Git fork
1gitcli(7)
2=========
3
4NAME
5----
6gitcli - Git command-line interface and conventions
7
8SYNOPSIS
9--------
10gitcli
11
12
13DESCRIPTION
14-----------
15
16This manual describes the convention used throughout Git CLI.
17
18Many commands take revisions (most often "commits", but sometimes
19"tree-ish", depending on the context and command) and paths as their
20arguments. Here are the rules:
21
22 * Options come first and then args.
23 A subcommand may take dashed options (which may take their own
24 arguments, e.g. "--max-parents 2") and arguments. You SHOULD
25 give dashed options first and then arguments. Some commands may
26 accept dashed options after you have already given non-option
27 arguments (which may make the command ambiguous), but you should
28 not rely on it (because eventually we may find a way to fix
29 these ambiguities by enforcing the "options then args" rule).
30
31 * Revisions come first and then paths.
32 E.g. in `git diff v1.0 v2.0 arch/x86 include/asm-x86`,
33 `v1.0` and `v2.0` are revisions and `arch/x86` and `include/asm-x86`
34 are paths.
35
36 * When an argument can be misunderstood as either a revision or a path,
37 they can be disambiguated by placing `--` between them.
38 E.g. `git diff -- HEAD` is, "I have a file called HEAD in my work
39 tree. Please show changes between the version I staged in the index
40 and what I have in the work tree for that file", not "show the difference
41 between the HEAD commit and the work tree as a whole". You can say
42 `git diff HEAD --` to ask for the latter.
43
44 * Without disambiguating `--`, Git makes a reasonable guess, but errors
45 out and asks you to disambiguate when ambiguous. E.g. if you have a
46 file called HEAD in your work tree, `git diff HEAD` is ambiguous, and
47 you have to say either `git diff HEAD --` or `git diff -- HEAD` to
48 disambiguate.
49
50 * Because `--` disambiguates revisions and paths in some commands, it
51 cannot be used for those commands to separate options and revisions.
52 You can use `--end-of-options` for this (it also works for commands
53 that do not distinguish between revisions in paths, in which case it
54 is simply an alias for `--`).
55+
56When writing a script that is expected to handle random user-input, it is
57a good practice to make it explicit which arguments are which by placing
58disambiguating `--` at appropriate places.
59
60 * Many commands allow wildcards in paths, but you need to protect
61 them from getting globbed by the shell. These two mean different
62 things:
63+
64--------------------------------
65$ git restore *.c
66$ git restore \*.c
67--------------------------------
68+
69The former lets your shell expand the fileglob, and you are asking
70the dot-C files in your working tree to be overwritten with the version
71in the index. The latter passes the `*.c` to Git, and you are asking
72the paths in the index that match the pattern to be checked out to your
73working tree. After running `git add hello.c; rm hello.c`, you will _not_
74see `hello.c` in your working tree with the former, but with the latter
75you will.
76
77 * Just as the filesystem '.' (period) refers to the current directory,
78 using a '.' as a repository name in Git (a dot-repository) is a relative
79 path and means your current repository.
80
81Here are the rules regarding the "flags" that you should follow when you are
82scripting Git:
83
84 * Splitting short options to separate words (prefer `git foo -a -b`
85 to `git foo -ab`, the latter may not even work).
86
87 * When a command-line option takes an argument, use the 'stuck' form. In
88 other words, write `git foo -oArg` instead of `git foo -o Arg` for short
89 options, and `git foo --long-opt=Arg` instead of `git foo --long-opt Arg`
90 for long options. An option that takes optional option-argument must be
91 written in the 'stuck' form.
92
93 * Despite the above suggestion, when Arg is a path relative to the
94 home directory of a user, e.g. `~/directory/file` or `~u/d/f`, you
95 may want to use the separate form, e.g. `git foo --file ~/mine`,
96 not `git foo --file=~/mine`. The shell will expand `~/` in the
97 former to your home directory, but most shells keep the tilde in
98 the latter. Some of our commands know how to tilde-expand the
99 option value even when given in the stuck form, but not all of
100 them do.
101
102 * When you give a revision parameter to a command, make sure the parameter is
103 not ambiguous with a name of a file in the work tree. E.g. do not write
104 `git log -1 HEAD` but write `git log -1 HEAD --`; the former will not work
105 if you happen to have a file called `HEAD` in the work tree.
106
107 * Many commands allow a long option `--option` to be abbreviated
108 only to their unique prefix (e.g. if there is no other option
109 whose name begins with `opt`, you may be able to spell `--opt` to
110 invoke the `--option` flag), but you should fully spell them out
111 when writing your scripts; later versions of Git may introduce a
112 new option whose name shares the same prefix, e.g. `--optimize`,
113 to make a short prefix that used to be unique no longer unique.
114
115
116ENHANCED OPTION PARSER
117----------------------
118From the Git 1.5.4 series and further, many Git commands (not all of them at the
119time of the writing though) come with an enhanced option parser.
120
121Here is a list of the facilities provided by this option parser.
122
123
124Magic Options
125~~~~~~~~~~~~~
126Commands which have the enhanced option parser activated all understand a
127couple of magic command-line options:
128
129-h::
130 gives a pretty printed usage of the command.
131+
132---------------------------------------------
133$ git describe -h
134usage: git describe [<options>] <commit-ish>*
135 or: git describe [<options>] --dirty
136
137 --contains find the tag that comes after the commit
138 --debug debug search strategy on stderr
139 --all use any ref
140 --tags use any tag, even unannotated
141 --long always use long format
142 --abbrev[=<n>] use <n> digits to display SHA-1s
143---------------------------------------------
144+
145Note that some subcommand (e.g. `git grep`) may behave differently
146when there are things on the command line other than `-h`, but `git
147subcmd -h` without anything else on the command line is meant to
148consistently give the usage.
149
150--help-all::
151 Some Git commands take options that are only used for plumbing or that
152 are deprecated, and such options are hidden from the default usage. This
153 option gives the full list of options.
154
155
156Negating options
157~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
158Options with long option names can be negated by prefixing `--no-`. For
159example, `git branch` has the option `--track` which is 'on' by default. You
160can use `--no-track` to override that behaviour. The same goes for `--color`
161and `--no-color`.
162
163
164Options trump configuration and environment
165~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
166
167When there is a configuration variable or an environment variable
168that tweak the behaviour of an aspect of a Git command, and also a
169command line option that tweaks the same, the command line option
170overrides what the configuration and/or environment variable say.
171
172For example, the `user.name` configuration variable is used to
173specify the human-readable name used by the `git commit` command to
174record the author and the committer name in a newly created commit.
175The `GIT_AUTHOR_NAME` environment variable, if set, takes precedence
176when deciding what author name to record. The `--author=<author>`
177command line option of the `git commit` command, when given, takes
178precedence over these two sources of information.
179
180
181Aggregating short options
182~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
183Commands that support the enhanced option parser allow you to aggregate short
184options. This means that you can for example use `git rm -rf` or
185`git clean -fdx`.
186
187
188Abbreviating long options
189~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
190Commands that support the enhanced option parser accepts unique
191prefix of a long option as if it is fully spelled out, but use this
192with a caution. For example, `git commit --amen` behaves as if you
193typed `git commit --amend`, but that is true only until a later version
194of Git introduces another option that shares the same prefix,
195e.g. `git commit --amenity` option.
196
197
198Separating argument from the option
199~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
200You can write the mandatory option parameter to an option as a separate
201word on the command line. That means that all the following uses work:
202
203----------------------------
204$ git foo --long-opt=Arg
205$ git foo --long-opt Arg
206$ git foo -oArg
207$ git foo -o Arg
208----------------------------
209
210However, this is *NOT* allowed for switches with an optional value, where the
211'stuck' form must be used:
212
213----------------------------
214$ git describe --abbrev HEAD # correct
215$ git describe --abbrev=10 HEAD # correct
216$ git describe --abbrev 10 HEAD # NOT WHAT YOU MEANT
217----------------------------
218
219
220Magic filename options
221~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
222Options that take a filename allow a prefix `:(optional)`. For example:
223
224----------------------------
225git commit -F :(optional)COMMIT_EDITMSG
226# if COMMIT_EDITMSG does not exist, equivalent to
227git commit
228----------------------------
229
230Like with configuration values, if the named file is missing Git behaves as if
231the option was not given at all. See "Values" in linkgit:git-config[1].
232
233NOTES ON FREQUENTLY CONFUSED OPTIONS
234------------------------------------
235
236Many commands that can work on files in the working tree
237and/or in the index can take `--cached` and/or `--index`
238options. Sometimes people incorrectly think that, because
239the index was originally called cache, these two are
240synonyms. They are *not* -- these two options mean very
241different things.
242
243 * The `--cached` option is used to ask a command that
244 usually works on files in the working tree to *only* work
245 with the index. For example, `git grep`, when used
246 without a commit to specify from which commit to look for
247 strings in, usually works on files in the working tree,
248 but with the `--cached` option, it looks for strings in
249 the index.
250
251 * The `--index` option is used to ask a command that
252 usually works on files in the working tree to *also*
253 affect the index. For example, `git stash apply` usually
254 merges changes recorded in a stash entry to the working tree,
255 but with the `--index` option, it also merges changes to
256 the index as well.
257
258`git apply` command can be used with `--cached` and
259`--index` (but not at the same time). Usually the command
260only affects the files in the working tree, but with
261`--index`, it patches both the files and their index
262entries, and with `--cached`, it modifies only the index
263entries.
264
265See also https://lore.kernel.org/git/7v64clg5u9.fsf@assigned-by-dhcp.cox.net/ and
266https://lore.kernel.org/git/7vy7ej9g38.fsf@gitster.siamese.dyndns.org/ for further
267information.
268
269Some other commands that also work on files in the working tree and/or
270in the index can take `--staged` and/or `--worktree`.
271
272* `--staged` is exactly like `--cached`, which is used to ask a
273 command to only work on the index, not the working tree.
274
275* `--worktree` is the opposite, to ask a command to work on the
276 working tree only, not the index.
277
278* The two options can be specified together to ask a command to work
279 on both the index and the working tree.
280
281GIT
282---
283Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite