e5121ca86a2e35bfd12d2a96a76823f74c95f734
   1This file contains reference information for the core git commands.
   2
   3The README contains much useful definition and clarification
   4info - read that first.  And of the commands, I suggest reading
   5'git-update-cache' and 'git-read-tree' first - I wish I had!
   6
   7David Greaves <david@dgreaves.com>
   824/4/05
   9
  10Updated by Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net> on 2005-05-05 to
  11reflect recent changes.
  12
  13Identifier terminology used:
  14
  15<object>
  16        Indicates any object sha1 identifier
  17
  18<blob>
  19        Indicates a blob object sha1 identifier
  20
  21<tree>
  22        Indicates a tree object sha1 identifier
  23
  24<commit>
  25        Indicates a commit object sha1 identifier
  26
  27<tree-ish>
  28        Indicates a tree, commit or tag object sha1 identifier.
  29        A command that takes a <tree-ish> argument ultimately
  30        wants to operate on a <tree> object but automatically
  31        dereferences <commit> and <tag> that points at a
  32        <tree>.
  33
  34<type>
  35        Indicates that an object type is required.
  36        Currently one of: blob/tree/commit/tag
  37
  38<file>
  39        Indicates a filename - always relative to the root of
  40        the tree structure GIT_INDEX_FILE describes.
  41
  42
  43################################################################
  44git-apply-patch-script
  45
  46This is a sample script to be used as GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF to apply
  47differences git-diff-* family of commands reports to the current
  48work tree.
  49
  50
  51################################################################
  52git-cat-file
  53        git-cat-file (-t | <type>) <object>
  54
  55Provides contents or type of objects in the repository. The type
  56is required if -t is not being used to find the object type.
  57
  58<object>
  59        The sha1 identifier of the object.
  60
  61-t
  62        Instead of the content, show the object type identified
  63        by <object>.
  64
  65<type>
  66        Typically this matches the real type of <object> but
  67        asking for type that can trivially dereferenced from the
  68        given <object> is also permitted.  An example is to ask
  69        "tree" with <object> for a commit object that contains
  70        it, or to ask "blob" with <object> for a tag object that
  71        points at it.
  72
  73Output
  74
  75If -t is specified, one of the <type>.
  76
  77Otherwise the raw (though uncompressed) contents of the <object> will
  78be returned.
  79
  80
  81################################################################
  82git-check-files
  83        git-check-files <file>...
  84
  85Check that a list of files are up-to-date between the filesystem and
  86the cache. Used to verify a patch target before doing a patch.
  87
  88Files that do not exist on the filesystem are considered up-to-date
  89(whether or not they are in the cache).
  90
  91Emits an error message on failure.
  92preparing to update existing file <file> not in cache
  93          <file> exists but is not in the cache
  94
  95preparing to update file <file> not uptodate in cache
  96          <file> on disk is not up-to-date with the cache
  97
  98Exits with a status code indicating success if all files are
  99up-to-date.
 100
 101see also: git-update-cache
 102
 103
 104################################################################
 105git-checkout-cache
 106        git-checkout-cache [-q] [-a] [-f] [-n] [--prefix=<string>]
 107                           [--] <file>...
 108
 109Will copy all files listed from the cache to the working directory
 110(not overwriting existing files).
 111
 112-q
 113        be quiet if files exist or are not in the cache
 114
 115-f
 116        forces overwrite of existing files
 117
 118-a
 119        checks out all files in the cache (will then continue to
 120        process listed files).
 121
 122-n
 123        Don't checkout new files, only refresh files already checked
 124        out.
 125
 126--prefix=<string>
 127        When creating files, prepend <string> (usually a directory
 128        including a trailing /)
 129
 130--
 131        Do not interpret any more arguments as options.
 132
 133Note that the order of the flags matters:
 134
 135        git-checkout-cache -a -f file.c
 136
 137will first check out all files listed in the cache (but not overwrite
 138any old ones), and then force-checkout file.c a second time (ie that
 139one _will_ overwrite any old contents with the same filename).
 140
 141Also, just doing "git-checkout-cache" does nothing. You probably meant
 142"git-checkout-cache -a". And if you want to force it, you want
 143"git-checkout-cache -f -a".
 144
 145Intuitiveness is not the goal here. Repeatability is. The reason for
 146the "no arguments means no work" thing is that from scripts you are
 147supposed to be able to do things like
 148
 149        find . -name '*.h' -print0 | xargs -0 git-checkout-cache -f --
 150
 151which will force all existing *.h files to be replaced with their
 152cached copies. If an empty command line implied "all", then this would
 153force-refresh everything in the cache, which was not the point.
 154
 155To update and refresh only the files already checked out:
 156
 157   git-checkout-cache -n -f -a && git-update-cache --ignore-missing --refresh
 158
 159Oh, and the "--" is just a good idea when you know the rest will be
 160filenames. Just so that you wouldn't have a filename of "-a" causing
 161problems (not possible in the above example, but get used to it in
 162scripting!).
 163
 164The prefix ability basically makes it trivial to use git-checkout-cache as
 165a "git-export as tree" function. Just read the desired tree into the
 166index, and do a
 167  
 168        git-checkout-cache --prefix=git-export-dir/ -a
 169  
 170and git-checkout-cache will "git-export" the cache into the specified
 171directory.
 172  
 173NOTE! The final "/" is important. The git-exported name is literally just
 174prefixed with the specified string, so you can also do something like
 175  
 176        git-checkout-cache --prefix=.merged- Makefile
 177  
 178to check out the currently cached copy of "Makefile" into the file
 179".merged-Makefile".
 180
 181
 182################################################################
 183git-commit-tree
 184        git-commit-tree <tree> [-p <parent commit>]*   < changelog
 185
 186Creates a new commit object based on the provided tree object and
 187emits the new commit object id on stdout. If no parent is given then
 188it is considered to be an initial tree.
 189
 190A commit object usually has 1 parent (a commit after a change) or up
 191to 16 parents.  More than one parent represents a merge of branches
 192that led to them.
 193
 194While a tree represents a particular directory state of a working
 195directory, a commit represents that state in "time", and explains how
 196to get there.
 197
 198Normally a commit would identify a new "HEAD" state, and while git
 199doesn't care where you save the note about that state, in practice we
 200tend to just write the result to the file ".git/HEAD", so that we can
 201always see what the last committed state was.
 202
 203Options
 204
 205<tree>
 206        An existing tree object
 207
 208-p <parent commit>
 209        Each -p indicates a the id of a parent commit object.
 210        
 211
 212Commit Information
 213
 214A commit encapsulates:
 215        all parent object ids
 216        author name, email and date
 217        committer name and email and the commit time.
 218
 219If not provided, git-commit-tree uses your name, hostname and domain to
 220provide author and committer info. This can be overridden using the
 221following environment variables.
 222        AUTHOR_NAME
 223        AUTHOR_EMAIL
 224        AUTHOR_DATE
 225        COMMIT_AUTHOR_NAME
 226        COMMIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL
 227(nb <,> and '\n's are stripped)
 228
 229A commit comment is read from stdin (max 999 chars). If a changelog
 230entry is not provided via '<' redirection, git-commit-tree will just wait
 231for one to be entered and terminated with ^D
 232
 233see also: git-write-tree
 234
 235
 236################################################################
 237git-convert-cache
 238
 239Converts old-style GIT repository to the latest.
 240
 241
 242################################################################
 243git-diff-cache
 244        git-diff-cache [-p] [-r] [-z] [--cached] <tree-ish>
 245
 246Compares the content and mode of the blobs found via a tree object
 247with the content of the current cache and, optionally ignoring the
 248stat state of the file on disk.
 249
 250<tree-ish>
 251        The id of a tree object to diff against.
 252
 253-p
 254        Generate patch (see section on generating patches)
 255
 256-r
 257        This flag does not mean anything.  It is there only to match
 258        git-diff-tree.  Unlike git-diff-tree, git-diff-cache always looks
 259        at all the subdirectories.
 260
 261-z
 262        \0 line termination on output
 263
 264--cached
 265        do not consider the on-disk file at all
 266
 267Output format:
 268
 269See "Output format from git-diff-cache, git-diff-tree and git-diff-files"
 270section.
 271
 272Operating Modes
 273
 274You can choose whether you want to trust the index file entirely
 275(using the "--cached" flag) or ask the diff logic to show any files
 276that don't match the stat state as being "tentatively changed".  Both
 277of these operations are very useful indeed.
 278
 279Cached Mode
 280
 281If --cached is specified, it allows you to ask:
 282
 283        show me the differences between HEAD and the current index
 284        contents (the ones I'd write with a "git-write-tree")
 285
 286For example, let's say that you have worked on your index file, and are
 287ready to commit. You want to see eactly _what_ you are going to commit is
 288without having to write a new tree object and compare it that way, and to
 289do that, you just do
 290
 291        git-diff-cache --cached $(cat .git/HEAD)
 292
 293Example: let's say I had renamed "commit.c" to "git-commit.c", and I had
 294done an "git-update-cache" to make that effective in the index file.
 295"git-diff-files" wouldn't show anything at all, since the index file
 296matches my working directory. But doing a git-diff-cache does:
 297
 298  torvalds@ppc970:~/git> git-diff-cache --cached $(cat .git/HEAD)
 299  -100644 blob    4161aecc6700a2eb579e842af0b7f22b98443f74        commit.c
 300  +100644 blob    4161aecc6700a2eb579e842af0b7f22b98443f74        git-commit.c
 301
 302You can trivially see that the above is a rename.
 303
 304In fact, "git-diff-cache --cached" _should_ always be entirely equivalent to
 305actually doing a "git-write-tree" and comparing that. Except this one is much
 306nicer for the case where you just want to check where you are.
 307
 308So doing a "git-diff-cache --cached" is basically very useful when you are 
 309asking yourself "what have I already marked for being committed, and 
 310what's the difference to a previous tree".
 311
 312Non-cached Mode
 313
 314The "non-cached" mode takes a different approach, and is potentially the
 315even more useful of the two in that what it does can't be emulated with a
 316"git-write-tree + git-diff-tree". Thus that's the default mode.  The
 317non-cached version asks the question
 318
 319   "show me the differences between HEAD and the currently checked out 
 320    tree - index contents _and_ files that aren't up-to-date"
 321
 322which is obviously a very useful question too, since that tells you what
 323you _could_ commit. Again, the output matches the "git-diff-tree -r"
 324output to a tee, but with a twist.
 325
 326The twist is that if some file doesn't match the cache, we don't have a
 327backing store thing for it, and we use the magic "all-zero" sha1 to show
 328that. So let's say that you have edited "kernel/sched.c", but have not
 329actually done an git-update-cache on it yet - there is no "object" associated
 330with the new state, and you get:
 331
 332  torvalds@ppc970:~/v2.6/linux> git-diff-cache $(cat .git/HEAD )
 333  *100644->100664 blob    7476bb......->000000......      kernel/sched.c
 334
 335ie it shows that the tree has changed, and that "kernel/sched.c" has is
 336not up-to-date and may contain new stuff. The all-zero sha1 means that to
 337get the real diff, you need to look at the object in the working directory
 338directly rather than do an object-to-object diff.
 339
 340NOTE! As with other commands of this type, "git-diff-cache" does not
 341actually look at the contents of the file at all. So maybe
 342"kernel/sched.c" hasn't actually changed, and it's just that you touched
 343it. In either case, it's a note that you need to upate-cache it to make
 344the cache be in sync.
 345
 346NOTE 2! You can have a mixture of files show up as "has been updated" and
 347"is still dirty in the working directory" together. You can always tell
 348which file is in which state, since the "has been updated" ones show a
 349valid sha1, and the "not in sync with the index" ones will always have the
 350special all-zero sha1.
 351
 352
 353################################################################
 354git-diff-tree
 355        git-diff-tree [-p] [-r] [-z] <tree-ish> <tree-ish> [<pattern>]*
 356
 357Compares the content and mode of the blobs found via two tree objects.
 358
 359Note that git-diff-tree can use the tree encapsulated in a commit object.
 360
 361<tree-ish>
 362        The id of a tree object.
 363
 364<pattern>
 365        If provided, the results are limited to a subset of files
 366        matching one of these prefix strings.
 367        ie file matches /^<pattern1>|<pattern2>|.../
 368        Note that pattern does not provide any wildcard or regexp
 369        features.
 370
 371-p
 372        generate patch (see section on generating patches).  For
 373        git-diff-tree, this flag implies -r as well.
 374
 375-r
 376        recurse
 377
 378-z
 379        \0 line termination on output
 380
 381Limiting Output
 382
 383If you're only interested in differences in a subset of files, for
 384example some architecture-specific files, you might do:
 385
 386        git-diff-tree -r <tree-ish> <tree-ish> arch/ia64 include/asm-ia64
 387
 388and it will only show you what changed in those two directories.
 389
 390Or if you are searching for what changed in just kernel/sched.c, just do
 391
 392        git-diff-tree -r <tree-ish> <tree-ish> kernel/sched.c
 393
 394and it will ignore all differences to other files.
 395
 396The pattern is always the prefix, and is matched exactly.  There are no
 397wildcards.  Even stricter, it has to match complete path comonent.
 398I.e. "foo" does not pick up "foobar.h".  "foo" does match "foo/bar.h"
 399so it can be used to name subdirectories.
 400
 401Output format:
 402
 403See "Output format from git-diff-cache, git-diff-tree and git-diff-files"
 404section.
 405
 406An example of normal usage is:
 407
 408  torvalds@ppc970:~/git> git-diff-tree 5319e4......
 409  *100664->100664 blob    ac348b.......->a01513.......      git-fsck-cache.c
 410
 411which tells you that the last commit changed just one file (it's from
 412this one:
 413
 414  commit 3c6f7ca19ad4043e9e72fa94106f352897e651a8
 415  tree 5319e4d609cdd282069cc4dce33c1db559539b03
 416  parent b4e628ea30d5ab3606119d2ea5caeab141d38df7
 417  author Linus Torvalds <torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org> Sat Apr 9 12:02:30 2005
 418  committer Linus Torvalds <torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org> Sat Apr 9 12:02:30 2005
 419
 420  Make "git-fsck-cache" print out all the root commits it finds.
 421
 422  Once I do the reference tracking, I'll also make it print out all the
 423  HEAD commits it finds, which is even more interesting.
 424
 425in case you care).
 426
 427
 428################################################################
 429git-diff-tree-helper
 430        git-diff-tree-helper [-z] [-R]
 431
 432Reads output from git-diff-cache, git-diff-tree and git-diff-files and
 433generates patch format output.
 434
 435-z
 436        \0 line termination on input
 437
 438-R
 439        Output diff in reverse.  This is useful for displaying output from
 440        git-diff-cache which always compares tree with cache or working
 441        file.  E.g.
 442
 443        git-diff-cache <tree> | git-diff-tree-helper -R file.c
 444
 445        would show a diff to bring the working file back to what is in the
 446        <tree>.
 447
 448See also the section on generating patches.
 449
 450
 451################################################################
 452git-fsck-cache
 453        git-fsck-cache [--tags] [--root] [[--unreachable] [--cache] <object>*]
 454
 455Verifies the connectivity and validity of the objects in the database.
 456
 457<object>
 458        An object to treat as the head of an unreachability trace.
 459
 460--unreachable
 461        Print out objects that exist but that aren't readable from any
 462        of the specified head nodes.
 463
 464--root
 465        Report root nodes.
 466
 467--tags
 468        Report tags.
 469
 470--cache
 471        Consider any object recorded in the cache also as a head node for
 472        an unreachability trace.
 473
 474It tests SHA1 and general object sanity, and it does full tracking of
 475the resulting reachability and everything else. It prints out any
 476corruption it finds (missing or bad objects), and if you use the
 477"--unreachable" flag it will also print out objects that exist but
 478that aren't readable from any of the specified head nodes.
 479
 480So for example
 481
 482        git-fsck-cache --unreachable $(cat .git/HEAD)
 483
 484or, for Cogito users:
 485
 486        git-fsck-cache --unreachable $(cat .git/refs/heads/*)
 487
 488will do quite a _lot_ of verification on the tree. There are a few
 489extra validity tests to be added (make sure that tree objects are
 490sorted properly etc), but on the whole if "git-fsck-cache" is happy, you
 491do have a valid tree.
 492
 493Any corrupt objects you will have to find in backups or other archives
 494(ie you can just remove them and do an "rsync" with some other site in
 495the hopes that somebody else has the object you have corrupted).
 496
 497Of course, "valid tree" doesn't mean that it wasn't generated by some
 498evil person, and the end result might be crap. Git is a revision
 499tracking system, not a quality assurance system ;)
 500
 501Extracted Diagnostics
 502
 503expect dangling commits - potential heads - due to lack of head information
 504        You haven't specified any nodes as heads so it won't be
 505        possible to differentiate between un-parented commits and
 506        root nodes.
 507
 508missing sha1 directory '<dir>'
 509        The directory holding the sha1 objects is missing.
 510
 511unreachable <type> <object>
 512        The <type> object <object>, isn't actually referred to directly
 513        or indirectly in any of the trees or commits seen. This can
 514        mean that there's another root na SHA1_ode that you're not specifying
 515        or that the tree is corrupt. If you haven't missed a root node
 516        then you might as well delete unreachable nodes since they
 517        can't be used.
 518
 519missing <type> <object>
 520        The <type> object <object>, is referred to but isn't present in
 521        the database.
 522
 523dangling <type> <object>
 524        The <type> object <object>, is present in the database but never
 525        _directly_ used. A dangling commit could be a root node.
 526
 527warning: git-fsck-cache: tree <tree> has full pathnames in it
 528        And it shouldn't...
 529
 530sha1 mismatch <object>
 531        The database has an object who's sha1 doesn't match the
 532        database value.
 533        This indicates a ??serious?? data integrity problem.
 534        (note: this error occured during early git development when
 535        the database format changed.)
 536
 537Environment Variables
 538
 539SHA1_FILE_DIRECTORY
 540        used to specify the object database root (usually .git/objects)
 541
 542GIT_INDEX_FILE
 543        used to specify the cache
 544
 545
 546################################################################
 547git-export
 548        git-export top [base]
 549
 550Exports each commit and diff against each of its parents, between
 551top and base.  If base is not specified it exports everything.
 552
 553
 554################################################################
 555git-init-db
 556        git-init-db
 557
 558This simply creates an empty git object database - basically a .git
 559directory and .git/object/??/ directories.
 560
 561If the object storage directory is specified via the SHA1_FILE_DIRECTORY
 562environment variable then the sha1 directories are created underneath -
 563otherwise the default .git/objects directory is used.
 564
 565git-init-db won't hurt an existing repository.
 566
 567
 568################################################################
 569git-http-pull
 570
 571        git-http-pull [-c] [-t] [-a] [-v] commit-id url
 572
 573Downloads a remote GIT repository via HTTP protocol.
 574
 575-c
 576        Get the commit objects.
 577-t
 578        Get trees associated with the commit objects.
 579-a
 580        Get all the objects.
 581-v
 582        Report what is downloaded.
 583
 584
 585################################################################
 586git-local-pull
 587
 588        git-local-pull [-c] [-t] [-a] [-l] [-s] [-n] [-v] commit-id path
 589
 590Downloads another GIT repository on a local system.
 591
 592-c
 593        Get the commit objects.
 594-t
 595        Get trees associated with the commit objects.
 596-a
 597        Get all the objects.
 598-v
 599        Report what is downloaded.
 600
 601################################################################
 602git-ls-tree
 603        git-ls-tree [-r] [-z] <tree-ish>
 604
 605Converts the tree object to a human readable (and script processable)
 606form.
 607
 608<tree-ish>
 609        Id of a tree.
 610
 611-r
 612        recurse into sub-trees
 613
 614-z
 615        \0 line termination on output
 616
 617Output Format
 618<mode>\t        <type>\t        <object>\t      <file>
 619
 620
 621################################################################
 622git-merge-base
 623        git-merge-base <commit> <commit>
 624
 625git-merge-base finds as good a common ancestor as possible. Given a
 626selection of equally good common ancestors it should not be relied on
 627to decide in any particular way.
 628
 629The git-merge-base algorithm is still in flux - use the source...
 630
 631
 632################################################################
 633git-merge-cache
 634        git-merge-cache <merge-program> (-a | -- | <file>*) 
 635
 636This looks up the <file>(s) in the cache and, if there are any merge
 637entries, passes the SHA1 hash for those files as arguments 1, 2, 3 (empty
 638argument if no file), and <file> as argument 4.  File modes for the three
 639files are passed as arguments 5, 6 and 7.
 640
 641--
 642        Interpret all future arguments as filenames.
 643
 644-a
 645        Run merge against all files in the cache that need merging.
 646
 647If git-merge-cache is called with multiple <file>s (or -a) then it
 648processes them in turn only stopping if merge returns a non-zero exit
 649code.
 650
 651Typically this is run with the a script calling the merge command from
 652the RCS package.
 653
 654A sample script called git-merge-one-file-script is included in the
 655ditribution.
 656
 657ALERT ALERT ALERT! The git "merge object order" is different from the
 658RCS "merge" program merge object order. In the above ordering, the
 659original is first. But the argument order to the 3-way merge program
 660"merge" is to have the original in the middle. Don't ask me why.
 661
 662Examples:
 663
 664  torvalds@ppc970:~/merge-test> git-merge-cache cat MM
 665  This is MM from the original tree.                    # original
 666  This is modified MM in the branch A.                  # merge1
 667  This is modified MM in the branch B.                  # merge2
 668  This is modified MM in the branch B.                  # current contents
 669
 670or 
 671
 672  torvalds@ppc970:~/merge-test> git-merge-cache cat AA MM
 673  cat: : No such file or directory
 674  This is added AA in the branch A.
 675  This is added AA in the branch B.
 676  This is added AA in the branch B.
 677  fatal: merge program failed
 678
 679where the latter example shows how "git-merge-cache" will stop trying to
 680merge once anything has returned an error (ie "cat" returned an error
 681for the AA file, because it didn't exist in the original, and thus
 682"git-merge-cache" didn't even try to merge the MM thing).
 683
 684################################################################
 685git-merge-one-file-script
 686
 687This is the standard helper program to use with git-merge-cache
 688to resolve a merge after the trivial merge done with git-read-tree -m.
 689
 690################################################################
 691git-mktag
 692
 693Reads a tag contents from its standard input and creates a tag object.
 694The input must be a well formed tag object.
 695
 696
 697################################################################
 698git-prune-script
 699
 700This runs git-fsck-cache --unreachable program using the heads specified
 701on the command line (or .git/refs/heads/* and .git/refs/tags/* if none is
 702specified), and prunes all unreachable objects from the object database.
 703
 704
 705################################################################
 706git-pull-script
 707
 708This script is used by Linus to pull from a remote repository and perform
 709a merge.
 710
 711
 712################################################################
 713git-read-tree
 714        git-read-tree (<tree-ish> | -m <tree-ish1> [<tree-ish2> <tree-ish3>])"
 715
 716Reads the tree information given by <tree> into the directory cache,
 717but does not actually _update_ any of the files it "caches". (see:
 718git-checkout-cache)
 719
 720Optionally, it can merge a tree into the cache or perform a 3-way
 721merge.
 722
 723Trivial merges are done by git-read-tree itself.  Only conflicting paths
 724will be in unmerged state when git-read-tree returns.
 725
 726-m
 727        Perform a merge, not just a read
 728
 729<tree-ish#>
 730        The id of the tree object(s) to be read/merged.
 731
 732
 733Merging
 734If -m is specified, git-read-tree performs 2 kinds of merge, a single tree
 735merge if only 1 tree is given or a 3-way merge if 3 trees are
 736provided.
 737
 738Single Tree Merge
 739If only 1 tree is specified, git-read-tree operates as if the user did not
 740specify "-m", except that if the original cache has an entry for a
 741given pathname; and the contents of the path matches with the tree
 742being read, the stat info from the cache is used. (In other words, the
 743cache's stat()s take precedence over the merged tree's)
 744
 745That means that if you do a "git-read-tree -m <newtree>" followed by a
 746"git-checkout-cache -f -a", the git-checkout-cache only checks out the stuff
 747that really changed.
 748
 749This is used to avoid unnecessary false hits when git-diff-files is
 750run after git-read-tree.
 751
 7523-Way Merge
 753Each "index" entry has two bits worth of "stage" state. stage 0 is the
 754normal one, and is the only one you'd see in any kind of normal use.
 755
 756However, when you do "git-read-tree" with three trees, the "stage"
 757starts out at 1.
 758
 759This means that you can do
 760
 761        git-read-tree -m <tree1> <tree2> <tree3>
 762
 763and you will end up with an index with all of the <tree1> entries in
 764"stage1", all of the <tree2> entries in "stage2" and all of the
 765<tree3> entries in "stage3".
 766
 767Furthermore, "git-read-tree" has special-case logic that says: if you see
 768a file that matches in all respects in the following states, it
 769"collapses" back to "stage0":
 770
 771   - stage 2 and 3 are the same; take one or the other (it makes no
 772     difference - the same work has been done on stage 2 and 3)
 773
 774   - stage 1 and stage 2 are the same and stage 3 is different; take
 775     stage 3 (some work has been done on stage 3)
 776
 777   - stage 1 and stage 3 are the same and stage 2 is different take
 778     stage 2 (some work has been done on stage 2)
 779
 780The git-write-tree command refuses to write a nonsensical tree, and it
 781will complain about unmerged entries if it sees a single entry that is not
 782stage 0.
 783
 784Ok, this all sounds like a collection of totally nonsensical rules,
 785but it's actually exactly what you want in order to do a fast
 786merge. The different stages represent the "result tree" (stage 0, aka
 787"merged"), the original tree (stage 1, aka "orig"), and the two trees
 788you are trying to merge (stage 2 and 3 respectively).
 789
 790In fact, the way "git-read-tree" works, it's entirely agnostic about how
 791you assign the stages, and you could really assign them any which way,
 792and the above is just a suggested way to do it (except since
 793"git-write-tree" refuses to write anything but stage0 entries, it makes
 794sense to always consider stage 0 to be the "full merge" state).
 795
 796So what happens? Try it out. Select the original tree, and two trees
 797to merge, and look how it works:
 798
 799 - if a file exists in identical format in all three trees, it will 
 800   automatically collapse to "merged" state by the new git-read-tree.
 801
 802 - a file that has _any_ difference what-so-ever in the three trees
 803   will stay as separate entries in the index. It's up to "script
 804   policy" to determine how to remove the non-0 stages, and insert a
 805   merged version.  But since the index is always sorted, they're easy
 806   to find: they'll be clustered together.
 807
 808 - the index file saves and restores with all this information, so you
 809   can merge things incrementally, but as long as it has entries in
 810   stages 1/2/3 (ie "unmerged entries") you can't write the result.
 811
 812So now the merge algorithm ends up being really simple:
 813
 814 - you walk the index in order, and ignore all entries of stage 0,
 815   since they've already been done.
 816
 817 - if you find a "stage1", but no matching "stage2" or "stage3", you
 818   know it's been removed from both trees (it only existed in the
 819   original tree), and you remove that entry.  - if you find a
 820   matching "stage2" and "stage3" tree, you remove one of them, and
 821   turn the other into a "stage0" entry. Remove any matching "stage1"
 822   entry if it exists too.  .. all the normal trivial rules ..
 823
 824Incidentally - it also means that you don't even have to have a separate
 825subdirectory for this. All the information literally is in the index file,
 826which is a temporary thing anyway. There is no need to worry about what is
 827in the working directory, since it is never shown and never used.
 828
 829see also:
 830git-write-tree
 831git-ls-files
 832
 833
 834################################################################
 835git-resolve-script
 836
 837This script is used by Linus to merge two trees.
 838
 839
 840################################################################
 841git-rev-list <commit>
 842
 843Lists commit objects in reverse chronological order starting at the
 844given commit, taking ancestry relationship into account.  This is
 845useful to produce human-readable log output.
 846
 847
 848################################################################
 849git-rev-tree
 850        git-rev-tree [--edges] [--cache <cache-file>] [^]<commit> [[^]<commit>]
 851
 852Provides the revision tree for one or more commits.
 853
 854--edges
 855        Show edges (ie places where the marking changes between parent
 856        and child)
 857
 858--cache <cache-file>
 859        Use the specified file as a cache from a previous git-rev-list run
 860        to speed things up.  Note that this "cache" is totally different
 861        concept from the directory index.  Also this option is not
 862        implemented yet.
 863
 864[^]<commit>
 865        The commit id to trace (a leading caret means to ignore this
 866        commit-id and below)
 867
 868Output:
 869<date> <commit>:<flags> [<parent-commit>:<flags> ]*
 870
 871<date>
 872        Date in 'seconds since epoch'
 873
 874<commit>
 875        id of commit object
 876
 877<parent-commit>
 878        id of each parent commit object (>1 indicates a merge)
 879
 880<flags>
 881
 882        The flags are read as a bitmask representing each commit
 883        provided on the commandline. eg: given the command:
 884
 885                 $ git-rev-tree <com1> <com2> <com3>
 886
 887        The output:
 888
 889            <date> <commit>:5
 890
 891         means that <commit> is reachable from <com1>(1) and <com3>(4)
 892        
 893A revtree can get quite large. git-rev-tree will eventually allow you to
 894cache previous state so that you don't have to follow the whole thing
 895down.
 896
 897So the change difference between two commits is literally
 898
 899        git-rev-tree [commit-id1]  > commit1-revtree
 900        git-rev-tree [commit-id2]  > commit2-revtree
 901        join -t : commit1-revtree commit2-revtree > common-revisions
 902
 903(this is also how to find the most common parent - you'd look at just
 904the head revisions - the ones that aren't referred to by other
 905revisions - in "common-revision", and figure out the best one. I
 906think.)
 907
 908
 909################################################################
 910git-rpull
 911
 912        git-rpull [-c] [-t] [-a] [-v] commit-id url
 913
 914Pulls from a remote repository over ssh connection, invoking git-rpush on
 915the other end.
 916
 917-c
 918        Get the commit objects.
 919-t
 920        Get trees associated with the commit objects.
 921-a
 922        Get all the objects.
 923-v
 924        Report what is downloaded.
 925
 926
 927################################################################
 928git-rpush
 929
 930Helper "server-side" program used by git-rpull.
 931
 932
 933################################################################
 934git-diff-files
 935        git-diff-files [-p] [-q] [-r] [-z] [<pattern>...]
 936
 937Compares the files in the working tree and the cache.  When paths
 938are specified, compares only those named paths.  Otherwise all
 939entries in the cache are compared.  The output format is the
 940same as git-diff-cache and git-diff-tree.
 941
 942-p
 943        generate patch (see section on generating patches).
 944
 945-q
 946        Remain silent even on nonexisting files
 947
 948-r
 949        This flag does not mean anything.  It is there only to match
 950        git-diff-tree.  Unlike git-diff-tree, git-diff-files always looks
 951        at all the subdirectories.
 952
 953
 954Output format:
 955
 956See "Output format from git-diff-cache, git-diff-tree and git-diff-files"
 957section.
 958
 959
 960################################################################
 961git-tag-script
 962
 963This is an example script that uses git-mktag to create a tag object
 964signed with GPG.
 965
 966
 967################################################################
 968git-tar-tree
 969
 970        git-tar-tree <tree-ish> [ <base> ]
 971
 972Creates a tar archive containing the tree structure for the named tree.
 973When <base> is specified it is added as a leading path as the files in the
 974generated tar archive.
 975
 976
 977################################################################
 978git-ls-files
 979        git-ls-files [-z] [-t]
 980                (--[cached|deleted|others|ignored|stage|unmerged])*
 981                (-[c|d|o|i|s|u])*
 982                [-x <pattern>|--exclude=<pattern>]
 983                [-X <file>|--exclude-from=<file>]
 984
 985This merges the file listing in the directory cache index with the
 986actual working directory list, and shows different combinations of the
 987two.
 988
 989One or more of the options below may be used to determine the files
 990shown:
 991
 992-c|--cached
 993        Show cached files in the output (default)
 994
 995-d|--deleted
 996        Show deleted files in the output
 997
 998-o|--others
 999        Show other files in the output
1000
1001-i|--ignored
1002        Show ignored files in the output
1003        Note the this also reverses any exclude list present.
1004
1005-s|--stage
1006        Show stage files in the output
1007
1008-u|--unmerged
1009        Show unmerged files in the output (forces --stage)
1010
1011-z
1012        \0 line termination on output
1013
1014-x|--exclude=<pattern>
1015        Skips files matching pattern.
1016        Note that pattern is a shell wildcard pattern.
1017
1018-X|--exclude-from=<file>
1019        exclude patterns are read from <file>; 1 per line.
1020        Allows the use of the famous dontdiff file as follows to find
1021        out about uncommitted files just as dontdiff is used with
1022        the diff command:
1023             git-ls-files --others --exclude-from=dontdiff
1024
1025Output
1026show files just outputs the filename unless --stage is specified in
1027which case it outputs:
1028
1029[<tag> ]<mode> <object> <stage> <file>
1030
1031git-ls-files --unmerged" and "git-ls-files --stage " can be used to examine
1032detailed information on unmerged paths.
1033
1034For an unmerged path, instead of recording a single mode/SHA1 pair,
1035the dircache records up to three such pairs; one from tree O in stage
10361, A in stage 2, and B in stage 3.  This information can be used by
1037the user (or Cogito) to see what should eventually be recorded at the
1038path. (see read-cache for more information on state)
1039
1040see also:
1041read-cache
1042
1043
1044################################################################
1045git-unpack-file
1046        git-unpack-file <blob>
1047
1048Creates a file holding the contents of the blob specified by sha1. It
1049returns the name of the temporary file in the following format:
1050        .merge_file_XXXXX
1051
1052<blob>
1053        Must be a blob id
1054
1055################################################################
1056git-update-cache
1057        git-update-cache
1058             [--add] [--remove] [--refresh]
1059             [--ignore-missing]
1060             [--force-remove <file>]
1061             [--cacheinfo <mode> <object> <file>]*
1062             [--] [<file>]*
1063
1064Modifies the index or directory cache. Each file mentioned is updated
1065into the cache and any 'unmerged' or 'needs updating' state is
1066cleared.
1067
1068The way git-update-cache handles files it is told about can be modified
1069using the various options:
1070
1071--add
1072        If a specified file isn't in the cache already then it's
1073        added.
1074        Default behaviour is to ignore new files.
1075
1076--remove
1077        If a specified file is in the cache but is missing then it's
1078        removed.
1079        Default behaviour is to ignore removed file.
1080
1081--refresh
1082        Looks at the current cache and checks to see if merges or
1083        updates are needed by checking stat() information.
1084
1085--ignore-missing
1086        Ignores missing files during a --refresh
1087
1088--cacheinfo <mode> <object> <path>
1089        Directly insert the specified info into the cache.
1090        
1091--force-remove
1092        Remove the file from the index even when the working directory
1093        still has such a file.
1094
1095--
1096        Do not interpret any more arguments as options.
1097
1098<file>
1099        Files to act on.
1100        Note that files begining with '.' are discarded. This includes
1101        "./file" and "dir/./file". If you don't want this, then use     
1102        cleaner names.
1103        The same applies to directories ending '/' and paths with '//'
1104
1105Using --refresh
1106--refresh does not calculate a new sha1 file or bring the cache
1107up-to-date for mode/content changes. But what it _does_ do is to
1108"re-match" the stat information of a file with the cache, so that you
1109can refresh the cache for a file that hasn't been changed but where
1110the stat entry is out of date.
1111
1112For example, you'd want to do this after doing a "git-read-tree", to link
1113up the stat cache details with the proper files.
1114
1115Using --cacheinfo
1116--cacheinfo is used to register a file that is not in the current
1117working directory.  This is useful for minimum-checkout merging.
1118
1119To pretend you have a file with mode and sha1 at path, say:
1120
1121 $ git-update-cache --cacheinfo mode sha1 path
1122
1123To update and refresh only the files already checked out:
1124
1125   git-checkout-cache -n -f -a && git-update-cache --ignore-missing --refresh
1126
1127
1128################################################################
1129git-write-blob
1130
1131        git-write-blob <any-file-on-the-filesystem>
1132
1133Writes the contents of the named file (which can be outside of the work
1134tree) as a blob into the object database, and reports its object ID to its
1135standard output.  This is used by git-merge-one-file-script to update the
1136cache without modifying files in the work tree.
1137
1138
1139################################################################
1140git-write-tree
1141        git-write-tree
1142
1143Creates a tree object using the current cache.
1144
1145The cache must be merged.
1146
1147Conceptually, git-write-tree sync()s the current directory cache contents
1148into a set of tree files.
1149In order to have that match what is actually in your directory right
1150now, you need to have done a "git-update-cache" phase before you did the
1151"git-write-tree".
1152
1153
1154################################################################
1155
1156Output format from git-diff-cache, git-diff-tree and git-diff-files.
1157
1158These commands all compare two sets of things; what are
1159compared are different:
1160
1161    git-diff-cache <tree-ish>
1162
1163        compares the <tree-ish> and the files on the filesystem.
1164
1165    git-diff-cache --cached <tree-ish>
1166
1167        compares the <tree-ish> and the cache.
1168
1169    git-diff-tree [-r] <tree-ish-1> <tree-ish-2> [<pattern>...]
1170
1171        compares the trees named by the two arguments.
1172
1173    git-diff-files [<pattern>...]
1174
1175        compares the cache and the files on the filesystem.
1176
1177The following desription uses "old" and "new" to mean those
1178compared entities.
1179
1180For files in old but not in new (i.e. removed):
1181-<mode> \t <type> \t <object> \t <path>
1182
1183For files not in old but in new (i.e. added):
1184+<mode> \t <type> \t <object> \t <path>
1185
1186For files that differ:
1187*<old-mode>-><new-mode> \t <type> \t <old-sha1>-><new-sha1> \t <path>
1188
1189<new-sha1> is shown as all 0's if new is a file on the
1190filesystem and it is out of sync with the cache.  Example:
1191
1192  *100644->100644 blob    5be4a4.......->000000.......      file.c
1193
1194################################################################
1195
1196Generating patches
1197
1198When git-diff-cache, git-diff-tree, or git-diff-files are run with a -p
1199option, they do not produce the output described in "Output format from
1200git-diff-cache, git-diff-tree and git-diff-files" section.  It instead
1201produces a patch file.
1202
1203The patch generation can be customized at two levels.  This
1204customization also applies to git-diff-tree-helper.
1205
12061. When the environment variable GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF is not set,
1207   these commands internally invoke diff like this:
1208
1209   diff -L a/<path> -L a/<path> -pu <old> <new>
1210
1211   For added files, /dev/null is used for <old>.  For removed
1212   files, /dev/null is used for <new>
1213
1214   The diff formatting options can be customized via the
1215   environment variable GIT_DIFF_OPTS.  For example, if you
1216   prefer context diff:
1217
1218   GIT_DIFF_OPTS=-c git-diff-cache -p $(cat .git/HEAD)
1219
1220
12212. When the environment variable GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF is set, the
1222   program named by it is called, instead of the diff invocation
1223   described above.
1224
1225   For a path that is added, removed, or modified,
1226   GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF is called with 7 parameters:
1227
1228     path old-file old-hex old-mode new-file new-hex new-mode
1229
1230   where
1231     <old|new>-file are files GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF can use to read the
1232                    contents of <old|ne>,
1233     <old|new>-hex are the 40-hexdigit SHA1 hashes,
1234     <old|new>-mode are the octal representation of the file modes.
1235
1236   The file parameters can point at the user's working file (e.g. new-file
1237   in git-diff-files), /dev/null (e.g. old-file when a new file is added),
1238   or a temporary file (e.g. old-file in the cache).  GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF
1239   should not worry about unlinking the temporary file --- it is removed
1240   when GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF exits.
1241
1242   For a path that is unmerged, GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF is called with
1243   1 parameter, path.
1244
1245################################################################
1246
1247Terminology: - see README for description
1248Each line contains terms used interchangeably
1249
1250object database, .git directory
1251directory cache, index
1252id, sha1, sha1-id, sha1 hash
1253type, tag
1254blob, blob object
1255tree, tree object
1256commit, commit object
1257parent
1258root object
1259changeset
1260
1261
1262git Environment Variables
1263AUTHOR_NAME
1264AUTHOR_EMAIL
1265AUTHOR_DATE
1266COMMIT_AUTHOR_NAME
1267COMMIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL
1268GIT_DIFF_OPTS
1269GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF
1270GIT_INDEX_FILE
1271SHA1_FILE_DIRECTORY