# source ~/.git-completion.sh
# 3) Consider changing your PS1 to also show the current branch,
# see git-prompt.sh for details.
+#
+# If you use complex aliases of form '!f() { ... }; f', you can use the null
+# command ':' as the first command in the function body to declare the desired
+# completion style. For example '!f() { : git commit ; ... }; f' will
+# tell the completion to use commit completion. This also works with aliases
+# of form "!sh -c '...'". For example, "!sh -c ': git commit ; ... '".
case "$COMP_WORDBREAKS" in
*:*) : great ;;
-*) : option ;;
*=*) : setting env ;;
git) : git itself ;;
+ \(\)) : skip parens of shell function definition ;;
+ {) : skip start of shell helper function ;;
+ :) : skip null command ;;
+ \'*) : skip opening quote after sh -c ;;
*)
echo "$word"
return
__git_complete_revlist
}
+# Common merge options shared by git-merge(1) and git-pull(1).
__git_merge_options="
--no-commit --no-stat --log --no-log --squash --strategy
--commit --stat --no-squash --ff --no-ff --ff-only --edit --no-edit
+ --verify-signatures --no-verify-signatures --gpg-sign
+ --quiet --verbose --progress --no-progress
"
_git_merge ()
case "$cur" in
--*)
- __gitcomp "$__git_merge_options"
+ __gitcomp "$__git_merge_options
+ --rerere-autoupdate --no-rerere-autoupdate --abort"
return
esac
__gitcomp_nl "$(__git_refs)"