        a valid tag 'name'
 507        (i.e. the contents of `$GIT_DIR/refs/tags/<tag>`).
 508
 509<head>::
 510        a valid head 'name'
 511        (i.e. the contents of `$GIT_DIR/refs/heads/<head>`).
 512
 513<snap>::
 514        a valid snapshot 'name'
 515        (i.e. the contents of `$GIT_DIR/refs/snap/<snap>`).
 516
 517
 518File/Directory Structure
 519------------------------
 520
 521Please see link:repository-layout.html[repository layout] document.
 522
 523Higher level SCMs may provide and manage additional information in the
 524`$GIT_DIR`.
 525
 526
 527Terminology
 528-----------
 529Please see link:glossary.html[glossary] document.
 530
 531
 532Environment Variables
 533---------------------
 534Various git commands use the following environment variables:
 535
 536The git Repository
 537~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 538These environment variables apply to 'all' core git commands. Nb: it
 539is worth noting that they may be used/overridden by SCMS sitting above
 540git so take care if using Cogito etc.
 541
 542'GIT_INDEX_FILE'::
 543        This environment allows the specification of an alternate
 544        index file. If not specified, the default of `$GIT_DIR/index`
 545        is used.
 546
 547'GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY'::
 548        If the object storage directory is specified via this
 549        environment variable then the sha1 directories are created
 550        underneath - otherwise the default `$GIT_DIR/objects`
 551        directory is used.
 552
 553'GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES'::
 554        Due to the immutable nature of git objects, old objects can be
 555        archived into shared, read-only directories. This variable
 556        specifies a ":" separated list of git object directories which
 557        can be used to search for git objects. New objects will not be
 558        written to these directories.
 559
 560'GIT_DIR'::
 561        If the 'GIT_DIR' environment variable is set then it
 562        specifies a path to use instead of the default `.git`
 563        for the base of the repository.
 564
 565git Commits
 566~~~~~~~~~~~
 567'GIT_AUTHOR_NAME'::
 568'GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL'::
 569'GIT_AUTHOR_DATE'::
 570'GIT_COMMITTER_NAME'::
 571'GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL'::
 572        see gitlink:git-commit-tree[1]
 573
 574git Diffs
 575~~~~~~~~~
 576'GIT_DIFF_OPTS'::
 577'GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF'::
 578        see the "generating patches" section in :
 579        gitlink:git-diff-index[1];
 580        gitlink:git-diff-files[1];
 581        gitlink:git-diff-tree[1]
 582
 583Discussion[[Discussion]]
 584------------------------
 585include::../README[]
 586
 587Authors
 588-------
 589* git's founding father is Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>.
 590* The current git nurse is Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>.
 591* The git potty was written by Andres Ericsson <ae@op5.se>.
 592* General upbringing is handled by the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
 593
 594Documentation
 595--------------
 596The documentation for git suite was started by David Greaves
 597<david@dgreaves.com>, and later enhanced greatly by the
 598contributors on the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
 599
 600GIT
 601---
 602Part of the gitlink:git[7] suite
 603