1git-tag(1) 2========== 3 4NAME 5---- 6git-tag - Create, list, delete or verify a tag object signed with GPG 7 8 9SYNOPSIS 10-------- 11[verse] 12'git tag' [-a | -s | -u <keyid>] [-f] [-m <msg> | -F <file>] [-e] 13 <tagname> [<commit> | <object>] 14'git tag' -d <tagname>... 15'git tag' [-n[<num>]] -l [--contains <commit>] [--no-contains <commit>] 16 [--points-at <object>] [--column[=<options>] | --no-column] 17 [--create-reflog] [--sort=<key>] [--format=<format>] 18 [--[no-]merged [<commit>]] [<pattern>...] 19'git tag' -v [--format=<format>] <tagname>... 20 21DESCRIPTION 22----------- 23 24Add a tag reference in `refs/tags/`, unless `-d/-l/-v` is given 25to delete, list or verify tags. 26 27Unless `-f` is given, the named tag must not yet exist. 28 29If one of `-a`, `-s`, or `-u <keyid>` is passed, the command 30creates a 'tag' object, and requires a tag message. Unless 31`-m <msg>` or `-F <file>` is given, an editor is started for the user to type 32in the tag message. 33 34If `-m <msg>` or `-F <file>` is given and `-a`, `-s`, and `-u <keyid>` 35are absent, `-a` is implied. 36 37Otherwise, a tag reference that points directly at the given object 38(i.e., a lightweight tag) is created. 39 40A GnuPG signed tag object will be created when `-s` or `-u 41<keyid>` is used. When `-u <keyid>` is not used, the 42committer identity for the current user is used to find the 43GnuPG key for signing. The configuration variable `gpg.program` 44is used to specify custom GnuPG binary. 45 46Tag objects (created with `-a`, `-s`, or `-u`) are called "annotated" 47tags; they contain a creation date, the tagger name and e-mail, a 48tagging message, and an optional GnuPG signature. Whereas a 49"lightweight" tag is simply a name for an object (usually a commit 50object). 51 52Annotated tags are meant for release while lightweight tags are meant 53for private or temporary object labels. For this reason, some git 54commands for naming objects (like `git describe`) will ignore 55lightweight tags by default. 56 57 58OPTIONS 59------- 60-a:: 61--annotate:: 62 Make an unsigned, annotated tag object 63 64-s:: 65--sign:: 66 Make a GPG-signed tag, using the default e-mail address's key. 67 The default behavior of tag GPG-signing is controlled by `tag.gpgSign` 68 configuration variable if it exists, or disabled oder otherwise. 69 See linkgit:git-config[1]. 70 71--no-sign:: 72 Override `tag.gpgSign` configuration variable that is 73 set to force each and every tag to be signed. 74 75-u <keyid>:: 76--local-user=<keyid>:: 77 Make a GPG-signed tag, using the given key. 78 79-f:: 80--force:: 81 Replace an existing tag with the given name (instead of failing) 82 83-d:: 84--delete:: 85 Delete existing tags with the given names. 86 87-v:: 88--verify:: 89 Verify the GPG signature of the given tag names. 90 91-n<num>:: 92 <num> specifies how many lines from the annotation, if any, 93 are printed when using -l. Implies `--list`. 94+ 95The default is not to print any annotation lines. 96If no number is given to `-n`, only the first line is printed. 97If the tag is not annotated, the commit message is displayed instead. 98 99-l:: 100--list:: 101 List tags. With optional `<pattern>...`, e.g. `git tag --list 102 'v-*'`, list only the tags that match the pattern(s). 103+ 104Running "git tag" without arguments also lists all tags. The pattern 105is a shell wildcard (i.e., matched using fnmatch(3)). Multiple 106patterns may be given; if any of them matches, the tag is shown. 107+ 108This option is implicitly supplied if any other list-like option such 109as `--contains` is provided. See the documentation for each of those 110options for details. 111 112--sort=<key>:: 113 Sort based on the key given. Prefix `-` to sort in 114 descending order of the value. You may use the --sort=<key> option 115 multiple times, in which case the last key becomes the primary 116 key. Also supports "version:refname" or "v:refname" (tag 117 names are treated as versions). The "version:refname" sort 118 order can also be affected by the "versionsort.suffix" 119 configuration variable. 120 The keys supported are the same as those in `git for-each-ref`. 121 Sort order defaults to the value configured for the `tag.sort` 122 variable if it exists, or lexicographic order otherwise. See 123 linkgit:git-config[1]. 124 125--color[=<when>]:: 126 Respect any colors specified in the `--format` option. The 127 `<when>` field must be one of `always`, `never`, or `auto` (if 128 `<when>` is absent, behave as if `always` was given). 129 130-i:: 131--ignore-case:: 132 Sorting and filtering tags are case insensitive. 133 134--column[=<options>]:: 135--no-column:: 136 Display tag listing in columns. See configuration variable 137 column.tag for option syntax.`--column` and `--no-column` 138 without options are equivalent to 'always' and 'never' respectively. 139+ 140This option is only applicable when listing tags without annotation lines. 141 142--contains [<commit>]:: 143 Only list tags which contain the specified commit (HEAD if not 144 specified). Implies `--list`. 145 146--no-contains [<commit>]:: 147 Only list tags which don't contain the specified commit (HEAD if 148 not specified). Implies `--list`. 149 150--merged [<commit>]:: 151 Only list tags whose commits are reachable from the specified 152 commit (`HEAD` if not specified), incompatible with `--no-merged`. 153 154--no-merged [<commit>]:: 155 Only list tags whose commits are not reachable from the specified 156 commit (`HEAD` if not specified), incompatible with `--merged`. 157 158--points-at <object>:: 159 Only list tags of the given object (HEAD if not 160 specified). Implies `--list`. 161 162-m <msg>:: 163--message=<msg>:: 164 Use the given tag message (instead of prompting). 165 If multiple `-m` options are given, their values are 166 concatenated as separate paragraphs. 167 Implies `-a` if none of `-a`, `-s`, or `-u <keyid>` 168 is given. 169 170-F <file>:: 171--file=<file>:: 172 Take the tag message from the given file. Use '-' to 173 read the message from the standard input. 174 Implies `-a` if none of `-a`, `-s`, or `-u <keyid>` 175 is given. 176 177-e:: 178--edit:: 179 The message taken from file with `-F` and command line with 180 `-m` are usually used as the tag message unmodified. 181 This option lets you further edit the message taken from these sources. 182 183--cleanup=<mode>:: 184 This option sets how the tag message is cleaned up. 185 The '<mode>' can be one of 'verbatim', 'whitespace' and 'strip'. The 186 'strip' mode is default. The 'verbatim' mode does not change message at 187 all, 'whitespace' removes just leading/trailing whitespace lines and 188 'strip' removes both whitespace and commentary. 189 190--create-reflog:: 191 Create a reflog for the tag. To globally enable reflogs for tags, see 192 `core.logAllRefUpdates` in linkgit:git-config[1]. 193 The negated form `--no-create-reflog` only overrides an earlier 194 `--create-reflog`, but currently does not negate the setting of 195 `core.logAllRefUpdates`. 196 197--format=<format>:: 198 A string that interpolates `%(fieldname)` from a tag ref being shown 199 and the object it points at. The format is the same as 200 that of linkgit:git-for-each-ref[1]. When unspecified, 201 defaults to `%(refname:strip=2)`. 202 203<tagname>:: 204 The name of the tag to create, delete, or describe. 205 The new tag name must pass all checks defined by 206 linkgit:git-check-ref-format[1]. Some of these checks 207 may restrict the characters allowed in a tag name. 208 209<commit>:: 210<object>:: 211 The object that the new tag will refer to, usually a commit. 212 Defaults to HEAD. 213 214CONFIGURATION 215------------- 216By default, 'git tag' in sign-with-default mode (-s) will use your 217committer identity (of the form `Your Name <your@email.address>`) to 218find a key. If you want to use a different default key, you can specify 219it in the repository configuration as follows: 220 221------------------------------------- 222[user] 223 signingKey = <gpg-keyid> 224------------------------------------- 225 226`pager.tag` is only respected when listing tags, i.e., when `-l` is 227used or implied. The default is to use a pager. 228See linkgit:git-config[1]. 229 230DISCUSSION 231---------- 232 233On Re-tagging 234~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 235 236What should you do when you tag a wrong commit and you would 237want to re-tag? 238 239If you never pushed anything out, just re-tag it. Use "-f" to 240replace the old one. And you're done. 241 242But if you have pushed things out (or others could just read 243your repository directly), then others will have already seen 244the old tag. In that case you can do one of two things: 245 246. The sane thing. 247 Just admit you screwed up, and use a different name. Others have 248 already seen one tag-name, and if you keep the same name, you 249 may be in the situation that two people both have "version X", 250 but they actually have 'different' "X"'s. So just call it "X.1" 251 and be done with it. 252 253. The insane thing. 254 You really want to call the new version "X" too, 'even though' 255 others have already seen the old one. So just use 'git tag -f' 256 again, as if you hadn't already published the old one. 257 258However, Git does *not* (and it should not) change tags behind 259users back. So if somebody already got the old tag, doing a 260'git pull' on your tree shouldn't just make them overwrite the old 261one. 262 263If somebody got a release tag from you, you cannot just change 264the tag for them by updating your own one. This is a big 265security issue, in that people MUST be able to trust their 266tag-names. If you really want to do the insane thing, you need 267to just fess up to it, and tell people that you messed up. You 268can do that by making a very public announcement saying: 269 270------------ 271Ok, I messed up, and I pushed out an earlier version tagged as X. I 272then fixed something, and retagged the *fixed* tree as X again. 273 274If you got the wrong tag, and want the new one, please delete 275the old one and fetch the new one by doing: 276 277 git tag -d X 278 git fetch origin tag X 279 280to get my updated tag. 281 282You can test which tag you have by doing 283 284 git rev-parse X 285 286which should return 0123456789abcdef.. if you have the new version. 287 288Sorry for the inconvenience. 289------------ 290 291Does this seem a bit complicated? It *should* be. There is no 292way that it would be correct to just "fix" it automatically. 293People need to know that their tags might have been changed. 294 295 296On Automatic following 297~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 298 299If you are following somebody else's tree, you are most likely 300using remote-tracking branches (eg. `refs/remotes/origin/master`). 301You usually want the tags from the other end. 302 303On the other hand, if you are fetching because you would want a 304one-shot merge from somebody else, you typically do not want to 305get tags from there. This happens more often for people near 306the toplevel but not limited to them. Mere mortals when pulling 307from each other do not necessarily want to automatically get 308private anchor point tags from the other person. 309 310Often, "please pull" messages on the mailing list just provide 311two pieces of information: a repo URL and a branch name; this 312is designed to be easily cut&pasted at the end of a 'git fetch' 313command line: 314 315------------ 316Linus, please pull from 317 318 git://git..../proj.git master 319 320to get the following updates... 321------------ 322 323becomes: 324 325------------ 326$ git pull git://git..../proj.git master 327------------ 328 329In such a case, you do not want to automatically follow the other 330person's tags. 331 332One important aspect of Git is its distributed nature, which 333largely means there is no inherent "upstream" or 334"downstream" in the system. On the face of it, the above 335example might seem to indicate that the tag namespace is owned 336by the upper echelon of people and that tags only flow downwards, but 337that is not the case. It only shows that the usage pattern 338determines who are interested in whose tags. 339 340A one-shot pull is a sign that a commit history is now crossing 341the boundary between one circle of people (e.g. "people who are 342primarily interested in the networking part of the kernel") who may 343have their own set of tags (e.g. "this is the third release 344candidate from the networking group to be proposed for general 345consumption with 2.6.21 release") to another circle of people 346(e.g. "people who integrate various subsystem improvements"). 347The latter are usually not interested in the detailed tags used 348internally in the former group (that is what "internal" means). 349That is why it is desirable not to follow tags automatically in 350this case. 351 352It may well be that among networking people, they may want to 353exchange the tags internal to their group, but in that workflow 354they are most likely tracking each other's progress by 355having remote-tracking branches. Again, the heuristic to automatically 356follow such tags is a good thing. 357 358 359On Backdating Tags 360~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 361 362If you have imported some changes from another VCS and would like 363to add tags for major releases of your work, it is useful to be able 364to specify the date to embed inside of the tag object; such data in 365the tag object affects, for example, the ordering of tags in the 366gitweb interface. 367 368To set the date used in future tag objects, set the environment 369variable GIT_COMMITTER_DATE (see the later discussion of possible 370values; the most common form is "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM"). 371 372For example: 373 374------------ 375$ GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="2006-10-02 10:31" git tag -s v1.0.1 376------------ 377 378include::date-formats.txt[] 379 380SEE ALSO 381-------- 382linkgit:git-check-ref-format[1]. 383linkgit:git-config[1]. 384 385GIT 386--- 387Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite