diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
40 files changed, 2518 insertions, 177 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/Makefile b/Documentation/Makefile index 6346a75dda..551325604e 100644 --- a/Documentation/Makefile +++ b/Documentation/Makefile @@ -1,9 +1,9 @@ MAN1_TXT= \ $(filter-out $(addsuffix .txt, $(ARTICLES) $(SP_ARTICLES)), \ $(wildcard git-*.txt)) \ - gitk.txt git.txt + gitk.txt gitweb.txt git.txt MAN5_TXT=gitattributes.txt gitignore.txt gitmodules.txt githooks.txt \ - gitrepository-layout.txt + gitrepository-layout.txt gitweb.conf.txt MAN7_TXT=gitcli.txt gittutorial.txt gittutorial-2.txt \ gitcvs-migration.txt gitcore-tutorial.txt gitglossary.txt \ gitdiffcore.txt gitnamespaces.txt gitrevisions.txt gitworkflows.txt diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.6.3.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.6.3.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..95971831b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.6.3.txt @@ -0,0 +1,24 @@ +Git v1.7.6.3 Release Notes +========================== + +Fixes since v1.7.6.2 +-------------------- + + * "git -c var=value subcmd" misparsed the custom configuration when + value contained an equal sign. + + * "git fetch" had a major performance regression, wasting many + needless cycles in a repository where there is no submodules + present. This was especially bad, when there were many refs. + + * "git reflog $refname" did not default to the "show" subcommand as + the documentation advertised the command to do. + + * "git reset" did not leave meaningful log message in the reflog. + + * "git status --ignored" did not show ignored items when there is no + untracked items. + + * "git tag --contains $commit" was unnecessarily inefficient. + +Also contains minor fixes and documentation updates. diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.6.4.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.6.4.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e19acac2da --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.6.4.txt @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +Git v1.7.6.4 Release Notes +========================== + +Fixes since v1.7.6.3 +-------------------- + + * The error reporting logic of "git am" when the command is fed a file + whose mail-storage format is unknown was fixed. + + * "git branch --set-upstream @{-1} foo" did not expand @{-1} correctly. + + * "git check-ref-format --print" used to parrot a candidate string that + began with a slash (e.g. /refs/heads/master) without stripping it, to make + the result a suitably normalized string the caller can append to "$GIT_DIR/". + + * "git clone" failed to clone locally from a ".git" file that itself + is not a directory but is a pointer to one. + + * "git clone" from a local repository that borrows from another + object store using a relative path in its objects/info/alternates + file did not adjust the alternates in the resulting repository. + + * "git describe --dirty" did not refresh the index before checking the + state of the working tree files. + + * "git ls-files ../$path" that is run from a subdirectory reported errors + incorrectly when there is no such path that matches the given pathspec. + + * "git mergetool" could loop forever prompting when nothing can be read + from the standard input. + +Also contains minor fixes and documentation updates. diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.7.1.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.7.1.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..fecfac8a16 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.7.1.txt @@ -0,0 +1,59 @@ +Git v1.7.7.1 Release Notes +========================== + +Fixes since v1.7.7 +------------------ + + * On some BSD systems, adding +s bit on directories is detrimental + (it is not necessary on BSD to begin with). The installation + procedure has been updated to take this into account. + + * After incorrectly written third-party tools store a tag object in + HEAD, git diagnosed it as a repository corruption and refused to + proceed in order to avoid spreading the damage. We now gracefully + recover from such a situation by pretending as if the commit that + is pointed at by the tag were in HEAD. + + * "git apply --whitespace=error" did not bother to report the exact + line number in the patch that introduced new blank lines at the end + of the file. + + * "git apply --index" did not check corrupted patch. + + * "git checkout $tree $directory/" resurrected paths locally removed or + modified only in the working tree in $directory/ that did not appear + in $directory of the given $tree. They should have been kept intact. + + * "git diff $tree $path" used to apply the pathspec at the output stage, + reading the whole tree, wasting resources. + + * The code to check for updated submodules during a "git fetch" of the + superproject had an unnecessary quadratic loop. + + * "git fetch" from a large bundle did not enable the progress output. + + * When "git fsck --lost-and-found" found that an empty blob object in the + object store is unreachable, it incorrectly reported an error after + writing the lost blob out successfully. + + * "git filter-branch" did not refresh the index before checking that the + working tree was clean. + + * "git grep $tree" when run with multiple threads had an unsafe access to + the object database that should have been protected with mutex. + + * The "--ancestry-path" option to "git log" and friends misbehaved in a + history with complex criss-cross merges and showed an uninteresting + side history as well. + + * Test t1304 assumed LOGNAME is always set, which may not be true on + some systems. + + * Tests with --valgrind failed to find "mergetool" scriptlets. + + * "git patch-id" miscomputed the patch-id in a patch that has a line longer + than 1kB. + + * When an "exec" insn failed after modifying the index and/or the working + tree during "rebase -i", we now check and warn that the changes need to + be cleaned up. diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.7.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.7.txt index d81995622d..7655cccfaa 100644 --- a/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.7.txt +++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.7.txt @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ Updates since v1.7.6 * Interix, Cygwin and Minix ports got updated. - * Various updates git-p4 (in contrib/), fast-import, and git-svn. + * Various updates to git-p4 (in contrib/), fast-import, and git-svn. * Gitweb learned to read from /etc/gitweb-common.conf when it exists, before reading from gitweb_config.perl or from /etc/gitweb.conf @@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ Updates since v1.7.6 platforms with 64-bit long, which has been corrected. * Git now recognizes loose objects written by other implementations that - uses non-standard window size for zlib deflation (e.g. Agit running on + use a non-standard window size for zlib deflation (e.g. Agit running on Android with 4kb window). We used to reject anything that was not deflated with 32kb window. @@ -28,59 +28,59 @@ Updates since v1.7.6 been improved, especially when a command that is not built-in was involved. - * "git am" learned to pass "--exclude=<path>" option through to underlying + * "git am" learned to pass the "--exclude=<path>" option through to underlying "git apply". - * You can now feed many empty lines before feeding a mbox file to + * You can now feed many empty lines before feeding an mbox file to "git am". * "git archive" can be told to pass the output to gzip compression and produce "archive.tar.gz". - * "git bisect" can be used in a bare repository (provided if the test + * "git bisect" can be used in a bare repository (provided that the test you perform per each iteration does not need a working tree, of course). * The length of abbreviated object names in "git branch -v" output - now honors core.abbrev configuration variable. + now honors the core.abbrev configuration variable. * "git check-attr" can take relative paths from the command line. - * "git check-attr" learned "--all" option to list the attributes for a + * "git check-attr" learned an "--all" option to list the attributes for a given path. * "git checkout" (both the code to update the files upon checking out a - different branch, the code to checkout specific set of files) learned + different branch and the code to checkout a specific set of files) learned to stream the data from object store when possible, without having to - read the entire contents of a file in memory first. An earlier round + read the entire contents of a file into memory first. An earlier round of this code that is not in any released version had a large leak but now it has been plugged. - * "git clone" can now take "--config key=value" option to set the + * "git clone" can now take a "--config key=value" option to set the repository configuration options that affect the initial checkout. * "git commit <paths>..." now lets you feed relative pathspecs that - refer outside your current subdirectory. + refer to outside your current subdirectory. - * "git diff --stat" learned --stat-count option to limit the output of - diffstat report. + * "git diff --stat" learned a --stat-count option to limit the output of + a diffstat report. - * "git diff" learned "--histogram" option, to use a different diff + * "git diff" learned a "--histogram" option to use a different diff generation machinery stolen from jgit, which might give better performance. - * "git diff" had a wierd worst case behaviour that can be triggered + * "git diff" had a weird worst case behaviour that can be triggered when comparing files with potentially many places that could match. * "git fetch", "git push" and friends no longer show connection - errors for addresses that couldn't be connected when at least one + errors for addresses that couldn't be connected to when at least one address succeeds (this is arguably a regression but a deliberate one). - * "git grep" learned --break and --heading options, to let users mimic - output format of "ack". + * "git grep" learned "--break" and "--heading" options, to let users mimic + the output format of "ack". - * "git grep" learned "-W" option that shows wider context using the same + * "git grep" learned a "-W" option that shows wider context using the same logic used by "git diff" to determine the hunk header. * Invoking the low-level "git http-fetch" without "-a" option (which @@ -91,25 +91,25 @@ Updates since v1.7.6 highlight grafted and replaced commits. * "git rebase master topci" no longer spews usage hints after giving - "fatal: no such branch: topci" error message. + the "fatal: no such branch: topci" error message. * The recursive merge strategy implementation got a fairly large - fixes for many corner cases that may rarely happen in real world + fix for many corner cases that may rarely happen in real world projects (it has been verified that none of the 16000+ merges in the Linux kernel history back to v2.6.12 is affected with the corner case bugs this update fixes). - * "git stash" learned --include-untracked option. + * "git stash" learned an "--include-untracked option". * "git submodule update" used to stop at the first error updating a submodule; it now goes on to update other submodules that can be updated, and reports the ones with errors at the end. - * "git push" can be told with --recurse-submodules=check option to + * "git push" can be told with the "--recurse-submodules=check" option to refuse pushing of the supermodule, if any of its submodules' commits hasn't been pushed out to their remotes. - * "git upload-pack" and "git receive-pack" learned to pretend only a + * "git upload-pack" and "git receive-pack" learned to pretend that only a subset of the refs exist in a repository. This may help a site to put many tiny repositories into one repository (this would not be useful for larger repositories as repacking would be problematic). @@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ Updates since v1.7.6 that is more efficient in reading objects in packfiles. * test scripts for gitweb tried to run even when CGI-related perl modules - are not installed; it now exits early when they are unavailable. + are not installed; they now exit early when the latter are unavailable. Also contains various documentation updates and minor miscellaneous changes. @@ -127,46 +127,8 @@ changes. Fixes since v1.7.6 ------------------ -Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes in 1.7.6.X maintenance track are +Unless otherwise noted, all fixes in the 1.7.6.X maintenance track are included in this release. - * The error reporting logic of "git am" when the command is fed a file - whose mail-storage format is unknown was fixed. - (merge dff4b0e gb/maint-am-patch-format-error-message later to 'maint'). - - * "git branch --set-upstream @{-1} foo" did not expand @{-1} correctly. - (merge e9d4f74 mg/branch-set-upstream-previous later to 'maint'). - * "git branch -m" and "git checkout -b" incorrectly allowed the tip of the branch that is currently checked out updated. - (merge 55c4a67 ci/forbid-unwanted-current-branch-update later to 'maint'). - - * "git check-ref-format --print" used to parrot a candidate string that - began with a slash (e.g. /refs/heads/master) without stripping it, to make - the result a suitably normalized string the caller can append to "$GIT_DIR/". - (merge f3738c1 mh/check-ref-format-print-normalize later to 'maint'). - - * "git clone" failed to clone locally from a ".git" file that itself - is not a directory but is a pointer to one. - (merge 9b0ebc7 nd/maint-clone-gitdir later to 'maint'). - - * "git clone" from a local repository that borrows from another - object store using a relative path in its objects/info/alternates - file did not adjust the alternates in the resulting repository. - (merge e6baf4a1 jc/maint-clone-alternates later to 'maint'). - - * "git describe --dirty" did not refresh the index before checking the - state of the working tree files. - (cherry-pick bb57148 ac/describe-dirty-refresh later to 'maint'). - - * "git ls-files ../$path" that is run from a subdirectory reported errors - incorrectly when there is no such path that matches the given pathspec. - (merge 0f64bfa cb/maint-ls-files-error-report later to 'maint'). - --- -exec >/var/tmp/1 -echo O=$(git describe master) -O=v1.7.7-rc0-185-gb648557 -git log --first-parent --oneline $O..master -echo -git shortlog --no-merges ^maint ^$O master diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.8.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..886dfbfaa5 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/1.7.8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,188 @@ +Git v1.7.8 Release Notes (draft) +================================ + +Updates since v1.7.7 +-------------------- + + * Some git-svn, git-gui and msysgit updates. + + * Updates to bash completion scripts. + + * The build procedure has been taught to take advantage of computed + dependency automatically when the complier supports it. + + * The date parser now accepts timezone designators that lack minutes + part and also has a colon between "hh:mm". + + * The contents of the /etc/mailname file, if exists, is used as the + default value of the hostname part of the committer/author e-mail. + + * "git am" learned how to read from patches generated by Hg. + + * "git archive" talking with a remote repository can report errors + from the remote side in a more informative way. + + * "git branch" learned an explicit --list option to ask for branches + listed, optionally with a glob matching pattern to limit its output. + + * "git check-attr" learned "--cached" option to look at .gitattributes + files from the index, not from the working tree. + + * Variants of "git cherry-pick" and "git revert" that take multiple + commits learned to "--continue". + + * Errors at the network layer is logged by "git daemon". + + * "git diff" learned "--minimal" option to spend extra cycles to come + up with a minimal patch output. + + * "git diff" learned "--function-context" option to show the whole + function as context that was affected by a change. + + * "git fetch" learned to honor transfer.fsckobjects configuration to + validate the objects that were received from the other end, just like + "git receive-pack" (the receiving end of "git push") does. + + * "git fetch" makes sure that the set of objects it received from the + other end actually completes the history before updating the refs. + "git receive-pack" (the receiving end of "git push") learned to do the + same. + + * "git for-each-ref" learned "%(contents:subject)", "%(contents:body)" + and "%(contents:signature)". The last one is useful for signed tags. + + * "git grep" used to incorrectly pay attention to .gitignore files + scattered in the directory it was working in even when "--no-index" + option was used. It no longer does this. The "--exclude-standard" + option needs to be given to explicitly activate the ignore + mechanism. + + * "git grep" learned "--untracked" option, where given patterns are + searched in untracked (but not ignored) files as well as tracked + files in the working tree, so that matches in new but not yet + added files do not get missed. + + * The recursive merge backend no longer looks for meaningless + existing merges in submodules unless in the outermost merge. + + * "git log" and friends learned "--children" option. + + * "git ls-remote" learned to respond to "-h"(elp) requests. + + * "git merge" learned the "--edit" option to allow users to edit the + merge commit log message. + + * "git send-email" learned to respond to "-h"(elp) requests. + + * "git send-email" allows the value given to sendemail.aliasfile to begin + with "~/" to refer to the $HOME directory. + + * "git send-email" forces use of Authen::SASL::Perl to work around + issues between Authen::SASL::Cyrus and AUTH PLAIN/LOGIN. + + * "git stash" learned "--include-untracked" option to stash away + untracked/ignored cruft from the working tree. + + * "git submodule update" learned to honor "none" as the value for + submodule.<name>.update to specify that the named submodule should + not be checked out by default. + + * When populating a new submodule directory with "git submodule init", + the $GIT_DIR metainformation directory for submodules is created inside + $GIT_DIR/modules/<name>/ directory of the superproject and referenced + via the gitfile mechanism. This is to make it possible to switch + between commits in the superproject that has and does not have the + submodule in the tree without re-cloning. + + * "mediawiki" remote helper can interact with (surprise!) MediaWiki + with "git fetch" & "git push". + + * "gitweb" leaked unescaped control characters from syntax hiliter + outputs. + + * "gitweb" now has its own manual pages. + + +Also contains other documentation updates and minor code cleanups. + + +Fixes since v1.7.7 +------------------ + +Unless otherwise noted, all fixes in the 1.7.7.X maintenance track are +included in this release. + + * We used to drop error messages from libcurl on certain kinds of + errors. + (merge be22d92eac8 jn/maint-http-error-message later to maint). + + * Error report from smart HTTP transport, when the connection was + broken in the middle of a transfer, showed a useless message on + a corrupt packet. + (merge 6cdf022 sp/smart-http-failure later to maint). + + * HTTP transport did not use pushurl correctly, and also did not tell + what host it is trying to authenticate with when asking for + credentials. + (merge deba493 jk/http-auth later to maint). + + * Adding many refs to the local repository in one go (e.g. "git fetch" + that fetches many tags) and looking up a ref by name in a repository + with too many refs were unnecessarily slow. + (merge 17d68a54d jp/get-ref-dir-unsorted later to maint). + + * Report from "git commit" on untracked files was confused under + core.ignorecase option. + (merge 2548183b jk/name-hash-dirent later to maint). + + * The attribute mechanism did not use case insensitive match when + core.ignorecase was set. + (merge 6eba621 bc/attr-ignore-case later to maint). + + * "git bisect" did not notice when it failed to update the working tree + to the next commit to be tested. + (merge 1acf11717 js/bisect-no-checkout later to maint). + + * "git config --bool --get-regexp" failed to separate the variable name + and its value "true" when the variable is defined without "= true". + (merge 880e3cc mm/maint-config-explicit-bool-display later to maint). + + * "git remote rename $a $b" were not careful to match the remote name + against $a (i.e. source side of the remote nickname). + (merge b52d00aed mz/remote-rename later to maint). + + * "git diff --[num]stat" used to use the number of lines of context + different from the default, potentially giving different results from + "git diff | diffstat" and confusing the users. + (merge f01cae918 jc/maint-diffstat-numstat-context later to maint). + + * "git merge" did not understand ":/<pattern>" as a way to name a commit. + + * "git mergetool" learned to use its arguments as pathspec, not a path to + the file that may not even have any conflict. + (merge 6d9990a jm/mergetool-pathspec later to maint). + + * "git pull" and "git rebase" did not work well even when GIT_WORK_TREE is + set correctly with GIT_DIR if the current directory is outside the working + tree. + (merge 035b5bf jk/pull-rebase-with-work-tree later to maint). + + " "git push" on the receiving end used to call post-receive and post-update + hooks for attempted removal of non-existing refs. + (merge 160b81ed ph/push-to-delete-nothing later to maint). + + * "git send-email" did not honor the configured hostname when restarting + the HELO/EHLO exchange after switching TLS on. + (merge 155b940 md/smtp-tls-hello-again later to maint). + + * "gitweb" used to produce a non-working link while showing the contents + of a blob, when JavaScript actions are enabled. + (merge 2b07ff3ff ps/gitweb-js-with-lineno later to maint). + +--- +exec >/var/tmp/1 +O=v1.7.7-418-g40d6987 +echo O=$(git describe --always master) +git log --first-parent --oneline --reverse ^$O master +echo +git shortlog --no-merges ^$O master diff --git a/Documentation/SubmittingPatches b/Documentation/SubmittingPatches index 938eccf2a5..0dbf2c9843 100644 --- a/Documentation/SubmittingPatches +++ b/Documentation/SubmittingPatches @@ -134,8 +134,7 @@ Another thing: NULL pointers shall be written as NULL, not as 0. (2) Generate your patch using git tools out of your commits. -git based diff tools (git, Cogito, and StGIT included) generate -unidiff which is the preferred format. +git based diff tools generate unidiff which is the preferred format. You do not have to be afraid to use -M option to "git diff" or "git format-patch", if your patch involves file renames. The diff --git a/Documentation/blame-options.txt b/Documentation/blame-options.txt index e76195ac97..d4a51da464 100644 --- a/Documentation/blame-options.txt +++ b/Documentation/blame-options.txt @@ -117,5 +117,4 @@ commit. And the default value is 40. If there are more than one take effect. -h:: ---help:: Show help message. diff --git a/Documentation/config.txt b/Documentation/config.txt index 0658ffb889..9c81fffc61 100644 --- a/Documentation/config.txt +++ b/Documentation/config.txt @@ -45,9 +45,10 @@ lines. Variables may belong directly to a section or to a given subsection. You can have `[section]` if you have `[section "subsection"]`, but you don't need to. -There is also a case insensitive alternative `[section.subsection]` syntax. -In this syntax, subsection names follow the same restrictions as for section -names. +There is also a deprecated `[section.subsection]` syntax. With this +syntax, the subsection name is converted to lower-case and is also +compared case sensitively. These subsection names follow the same +restrictions as section names. All the other lines (and the remainder of the line after the section header) are recognized as setting variables, in the form @@ -147,7 +148,7 @@ advice.*:: core.fileMode:: If false, the executable bit differences between the index and - the working copy are ignored; useful on broken filesystems like FAT. + the working tree are ignored; useful on broken filesystems like FAT. See linkgit:git-update-index[1]. + The default is true, except linkgit:git-clone[1] or linkgit:git-init[1] @@ -179,7 +180,7 @@ is created. core.trustctime:: If false, the ctime differences between the index and the - working copy are ignored; useful when the inode change time + working tree are ignored; useful when the inode change time is regularly modified by something outside Git (file system crawlers and some backup systems). See linkgit:git-update-index[1]. True by default. @@ -292,7 +293,7 @@ core.ignoreStat:: If true, commands which modify both the working tree and the index will mark the updated paths with the "assume unchanged" bit in the index. These marked files are then assumed to stay unchanged in the - working copy, until you mark them otherwise manually - Git will not + working tree, until you mark them otherwise manually - Git will not detect the file changes by lstat() calls. This is useful on systems where those are very slow, such as Microsoft Windows. See linkgit:git-update-index[1]. @@ -857,6 +858,13 @@ fetch.recurseSubmodules:: when its superproject retrieves a commit that updates the submodule's reference. +fetch.fsckObjects:: + If it is set to true, git-fetch-pack will check all fetched + objects. It will abort in the case of a malformed object or a + broken link. The result of an abort are only dangling objects. + Defaults to false. If not set, the value of `transfer.fsckObjects` + is used instead. + fetch.unpackLimit:: If the number of objects fetched over the git native transfer is below this @@ -1064,6 +1072,23 @@ All gitcvs variables except for 'gitcvs.usecrlfattr' and is one of "ext" and "pserver") to make them apply only for the given access method. +gitweb.category:: +gitweb.description:: +gitweb.owner:: +gitweb.url:: + See linkgit:gitweb[1] for description. + +gitweb.avatar:: +gitweb.blame:: +gitweb.grep:: +gitweb.highlight:: +gitweb.patches:: +gitweb.pickaxe:: +gitweb.remote_heads:: +gitweb.showsizes:: +gitweb.snapshot:: + See linkgit:gitweb.conf[5] for description. + grep.lineNumber:: If set to true, enable '-n' option by default. @@ -1453,7 +1478,8 @@ notes.rewriteRef:: You may also specify this configuration several times. + Does not have a default value; you must configure this variable to -enable note rewriting. +enable note rewriting. Set it to `refs/notes/commits` to enable +rewriting for the default commit notes. + This setting can be overridden with the `GIT_NOTES_REWRITE_REF` environment variable, which must be a colon separated list of refs or @@ -1595,7 +1621,8 @@ receive.fsckObjects:: If it is set to true, git-receive-pack will check all received objects. It will abort in the case of a malformed object or a broken link. The result of an abort are only dangling objects. - Defaults to false. + Defaults to false. If not set, the value of `transfer.fsckObjects` + is used instead. receive.unpackLimit:: If the number of objects received in a push is below this @@ -1830,6 +1857,11 @@ tar.umask:: archiving user's umask will be used instead. See umask(2) and linkgit:git-archive[1]. +transfer.fsckObjects:: + When `fetch.fsckObjects` or `receive.fsckObjects` are + not set, the value of this variable is used instead. + Defaults to false. + transfer.unpackLimit:: When `fetch.unpackLimit` or `receive.unpackLimit` are not set, the value of this variable is used instead. diff --git a/Documentation/diff-options.txt b/Documentation/diff-options.txt index b620b3afec..08b581f040 100644 --- a/Documentation/diff-options.txt +++ b/Documentation/diff-options.txt @@ -45,6 +45,10 @@ ifndef::git-format-patch[] Synonym for `-p --raw`. endif::git-format-patch[] +--minimal:: + Spend extra time to make sure the smallest possible + diff is produced. + --patience:: Generate a diff using the "patience diff" algorithm. @@ -404,6 +408,10 @@ endif::git-format-patch[] Show the context between diff hunks, up to the specified number of lines, thereby fusing hunks that are close to each other. +-W:: +--function-context:: + Show whole surrounding functions of changes. + ifndef::git-format-patch[] --exit-code:: Make the program exit with codes similar to diff(1). diff --git a/Documentation/git-branch.txt b/Documentation/git-branch.txt index 507b8d0ab2..f46013c91f 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-branch.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-branch.txt @@ -9,8 +9,8 @@ SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] 'git branch' [--color[=<when>] | --no-color] [-r | -a] - [-v [--abbrev=<length> | --no-abbrev]] - [(--merged | --no-merged | --contains) [<commit>]] + [--list] [-v [--abbrev=<length> | --no-abbrev]] + [(--merged | --no-merged | --contains) [<commit>]] [<pattern>...] 'git branch' [--set-upstream | --track | --no-track] [-l] [-f] <branchname> [<start-point>] 'git branch' (-m | -M) [<oldbranch>] <newbranch> 'git branch' (-d | -D) [-r] <branchname>... @@ -20,7 +20,11 @@ DESCRIPTION With no arguments, existing branches are listed and the current branch will be highlighted with an asterisk. Option `-r` causes the remote-tracking -branches to be listed, and option `-a` shows both. +branches to be listed, and option `-a` shows both. This list mode is also +activated by the `--list` option (see below). +<pattern> restricts the output to matching branches, the pattern is a shell +wildcard (i.e., matched using fnmatch(3)) +Multiple patterns may be given; if any of them matches, the tag is shown. With `--contains`, shows only the branches that contain the named commit (in other words, the branches whose tip commits are descendants of the @@ -64,6 +68,7 @@ way to clean up all obsolete remote-tracking branches. OPTIONS ------- -d:: +--delete:: Delete a branch. The branch must be fully merged in its upstream branch, or in `HEAD` if no upstream was set with `--track` or `--set-upstream`. @@ -72,6 +77,7 @@ OPTIONS Delete a branch irrespective of its merged status. -l:: +--create-reflog:: Create the branch's reflog. This activates recording of all changes made to the branch ref, enabling use of date based sha1 expressions such as "<branchname>@\{yesterday}". @@ -84,6 +90,7 @@ OPTIONS already. Without `-f` 'git branch' refuses to change an existing branch. -m:: +--move:: Move/rename a branch and the corresponding reflog. -M:: @@ -100,14 +107,21 @@ OPTIONS Same as `--color=never`. -r:: +--remotes:: List or delete (if used with -d) the remote-tracking branches. -a:: +--all:: List both remote-tracking branches and local branches. +--list:: + Activate the list mode. `git branch <pattern>` would try to create a branch, + use `git branch --list <pattern>` to list matching branches. + -v:: --verbose:: - Show sha1 and commit subject line for each head, along with + When in list mode, + show sha1 and commit subject line for each head, along with relationship to upstream branch (if any). If given twice, print the name of the upstream branch, as well. diff --git a/Documentation/git-check-attr.txt b/Documentation/git-check-attr.txt index 1f7312a189..5abdbaa51c 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-check-attr.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-check-attr.txt @@ -24,6 +24,9 @@ OPTIONS paths. If this option is used, then 'unspecified' attributes will not be included in the output. +--cached:: + Consider `.gitattributes` in the index only, ignoring the working tree. + --stdin:: Read file names from stdin instead of from the command-line. diff --git a/Documentation/git-check-ref-format.txt b/Documentation/git-check-ref-format.txt index c9fdf84a08..103e7b128d 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-check-ref-format.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-check-ref-format.txt @@ -8,8 +8,9 @@ git-check-ref-format - Ensures that a reference name is well formed SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] -'git check-ref-format' <refname> -'git check-ref-format' --print <refname> +'git check-ref-format' [--normalize] + [--[no-]allow-onelevel] [--refspec-pattern] + <refname> 'git check-ref-format' --branch <branchname-shorthand> DESCRIPTION @@ -28,22 +29,28 @@ git imposes the following rules on how references are named: . They can include slash `/` for hierarchical (directory) grouping, but no slash-separated component can begin with a - dot `.`. + dot `.` or end with the sequence `.lock`. . They must contain at least one `/`. This enforces the presence of a category like `heads/`, `tags/` etc. but the actual names are not - restricted. + restricted. If the `--allow-onelevel` option is used, this rule + is waived. . They cannot have two consecutive dots `..` anywhere. . They cannot have ASCII control characters (i.e. bytes whose values are lower than \040, or \177 `DEL`), space, tilde `~`, - caret `{caret}`, colon `:`, question-mark `?`, asterisk `*`, - or open bracket `[` anywhere. + caret `{caret}`, or colon `:` anywhere. -. They cannot end with a slash `/` nor a dot `.`. +. They cannot have question-mark `?`, asterisk `{asterisk}`, or open + bracket `[` anywhere. See the `--refspec-pattern` option below for + an exception to this rule. -. They cannot end with the sequence `.lock`. +. They cannot begin or end with a slash `/` or contain multiple + consecutive slashes (see the `--normalize` option below for an + exception to this rule) + +. They cannot end with a dot `.`. . They cannot contain a sequence `@{`. @@ -68,16 +75,36 @@ reference name expressions (see linkgit:gitrevisions[7]): . at-open-brace `@{` is used as a notation to access a reflog entry. -With the `--print` option, if 'refname' is acceptable, it prints the -canonicalized name of a hypothetical reference with that name. That is, -it prints 'refname' with any extra `/` characters removed. - With the `--branch` option, it expands the ``previous branch syntax'' `@{-n}`. For example, `@{-1}` is a way to refer the last branch you were on. This option should be used by porcelains to accept this syntax anywhere a branch name is expected, so they can act as if you typed the branch name. +OPTIONS +------- +--allow-onelevel:: +--no-allow-onelevel:: + Controls whether one-level refnames are accepted (i.e., + refnames that do not contain multiple `/`-separated + components). The default is `--no-allow-onelevel`. + +--refspec-pattern:: + Interpret <refname> as a reference name pattern for a refspec + (as used with remote repositories). If this option is + enabled, <refname> is allowed to contain a single `{asterisk}` + in place of a one full pathname component (e.g., + `foo/{asterisk}/bar` but not `foo/bar{asterisk}`). + +--normalize:: + Normalize 'refname' by removing any leading slash (`/`) + characters and collapsing runs of adjacent slashes between + name components into a single slash. Iff the normalized + refname is valid then print it to standard output and exit + with a status of 0. (`--print` is a deprecated way to spell + `--normalize`.) + + EXAMPLES -------- @@ -90,7 +117,7 @@ $ git check-ref-format --branch @{-1} * Determine the reference name to use for a new branch: + ------------ -$ ref=$(git check-ref-format --print "refs/heads/$newbranch") || +$ ref=$(git check-ref-format --normalize "refs/heads/$newbranch") || die "we do not like '$newbranch' as a branch name." ------------ diff --git a/Documentation/git-cherry-pick.txt b/Documentation/git-cherry-pick.txt index 7cfa3d92ac..2660a842fc 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-cherry-pick.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-cherry-pick.txt @@ -9,6 +9,8 @@ SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] 'git cherry-pick' [--edit] [-n] [-m parent-number] [-s] [-x] [--ff] <commit>... +'git cherry-pick' --reset +'git cherry-pick' --continue DESCRIPTION ----------- @@ -110,6 +112,10 @@ effect to your index in a row. Pass the merge strategy-specific option through to the merge strategy. See linkgit:git-merge[1] for details. +SEQUENCER SUBCOMMANDS +--------------------- +include::sequencer.txt[] + EXAMPLES -------- `git cherry-pick master`:: diff --git a/Documentation/git-commit-tree.txt b/Documentation/git-commit-tree.txt index 0fdb82ee86..02133d5fc9 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-commit-tree.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-commit-tree.txt @@ -68,7 +68,9 @@ if set: In case (some of) these environment variables are not set, the information is taken from the configuration items user.name and user.email, or, if not -present, system user name and fully qualified hostname. +present, system user name and the hostname used for outgoing mail (taken +from `/etc/mailname` and falling back to the fully qualified hostname when +that file does not exist). A commit comment is read from stdin. If a changelog entry is not provided via "<" redirection, 'git commit-tree' will just wait @@ -90,6 +92,10 @@ Discussion include::i18n.txt[] +FILES +----- +/etc/mailname + SEE ALSO -------- linkgit:git-write-tree[1] diff --git a/Documentation/git-daemon.txt b/Documentation/git-daemon.txt index 69a1e4af9e..31b28fc29f 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-daemon.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-daemon.txt @@ -161,6 +161,16 @@ the facility of inet daemon to achieve the same before spawning repository configuration. By default, all the services are overridable. +--informative-errors:: +--no-informative-errors:: + When informative errors are turned on, git-daemon will report + more verbose errors to the client, differentiating conditions + like "no such repository" from "repository not exported". This + is more convenient for clients, but may leak information about + the existence of unexported repositories. When informative + errors are not enabled, all errors report "access denied" to the + client. The default is --no-informative-errors. + <directory>:: A directory to add to the whitelist of allowed directories. Unless --strict-paths is specified this will also include subdirectories diff --git a/Documentation/git-for-each-ref.txt b/Documentation/git-for-each-ref.txt index 152e695c81..c872b883ba 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-for-each-ref.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-for-each-ref.txt @@ -101,9 +101,10 @@ Fields that have name-email-date tuple as its value (`author`, `committer`, and `tagger`) can be suffixed with `name`, `email`, and `date` to extract the named component. -The first line of the message in a commit and tag object is -`subject`, the remaining lines are `body`. The whole message -is `contents`. +The complete message in a commit and tag object is `contents`. +Its first line is `contents:subject`, the remaining lines +are `contents:body` and the optional GPG signature +is `contents:signature`. For sorting purposes, fields with numeric values sort in numeric order (`objectsize`, `authordate`, `committerdate`, `taggerdate`). diff --git a/Documentation/git-grep.txt b/Documentation/git-grep.txt index e44a4988b7..15d6711d46 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-grep.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-grep.txt @@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ SYNOPSIS [-A <post-context>] [-B <pre-context>] [-C <context>] [-f <file>] [-e] <pattern> [--and|--or|--not|(|)|-e <pattern>...] - [--cached | --no-index | <tree>...] + [ [--exclude-standard] [--cached | --no-index | --untracked] | <tree>...] [--] [<pathspec>...] DESCRIPTION @@ -49,7 +49,20 @@ OPTIONS blobs registered in the index file. --no-index:: - Search files in the current directory, not just those tracked by git. + Search files in the current directory that is not managed by git. + +--untracked:: + In addition to searching in the tracked files in the working + tree, search also in untracked files. + +--no-exclude-standard:: + Also search in ignored files by not honoring the `.gitignore` + mechanism. Only useful with `--untracked`. + +--exclude-standard:: + Do not pay attention to ignored files specified via the `.gitignore` + mechanism. Only useful when searching files in the current directory + with `--no-index`. -a:: --text:: diff --git a/Documentation/git-instaweb.txt b/Documentation/git-instaweb.txt index ea95c90460..f3eef510f2 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-instaweb.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-instaweb.txt @@ -84,6 +84,10 @@ If the configuration variable 'instaweb.browser' is not set, 'web.browser' will be used instead if it is defined. See linkgit:git-web{litdd}browse[1] for more information about this. +SEE ALSO +-------- +linkgit:gitweb[1] + GIT --- Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite diff --git a/Documentation/git-mergetool.txt b/Documentation/git-mergetool.txt index 3470910109..2a49de7cfe 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-mergetool.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-mergetool.txt @@ -17,9 +17,10 @@ Use `git mergetool` to run one of several merge utilities to resolve merge conflicts. It is typically run after 'git merge'. If one or more <file> parameters are given, the merge tool program will -be run to resolve differences on each file. If no <file> names are -specified, 'git mergetool' will run the merge tool program on every file -with merge conflicts. +be run to resolve differences on each file (skipping those without +conflicts). Specifying a directory will include all unresolved files in +that path. If no <file> names are specified, 'git mergetool' will run +the merge tool program on every file with merge conflicts. OPTIONS ------- diff --git a/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt b/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt index c45d53c6e1..5375549820 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt @@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ OPTIONS -i:: Usually a merge requires the index file as well as the - files in the working tree are up to date with the + files in the working tree to be up to date with the current head commit, in order not to lose local changes. This flag disables the check with the working tree and is meant to be used when creating a merge of @@ -71,21 +71,21 @@ OPTIONS --aggressive:: Usually a three-way merge by 'git read-tree' resolves the merge for really trivial cases and leaves other - cases unresolved in the index, so that Porcelains can + cases unresolved in the index, so that porcelains can implement different merge policies. This flag makes the - command to resolve a few more cases internally: + command resolve a few more cases internally: + * when one side removes a path and the other side leaves the path unmodified. The resolution is to remove that path. * when both sides remove a path. The resolution is to remove that path. -* when both sides adds a path identically. The resolution +* when both sides add a path identically. The resolution is to add that path. --prefix=<prefix>/:: Keep the current index contents, and read the contents - of named tree-ish under directory at `<prefix>`. The + of the named tree-ish under the directory at `<prefix>`. The original index file cannot have anything at the path - `<prefix>` itself, and have nothing in `<prefix>/` + `<prefix>` itself, nor anything in the `<prefix>/` directory. Note that the `<prefix>/` value must end with a slash. @@ -379,45 +379,45 @@ have finished your work-in-progress), attempt the merge again. Sparse checkout --------------- -"Sparse checkout" allows to sparsely populate working directory. -It uses skip-worktree bit (see linkgit:git-update-index[1]) to tell -Git whether a file on working directory is worth looking at. +"Sparse checkout" allows populating the working directory sparsely. +It uses the skip-worktree bit (see linkgit:git-update-index[1]) to tell +Git whether a file in the working directory is worth looking at. -"git read-tree" and other merge-based commands ("git merge", "git -checkout"...) can help maintaining skip-worktree bitmap and working +'git read-tree' and other merge-based commands ('git merge', 'git +checkout'...) can help maintaining the skip-worktree bitmap and working directory update. `$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout` is used to -define the skip-worktree reference bitmap. When "git read-tree" needs -to update working directory, it will reset skip-worktree bit in index +define the skip-worktree reference bitmap. When 'git read-tree' needs +to update the working directory, it resets the skip-worktree bit in the index based on this file, which uses the same syntax as .gitignore files. -If an entry matches a pattern in this file, skip-worktree will be -set on that entry. Otherwise, skip-worktree will be unset. +If an entry matches a pattern in this file, skip-worktree will not be +set on that entry. Otherwise, skip-worktree will be set. Then it compares the new skip-worktree value with the previous one. If -skip-worktree turns from unset to set, it will add the corresponding -file back. If it turns from set to unset, that file will be removed. +skip-worktree turns from set to unset, it will add the corresponding +file back. If it turns from unset to set, that file will be removed. While `$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout` is usually used to specify what -files are in. You can also specify what files are _not_ in, using -negate patterns. For example, to remove file "unwanted": +files are in, you can also specify what files are _not_ in, using +negate patterns. For example, to remove the file `unwanted`: ---------------- -* +/* !unwanted ---------------- -Another tricky thing is fully repopulating working directory when you +Another tricky thing is fully repopulating the working directory when you no longer want sparse checkout. You cannot just disable "sparse -checkout" because skip-worktree are still in the index and you working -directory is still sparsely populated. You should re-populate working +checkout" because skip-worktree bits are still in the index and your working +directory is still sparsely populated. You should re-populate the working directory with the `$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout` file content as follows: ---------------- -* +/* ---------------- -Then you can disable sparse checkout. Sparse checkout support in "git -read-tree" and similar commands is disabled by default. You need to +Then you can disable sparse checkout. Sparse checkout support in 'git +read-tree' and similar commands is disabled by default. You need to turn `core.sparseCheckout` on in order to have sparse checkout support. diff --git a/Documentation/git-remote-helpers.txt b/Documentation/git-remote-helpers.txt index 4f83dea5a3..674797cd83 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-remote-helpers.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-remote-helpers.txt @@ -24,22 +24,141 @@ output. Because a remote helper runs as an independent process from git, there is no need to re-link git to add a new helper, nor any need to link the helper with the implementation of git. -Every helper must support the "capabilities" command, which git will -use to determine what other commands the helper will accept. Other -commands generally concern facilities like discovering and updating -remote refs, transporting objects between the object database and -the remote repository, and updating the local object store. - -Helpers supporting the 'fetch' capability can discover refs from the -remote repository and transfer objects reachable from those refs to -the local object store. Helpers supporting the 'push' capability can -transfer local objects to the remote repository and update remote refs. +Every helper must support the "capabilities" command, which git +uses to determine what other commands the helper will accept. Those +other commands can be used to discover and update remote refs, +transport objects between the object database and the remote repository, +and update the local object store. Git comes with a "curl" family of remote helpers, that handle various transport protocols, such as 'git-remote-http', 'git-remote-https', 'git-remote-ftp' and 'git-remote-ftps'. They implement the capabilities 'fetch', 'option', and 'push'. +INPUT FORMAT +------------ + +Git sends the remote helper a list of commands on standard input, one +per line. The first command is always the 'capabilities' command, in +response to which the remote helper must print a list of the +capabilities it supports (see below) followed by a blank line. The +response to the capabilities command determines what commands Git uses +in the remainder of the command stream. + +The command stream is terminated by a blank line. In some cases +(indicated in the documentation of the relevant commands), this blank +line is followed by a payload in some other protocol (e.g., the pack +protocol), while in others it indicates the end of input. + +Capabilities +~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Each remote helper is expected to support only a subset of commands. +The operations a helper supports are declared to git in the response +to the `capabilities` command (see COMMANDS, below). + +'option':: + For specifying settings like `verbosity` (how much output to + write to stderr) and `depth` (how much history is wanted in the + case of a shallow clone) that affect how other commands are + carried out. + +'connect':: + For fetching and pushing using git's native packfile protocol + that requires a bidirectional, full-duplex connection. + +'push':: + For listing remote refs and pushing specified objects from the + local object store to remote refs. + +'fetch':: + For listing remote refs and fetching the associated history to + the local object store. + +'import':: + For listing remote refs and fetching the associated history as + a fast-import stream. + +'refspec' <refspec>:: + This modifies the 'import' capability, allowing the produced + fast-import stream to modify refs in a private namespace + instead of writing to refs/heads or refs/remotes directly. + It is recommended that all importers providing the 'import' + capability use this. ++ +A helper advertising the capability +`refspec refs/heads/{asterisk}:refs/svn/origin/branches/{asterisk}` +is saying that, when it is asked to `import refs/heads/topic`, the +stream it outputs will update the `refs/svn/origin/branches/topic` +ref. ++ +This capability can be advertised multiple times. The first +applicable refspec takes precedence. The left-hand of refspecs +advertised with this capability must cover all refs reported by +the list command. If no 'refspec' capability is advertised, +there is an implied `refspec {asterisk}:{asterisk}`. + +Capabilities for Pushing +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +'connect':: + Can attempt to connect to 'git receive-pack' (for pushing), + 'git upload-pack', etc for communication using the + packfile protocol. ++ +Supported commands: 'connect'. + +'push':: + Can discover remote refs and push local commits and the + history leading up to them to new or existing remote refs. ++ +Supported commands: 'list for-push', 'push'. + +If a helper advertises both 'connect' and 'push', git will use +'connect' if possible and fall back to 'push' if the helper requests +so when connecting (see the 'connect' command under COMMANDS). + +Capabilities for Fetching +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +'connect':: + Can try to connect to 'git upload-pack' (for fetching), + 'git receive-pack', etc for communication using the + packfile protocol. ++ +Supported commands: 'connect'. + +'fetch':: + Can discover remote refs and transfer objects reachable from + them to the local object store. ++ +Supported commands: 'list', 'fetch'. + +'import':: + Can discover remote refs and output objects reachable from + them as a stream in fast-import format. ++ +Supported commands: 'list', 'import'. + +If a helper advertises 'connect', git will use it if possible and +fall back to another capability if the helper requests so when +connecting (see the 'connect' command under COMMANDS). +When choosing between 'fetch' and 'import', git prefers 'fetch'. +Other frontends may have some other order of preference. + +'refspec' <refspec>:: + This modifies the 'import' capability. ++ +A helper advertising +`refspec refs/heads/{asterisk}:refs/svn/origin/branches/{asterisk}` +in its capabilities is saying that, when it handles +`import refs/heads/topic`, the stream it outputs will update the +`refs/svn/origin/branches/topic` ref. ++ +This capability can be advertised multiple times. The first +applicable refspec takes precedence. The left-hand of refspecs +advertised with this capability must cover all refs reported by +the list command. If no 'refspec' capability is advertised, +there is an implied `refspec {asterisk}:{asterisk}`. + INVOCATION ---------- @@ -122,7 +241,22 @@ Supported if the helper has the "fetch" capability. 'push' +<src>:<dst>:: Pushes the given local <src> commit or branch to the remote branch described by <dst>. A batch sequence of - one or more push commands is terminated with a blank line. + one or more 'push' commands is terminated with a blank line + (if there is only one reference to push, a single 'push' command + is followed by a blank line). For example, the following would + be two batches of 'push', the first asking the remote-helper + to push the local ref 'master' to the remote ref 'master' and + the local 'HEAD' to the remote 'branch', and the second + asking to push ref 'foo' to ref 'bar' (forced update requested + by the '+'). ++ +------------ +push refs/heads/master:refs/heads/master +push HEAD:refs/heads/branch +\n +push +refs/heads/foo:refs/heads/bar +\n +------------ + Zero or more protocol options may be entered after the last 'push' command, before the batch's terminating blank line. @@ -147,6 +281,11 @@ Supported if the helper has the "push" capability. Especially useful for interoperability with a foreign versioning system. + +Just like 'push', a batch sequence of one or more 'import' is +terminated with a blank line. For each batch of 'import', the remote +helper should produce a fast-import stream terminated by a 'done' +command. ++ Supported if the helper has the "import" capability. 'connect' <service>:: @@ -171,26 +310,6 @@ completing a valid response for the current command. Additional commands may be supported, as may be determined from capabilities reported by the helper. -CAPABILITIES ------------- - -'fetch':: -'option':: -'push':: -'import':: -'connect':: - This helper supports the corresponding command with the same name. - -'refspec' 'spec':: - When using the import command, expect the source ref to have - been written to the destination ref. The earliest applicable - refspec takes precedence. For example - "refs/heads/{asterisk}:refs/svn/origin/branches/{asterisk}" means - that, after an "import refs/heads/name", the script has written to - refs/svn/origin/branches/name. If this capability is used at - all, it must cover all refs reported by the list command; if - it is not used, it is effectively "{asterisk}:{asterisk}" - REF LIST ATTRIBUTES ------------------- @@ -243,6 +362,8 @@ SEE ALSO -------- linkgit:git-remote[1] +linkgit:git-remote-testgit[1] + GIT --- Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite diff --git a/Documentation/git-remote-testgit.txt b/Documentation/git-remote-testgit.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..2a67d456a3 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/git-remote-testgit.txt @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +git-remote-testgit(1) +===================== + +NAME +---- +git-remote-testgit - Example remote-helper + + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +[verse] +git clone testgit::<source-repo> [<destination>] + +DESCRIPTION +----------- + +This command is a simple remote-helper, that is used both as a +testcase for the remote-helper functionality, and as an example to +show remote-helper authors one possible implementation. + +The best way to learn more is to read the comments and source code in +'git-remote-testgit.py'. + +SEE ALSO +-------- +linkgit:git-remote-helpers[1] + +GIT +--- +Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite diff --git a/Documentation/git-rev-parse.txt b/Documentation/git-rev-parse.txt index 42c9676eaa..8023dc086d 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-rev-parse.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-rev-parse.txt @@ -180,6 +180,10 @@ print a message to stderr and exit with nonzero status. <args>...:: Flags and parameters to be parsed. +--resolve-git-dir <path>:: + Check if <path> is a valid git-dir or a git-file pointing to a valid + git-dir. If <path> is a valid git-dir the resolved path to git-dir will + be printed. include::revisions.txt[] diff --git a/Documentation/git-revert.txt b/Documentation/git-revert.txt index b311d59c7c..f3519413e7 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-revert.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-revert.txt @@ -9,6 +9,8 @@ SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] 'git revert' [--edit | --no-edit] [-n] [-m parent-number] [-s] <commit>... +'git revert' --reset +'git revert' --continue DESCRIPTION ----------- @@ -91,6 +93,10 @@ effect to your index in a row. Pass the merge strategy-specific option through to the merge strategy. See linkgit:git-merge[1] for details. +SEQUENCER SUBCOMMANDS +--------------------- +include::sequencer.txt[] + EXAMPLES -------- `git revert HEAD~3`:: diff --git a/Documentation/git-submodule.txt b/Documentation/git-submodule.txt index 67cf5f0f8b..6ec3fef079 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-submodule.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-submodule.txt @@ -120,6 +120,8 @@ too (and can also report changes to a submodule's work tree). init:: Initialize the submodules, i.e. register each submodule name and url found in .gitmodules into .git/config. + It will also copy the value of `submodule.$name.update` into + .git/config. The key used in .git/config is `submodule.$name.url`. This command does not alter existing information in .git/config. You can then customize the submodule clone URLs in .git/config @@ -133,7 +135,7 @@ update:: checkout the commit specified in the index of the containing repository. This will make the submodules HEAD be detached unless `--rebase` or `--merge` is specified or the key `submodule.$name.update` is set to - `rebase` or `merge`. + `rebase`, `merge` or `none`. + If the submodule is not yet initialized, and you just want to use the setting as stored in .gitmodules, you can automatically initialize the @@ -141,6 +143,10 @@ submodule with the `--init` option. + If `--recursive` is specified, this command will recurse into the registered submodules, and update any nested submodules within. ++ +If the configuration key `submodule.$name.update` is set to `none` the +submodule with name `$name` will not be updated by default. This can be +overriden by adding `--checkout` to the command. summary:: Show commit summary between the given commit (defaults to HEAD) and diff --git a/Documentation/git-svn.txt b/Documentation/git-svn.txt index e75fc191d3..34ee785064 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-svn.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-svn.txt @@ -225,6 +225,22 @@ discouraged. version 1.5 can make use of it. To specify merge information from multiple branches, use a single space character between the branches (`--mergeinfo="/branches/foo:1-10 /branches/bar:3,5-6,8"`) ++ +[verse] +config key: svn.pushmergeinfo ++ +This option will cause git-svn to attempt to automatically populate the +svn:mergeinfo property in the SVN repository when possible. Currently, this can +only be done when dcommitting non-fast-forward merges where all parents but the +first have already been pushed into SVN. + +--interactive;; + Ask the user to confirm that a patch set should actually be sent to SVN. + For each patch, one may answer "yes" (accept this patch), "no" (discard this + patch), "all" (accept all patches), or "quit". + + + 'git svn dcommit' returns immediately if answer if "no" or "quit", without + commiting anything to SVN. 'branch':: Create a branch in the SVN repository. @@ -310,7 +326,7 @@ Any other arguments are passed directly to 'git log' Show what revision and author last modified each line of a file. The output of this mode is format-compatible with the output of `svn blame' by default. Like the SVN blame command, - local uncommitted changes in the working copy are ignored; + local uncommitted changes in the working tree are ignored; the version of the file in the HEAD revision is annotated. Unknown arguments are passed directly to 'git blame'. + diff --git a/Documentation/git-tag.txt b/Documentation/git-tag.txt index fb1c0ac694..c83cb13de6 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-tag.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-tag.txt @@ -43,12 +43,15 @@ GnuPG key for signing. OPTIONS ------- -a:: +--annotate:: Make an unsigned, annotated tag object -s:: +--sign:: Make a GPG-signed tag, using the default e-mail address's key -u <key-id>:: +--local-user=<key-id>:: Make a GPG-signed tag, using the given key -f:: @@ -56,9 +59,11 @@ OPTIONS Replace an existing tag with the given name (instead of failing) -d:: +--delete:: Delete existing tags with the given names. -v:: +--verify:: Verify the gpg signature of the given tag names. -n<num>:: @@ -69,6 +74,7 @@ OPTIONS If the tag is not annotated, the commit message is displayed instead. -l <pattern>:: +--list <pattern>:: List tags with names that match the given pattern (or all if no pattern is given). Running "git tag" without arguments also lists all tags. The pattern is a shell wildcard (i.e., matched @@ -79,6 +85,7 @@ OPTIONS Only list tags which contain the specified commit. -m <msg>:: +--message=<msg>:: Use the given tag message (instead of prompting). If multiple `-m` options are given, their values are concatenated as separate paragraphs. @@ -86,6 +93,7 @@ OPTIONS is given. -F <file>:: +--file=<file>:: Take the tag message from the given file. Use '-' to read the message from the standard input. Implies `-a` if none of `-a`, `-s`, or `-u <key-id>` diff --git a/Documentation/git-update-index.txt b/Documentation/git-update-index.txt index d3931294d1..a3081f4e23 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-update-index.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-update-index.txt @@ -264,7 +264,9 @@ tree files, you have to explicitly tell git about it by dropping "assume unchanged" bit, either before or after you modify them. In order to set "assume unchanged" bit, use `--assume-unchanged` -option. To unset, use `--no-assume-unchanged`. +option. To unset, use `--no-assume-unchanged`. To see which files +have the "assume unchanged" bit set, use `git ls-files -v` +(see linkgit:git-ls-files[1]). The command looks at `core.ignorestat` configuration variable. When this is true, paths updated with `git update-index paths...` and @@ -363,7 +365,8 @@ ctime for marking files processed) (see linkgit:git-config[1]). SEE ALSO -------- linkgit:git-config[1], -linkgit:git-add[1] +linkgit:git-add[1], +linkgit:git-ls-files[1] GIT --- diff --git a/Documentation/git.txt b/Documentation/git.txt index 651e155d1d..cbc51d5a94 100644 --- a/Documentation/git.txt +++ b/Documentation/git.txt @@ -44,9 +44,16 @@ unreleased) version of git, that is available from 'master' branch of the `git.git` repository. Documentation for older releases are available here: -* link:v1.7.6.2/git.html[documentation for release 1.7.6.2] +* link:v1.7.7/git.html[documentation for release 1.7.7] * release notes for + link:RelNotes/1.7.7.txt[1.7.7]. + +* link:v1.7.6.4/git.html[documentation for release 1.7.6.4] + +* release notes for + link:RelNotes/1.7.6.4.txt[1.7.6.4], + link:RelNotes/1.7.6.3.txt[1.7.6.3], link:RelNotes/1.7.6.2.txt[1.7.6.2], link:RelNotes/1.7.6.1.txt[1.7.6.1], link:RelNotes/1.7.6.txt[1.7.6]. diff --git a/Documentation/gitnamespaces.txt b/Documentation/gitnamespaces.txt index ed8924e856..c6713cf5d7 100644 --- a/Documentation/gitnamespaces.txt +++ b/Documentation/gitnamespaces.txt @@ -5,6 +5,13 @@ NAME ---- gitnamespaces - Git namespaces +SYNOPSIS +-------- +[verse] +GIT_NAMESPACE=<namespace> 'git upload-pack' +GIT_NAMESPACE=<namespace> 'git receive-pack' + + DESCRIPTION ----------- diff --git a/Documentation/gitweb.conf.txt b/Documentation/gitweb.conf.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..4ca3e27dc9 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/gitweb.conf.txt @@ -0,0 +1,884 @@ +gitweb.conf(5) +============== + +NAME +---- +gitweb.conf - Gitweb (git web interface) configuration file + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +/etc/gitweb.conf, /etc/gitweb-common.conf, $GITWEBDIR/gitweb_config.perl + +DESCRIPTION +----------- + +The gitweb CGI script for viewing Git repositories over the web uses a +perl script fragment as its configuration file. You can set variables +using "`our $variable = value`"; text from a "#" character until the +end of a line is ignored. See *perlsyn*(1) for details. + +An example: + + # gitweb configuration file for http://git.example.org + # + our $projectroot = "/srv/git"; # FHS recommendation + our $site_name = 'Example.org >> Repos'; + + +The configuration file is used to override the default settings that +were built into gitweb at the time the 'gitweb.cgi' script was generated. + +While one could just alter the configuration settings in the gitweb +CGI itself, those changes would be lost upon upgrade. Configuration +settings might also be placed into a file in the same directory as the +CGI script with the default name 'gitweb_config.perl' -- allowing +one to have multiple gitweb instances with different configurations by +the use of symlinks. + +Note that some configuration can be controlled on per-repository rather than +gitweb-wide basis: see "Per-repository gitweb configuration" subsection on +linkgit:gitweb[1] manpage. + + +DISCUSSION +---------- +Gitweb reads configuration data from the following sources in the +following order: + + * built-in values (some set during build stage), + + * common system-wide configuration file (defaults to + '/etc/gitweb-common.conf'), + + * either per-instance configuration file (defaults to 'gitweb_config.perl' + in the same directory as the installed gitweb), or if it does not exists + then fallback system-wide configuration file (defaults to '/etc/gitweb.conf'). + +Values obtained in later configuration files override values obtained earlier +in the above sequence. + +Locations of the common system-wide configuration file, the fallback +system-wide configuration file and the per-instance configuration file +are defined at compile time using build-time Makefile configuration +variables, respectively `GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON`, `GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM` +and `GITWEB_CONFIG`. + +You can also override locations of gitweb configuration files during +runtime by setting the following environment variables: +`GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON`, `GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM` and `GITWEB_CONFIG` +to a non-empty value. + + +The syntax of the configuration files is that of Perl, since these files are +handled by sourcing them as fragments of Perl code (the language that +gitweb itself is written in). Variables are typically set using the +`our` qualifier (as in "`our $variable = <value>;`") to avoid syntax +errors if a new version of gitweb no longer uses a variable and therefore +stops declaring it. + +You can include other configuration file using read_config_file() +subroutine. For example, one might want to put gitweb configuration +related to access control for viewing repositories via Gitolite (one +of git repository management tools) in a separate file, e.g. in +'/etc/gitweb-gitolite.conf'. To include it, put + +-------------------------------------------------- +read_config_file("/etc/gitweb-gitolite.conf"); +-------------------------------------------------- + +somewhere in gitweb configuration file used, e.g. in per-installation +gitweb configuration file. Note that read_config_file() checks itself +that the file it reads exists, and does nothing if it is not found. +It also handles errors in included file. + + +The default configuration with no configuration file at all may work +perfectly well for some installations. Still, a configuration file is +useful for customizing or tweaking the behavior of gitweb in many ways, and +some optional features will not be present unless explicitly enabled using +the configurable `%features` variable (see also "Configuring gitweb +features" section below). + + +CONFIGURATION VARIABLES +----------------------- +Some configuration variables have their default values (embedded in the CGI +script) set during building gitweb -- if that is the case, this fact is put +in their description. See gitweb's 'INSTALL' file for instructions on building +and installing gitweb. + + +Location of repositories +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +The configuration variables described below control how gitweb finds +git repositories, and how repositories are displayed and accessed. + +See also "Repositories" and later subsections in linkgit:gitweb[1] manpage. + +$projectroot:: + Absolute filesystem path which will be prepended to project path; + the path to repository is `$projectroot/$project`. Set to + `$GITWEB_PROJECTROOT` during installation. This variable has to be + set correctly for gitweb to find repositories. ++ +For example, if `$projectroot` is set to "/srv/git" by putting the following +in gitweb config file: ++ +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +our $projectroot = "/srv/git"; +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +then ++ +------------------------------------------------ +http://git.example.com/gitweb.cgi?p=foo/bar.git +------------------------------------------------ ++ +and its path_info based equivalent ++ +------------------------------------------------ +http://git.example.com/gitweb.cgi/foo/bar.git +------------------------------------------------ ++ +will map to the path '/srv/git/foo/bar.git' on the filesystem. + +$projects_list:: + Name of a plain text file listing projects, or a name of directory + to be scanned for projects. ++ +Project list files should list one project per line, with each line +having the following format ++ +----------------------------------------------------------------------------- +<URI-encoded filesystem path to repository> SP <URI-encoded repository owner> +----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +The default value of this variable is determined by the `GITWEB_LIST` +makefile variable at installation time. If this variable is empty, gitweb +will fall back to scanning the `$projectroot` directory for repositories. + +$project_maxdepth:: + If `$projects_list` variable is unset, gitweb will recursively + scan filesystem for git repositories. The `$project_maxdepth` + is used to limit traversing depth, relative to `$projectroot` + (starting point); it means that directories which are further + from `$projectroot` than `$project_maxdepth` will be skipped. ++ +It is purely performance optimization, originally intended for MacOS X, +where recursive directory traversal is slow. Gitweb follows symbolic +links, but it detects cycles, ignoring any duplicate files and directories. ++ +The default value of this variable is determined by the build-time +configuration variable `GITWEB_PROJECT_MAXDEPTH`, which defaults to +2007. + +$export_ok:: + Show repository only if this file exists (in repository). Only + effective if this variable evaluates to true. Can be set when + building gitweb by setting `GITWEB_EXPORT_OK`. This path is + relative to `GIT_DIR`. git-daemon[1] uses 'git-daemon-export-ok', + unless started with `--export-all`. By default this variable is + not set, which means that this feature is turned off. + +$export_auth_hook:: + Function used to determine which repositories should be shown. + This subroutine should take one parameter, the full path to + a project, and if it returns true, that project will be included + in the projects list and can be accessed through gitweb as long + as it fulfills the other requirements described by $export_ok, + $projects_list, and $projects_maxdepth. Example: ++ +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +our $export_auth_hook = sub { return -e "$_[0]/git-daemon-export-ok"; }; +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +though the above might be done by using `$export_ok` instead ++ +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +our $export_ok = "git-daemon-export-ok"; +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +If not set (default), it means that this feature is disabled. ++ +See also more involved example in "Controlling access to git repositories" +subsection on linkgit:gitweb[1] manpage. + +$strict_export:: + Only allow viewing of repositories also shown on the overview page. + This for example makes `$gitweb_export_ok` file decide if repository is + available and not only if it is shown. If `$gitweb_list` points to + file with list of project, only those repositories listed would be + available for gitweb. Can be set during building gitweb via + `GITWEB_STRICT_EXPORT`. By default this variable is not set, which + means that you can directly access those repositories that are hidden + from projects list page (e.g. the are not listed in the $projects_list + file). + + +Finding files +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +The following configuration variables tell gitweb where to find files. +The values of these variables are paths on the filesystem. + +$GIT:: + Core git executable to use. By default set to `$GIT_BINDIR/git`, which + in turn is by default set to `$(bindir)/git`. If you use git installed + from a binary package, you should usually set this to "/usr/bin/git". + This can just be "git" if your web server has a sensible PATH; from + security point of view it is better to use absolute path to git binary. + If you have multiple git versions installed it can be used to choose + which one to use. Must be (correctly) set for gitweb to be able to + work. + +$mimetypes_file:: + File to use for (filename extension based) guessing of MIME types before + trying '/etc/mime.types'. *NOTE* that this path, if relative, is taken + as relative to the current git repository, not to CGI script. If unset, + only '/etc/mime.types' is used (if present on filesystem). If no mimetypes + file is found, mimetype guessing based on extension of file is disabled. + Unset by default. + +$highlight_bin:: + Path to the highlight executable to use (it must be the one from + http://www.andre-simon.de[] due to assumptions about parameters and output). + By default set to 'highlight'; set it to full path to highlight + executable if it is not installed on your web server's PATH. + Note that 'highlight' feature must be set for gitweb to actually + use syntax hightlighting. ++ +*NOTE*: if you want to add support for new file type (supported by +"highlight" but not used by gitweb), you need to modify `%highlight_ext` +or `%highlight_basename`, depending on whether you detect type of file +based on extension (for example "sh") or on its basename (for example +"Makefile"). The keys of these hashes are extension and basename, +respectively, and value for given key is name of syntax to be passed via +`--syntax <syntax>` to highlighter. ++ +For example if repositories you are hosting use "phtml" extension for +PHP files, and you want to have correct syntax-highlighting for those +files, you can add the following to gitweb configuration: ++ +--------------------------------------------------------- +our %highlight_ext; +$highlight_ext{'phtml'} = 'php'; +--------------------------------------------------------- + + +Links and their targets +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +The configuration variables described below configure some of gitweb links: +their target and their look (text or image), and where to find page +prerequisites (stylesheet, favicon, images, scripts). Usually they are left +at their default values, with the possible exception of `@stylesheets` +variable. + +@stylesheets:: + List of URIs of stylesheets (relative to the base URI of a page). You + might specify more than one stylesheet, for example to use "gitweb.css" + as base with site specific modifications in a separate stylesheet + to make it easier to upgrade gitweb. For example, you can add + a `site` stylesheet by putting ++ +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +push @stylesheets, "gitweb-site.css"; +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +in the gitweb config file. Those values that are relative paths are +relative to base URI of gitweb. ++ +This list should contain the URI of gitweb's standard stylesheet. The default +URI of gitweb stylesheet can be set at build time using the `GITWEB_CSS` +makefile variable. Its default value is 'static/gitweb.css' +(or 'static/gitweb.min.css' if the `CSSMIN` variable is defined, +i.e. if CSS minifier is used during build). ++ +*Note*: there is also a legacy `$stylesheet` configuration variable, which was +used by older gitweb. If `$stylesheet` variable is defined, only CSS stylesheet +given by this variable is used by gitweb. + +$logo:: + Points to the location where you put 'git-logo.png' on your web + server, or to be more the generic URI of logo, 72x27 size). This image + is displayed in the top right corner of each gitweb page and used as + a logo for the Atom feed. Relative to the base URI of gitweb (as a path). + Can be adjusted when building gitweb using `GITWEB_LOGO` variable + By default set to 'static/git-logo.png'. + +$favicon:: + Points to the location where you put 'git-favicon.png' on your web + server, or to be more the generic URI of favicon, which will be served + as "image/png" type. Web browsers that support favicons (website icons) + may display them in the browser's URL bar and next to the site name in + bookmarks. Relative to the base URI of gitweb. Can be adjusted at + build time using `GITWEB_FAVICON` variable. + By default set to 'static/git-favicon.png'. + +$javascript:: + Points to the location where you put 'gitweb.js' on your web server, + or to be more generic the URI of JavaScript code used by gitweb. + Relative to the base URI of gitweb. Can be set at build time using + the `GITWEB_JS` build-time configuration variable. ++ +The default value is either 'static/gitweb.js', or 'static/gitweb.min.js' if +the `JSMIN` build variable was defined, i.e. if JavaScript minifier was used +at build time. *Note* that this single file is generated from multiple +individual JavaScript "modules". + +$home_link:: + Target of the home link on the top of all pages (the first part of view + "breadcrumbs"). By default it is set to the absolute URI of a current page + (to the value of `$my_uri` variable, or to "/" if `$my_uri` is undefined + or is an empty string). + +$home_link_str:: + Label for the "home link" at the top of all pages, leading to `$home_link` + (usually the main gitweb page, which contains the projects list). It is + used as the first component of gitweb's "breadcrumb trail": + `<home link> / <project> / <action>`. Can be set at build time using + the `GITWEB_HOME_LINK_STR` variable. By default it is set to "projects", + as this link leads to the list of projects. Other popular choice it to + set it to the name of site. + +$logo_url:: +$logo_label:: + URI and label (title) for the Git logo link (or your site logo, + if you chose to use different logo image). By default, these both + refer to git homepage, http://git-scm.com[]; in the past, they pointed + to git documentation at http://www.kernel.org[]. + + +Changing gitweb's look +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +You can adjust how pages generated by gitweb look using the variables described +below. You can change the site name, add common headers and footers for all +pages, and add a description of this gitweb installation on its main page +(which is the projects list page), etc. + +$site_name:: + Name of your site or organization, to appear in page titles. Set it + to something descriptive for clearer bookmarks etc. If this variable + is not set or is, then gitweb uses the value of the `SERVER_NAME` + CGI environment variable, setting site name to "$SERVER_NAME Git", + or "Untitled Git" if this variable is not set (e.g. if running gitweb + as standalone script). ++ +Can be set using the `GITWEB_SITENAME` at build time. Unset by default. + +$site_header:: + Name of a file with HTML to be included at the top of each page. + Relative to the directory containing the 'gitweb.cgi' script. + Can be set using `GITWEB_SITE_HEADER` at build time. No default + value. + +$site_footer:: + Name of a file with HTML to be included at the bottom of each page. + Relative to the directory containing the 'gitweb.cgi' script. + Can be set using `GITWEB_SITE_FOOTER` at build time. No default + value. + +$home_text:: + Name of a HTML file which, if it exists, is included on the + gitweb projects overview page ("projects_list" view). Relative to + the directory containing the gitweb.cgi script. Default value + can be adjusted during build time using `GITWEB_HOMETEXT` variable. + By default set to 'indextext.html'. + +$projects_list_description_width:: + The width (in characters) of the "Description" column of the projects list. + Longer descriptions will be truncated (trying to cut at word boundary); + the full description is available in the 'title' attribute (usually shown on + mouseover). The default is 25, which might be too small if you + use long project descriptions. + +$default_projects_order:: + Default value of ordering of projects on projects list page, which + means the ordering used if you don't explicitly sort projects list + (if there is no "o" CGI query parameter in the URL). Valid values + are "none" (unsorted), "project" (projects are by project name, + i.e. path to repository relative to `$projectroot`), "descr" + (project description), "owner", and "age" (by date of most current + commit). ++ +Default value is "project". Unknown value means unsorted. + + +Changing gitweb's behavior +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +These configuration variables control _internal_ gitweb behavior. + +$default_blob_plain_mimetype:: + Default mimetype for the blob_plain (raw) view, if mimetype checking + doesn't result in some other type; by default "text/plain". + Gitweb guesses mimetype of a file to display based on extension + of its filename, using `$mimetypes_file` (if set and file exists) + and '/etc/mime.types' files (see *mime.types*(5) manpage; only + filename extension rules are supported by gitweb). + +$default_text_plain_charset:: + Default charset for text files. If this is not set, the web server + configuration will be used. Unset by default. + +$fallback_encoding:: + Gitweb assumes this charset when a line contains non-UTF-8 characters. + The fallback decoding is used without error checking, so it can be even + "utf-8". The value must be a valid encoding; see the *Encoding::Supported*(3pm) + man page for a list. The default is "latin1", aka. "iso-8859-1". + +@diff_opts:: + Rename detection options for git-diff and git-diff-tree. The default is + (\'-M'); set it to (\'-C') or (\'-C', \'-C') to also detect copies, + or set it to () i.e. empty list if you don't want to have renames + detection. ++ +*Note* that rename and especially copy detection can be quite +CPU-intensive. Note also that non git tools can have problems with +patches generated with options mentioned above, especially when they +involve file copies (\'-C') or criss-cross renames (\'-B'). + + +Some optional features and policies +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Most of features are configured via `%feature` hash; however some of extra +gitweb features can be turned on and configured using variables described +below. This list beside configuration variables that control how gitweb +looks does contain variables configuring administrative side of gitweb +(e.g. cross-site scripting prevention; admittedly this as side effect +affects how "summary" pages look like, or load limiting). + +@git_base_url_list:: + List of git base URLs. These URLs are used to generate URLs + describing from where to fetch a project, which are shown on + project summary page. The full fetch URL is "`$git_base_url/$project`", + for each element of this list. You can set up multiple base URLs + (for example one for `git://` protocol, and one for `http://` + protocol). ++ +Note that per repository configuration can be set in '$GIT_DIR/cloneurl' +file, or as values of multi-value `gitweb.url` configuration variable in +project config. Per-repository configuration takes precedence over value +composed from `@git_base_url_list` elements and project name. ++ +You can setup one single value (single entry/item in this list) at build +time by setting the `GITWEB_BASE_URL` built-time configuration variable. +By default it is set to (), i.e. an empty list. This means that gitweb +would not try to create project URL (to fetch) from project name. + +$projects_list_group_categories:: + Whether to enables the grouping of projects by category on the project + list page. The category of a project is determined by the + `$GIT_DIR/category` file or the `gitweb.category` variable in each + repository's configuration. Disabled by default (set to 0). + +$project_list_default_category:: + Default category for projects for which none is specified. If this is + set to the empty string, such projects will remain uncategorized and + listed at the top, above categorized projects. Used only if project + categories are enabled, which means if `$projects_list_group_categories` + is true. By default set to "" (empty string). + +$prevent_xss:: + If true, some gitweb features are disabled to prevent content in + repositories from launching cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. Set this + to true if you don't trust the content of your repositories. + False by default (set to 0). + +$maxload:: + Used to set the maximum load that we will still respond to gitweb queries. + If the server load exceeds this value then gitweb will return + "503 Service Unavailable" error. The server load is taken to be 0 + if gitweb cannot determine its value. Currently it works only on Linux, + where it uses '/proc/loadavg'; the load there is the number of active + tasks on the system -- processes that are actually running -- averaged + over the last minute. ++ +Set `$maxload` to undefined value (`undef`) to turn this feature off. +The default value is 300. + +$per_request_config:: + If this is set to code reference, it will be run once for each request. + You can set parts of configuration that change per session this way. + For example, one might use the following code in a gitweb configuration + file ++ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +our $per_request_config = sub { + $ENV{GL_USER} = $cgi->remote_user || "gitweb"; +}; +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +If `$per_request_config` is not a code reference, it is interpreted as boolean +value. If it is true gitweb will process config files once per request, +and if it is false gitweb will process config files only once, each time it +is executed. True by default (set to 1). ++ +*NOTE*: `$my_url`, `$my_uri`, and `$base_url` are overwritten with their default +values before every request, so if you want to change them, be sure to set +this variable to true or a code reference effecting the desired changes. ++ +This variable matters only when using persistent web environments that +serve multiple requests using single gitweb instance, like mod_perl, +FastCGI or Plackup. + + +Other variables +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Usually you should not need to change (adjust) any of configuration +variables described below; they should be automatically set by gitweb to +correct value. + + +$version:: + Gitweb version, set automatically when creating gitweb.cgi from + gitweb.perl. You might want to modify it if you are running modified + gitweb, for example ++ +--------------------------------------------------- +our $version .= " with caching"; +--------------------------------------------------- ++ +if you run modified version of gitweb with caching support. This variable +is purely informational, used e.g. in the "generator" meta header in HTML +header. + +$my_url:: +$my_uri:: + Full URL and absolute URL of the gitweb script; + in earlier versions of gitweb you might have need to set those + variables, but now there should be no need to do it. See + `$per_request_config` if you need to set them still. + +$base_url:: + Base URL for relative URLs in pages generated by gitweb, + (e.g. `$logo`, `$favicon`, `@stylesheets` if they are relative URLs), + needed and used '<base href="$base_url">' only for URLs with nonempty + PATH_INFO. Usually gitweb sets its value correctly, + and there is no need to set this variable, e.g. to $my_uri or "/". + See `$per_request_config` if you need to override it anyway. + + +CONFIGURING GITWEB FEATURES +--------------------------- +Many gitweb features can be enabled (or disabled) and configured using the +`%feature` hash. Names of gitweb features are keys of this hash. + +Each `%feature` hash element is a hash reference and has the following +structure: +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +"<feature_name>" => { + "sub" => <feature-sub (subroutine)>, + "override" => <allow-override (boolean)>, + "default" => [ <options>... ] +}, +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +Some features cannot be overridden per project. For those +features the structure of appropriate `%feature` hash element has a simpler +form: +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +"<feature_name>" => { + "override" => 0, + "default" => [ <options>... ] +}, +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +As one can see it lacks the \'sub' element. + +The meaning of each part of feature configuration is described +below: + +default:: + List (array reference) of feature parameters (if there are any), + used also to toggle (enable or disable) given feature. ++ +Note that it is currently *always* an array reference, even if +feature doesn't accept any configuration parameters, and \'default' +is used only to turn it on or off. In such case you turn feature on +by setting this element to `[1]`, and torn it off by setting it to +`[0]`. See also the passage about the "blame" feature in the "Examples" +section. ++ +To disable features that accept parameters (are configurable), you +need to set this element to empty list i.e. `[]`. + +override:: + If this field has a true value then the given feature is + overriddable, which means that it can be configured + (or enabled/disabled) on a per-repository basis. ++ +Usually given "<feature>" is configurable via the `gitweb.<feature>` +config variable in the per-repository git configuration file. ++ +*Note* that no feature is overriddable by default. + +sub:: + Internal detail of implementation. What is important is that + if this field is not present then per-repository override for + given feature is not supported. ++ +You wouldn't need to ever change it in gitweb config file. + + +Features in `%feature` +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +The gitweb features that are configurable via `%feature` hash are listed +below. This should be a complete list, but ultimately the authoritative +and complete list is in gitweb.cgi source code, with features described +in the comments. + +blame:: + Enable the "blame" and "blame_incremental" blob views, showing for + each line the last commit that modified it; see linkgit:git-blame[1]. + This can be very CPU-intensive and is therefore disabled by default. ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via +repository's `gitweb.blame` configuration variable (boolean). + +snapshot:: + Enable and configure the "snapshot" action, which allows user to + download a compressed archive of any tree or commit, as produced + by linkgit:git-archive[1] and possibly additionally compressed. + This can potentially generate high traffic if you have large project. ++ +The value of \'default' is a list of names of snapshot formats, +defined in `%known_snapshot_formats` hash, that you wish to offer. +Supported formats include "tgz", "tbz2", "txz" (gzip/bzip2/xz +compressed tar archive) and "zip"; please consult gitweb sources for +a definitive list. By default only "tgz" is offered. ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via +repository's `gitweb.blame` configuration variable, which contains +a comma separated list of formats or "none" to disable snapshots. +Unknown values are ignored. + +grep:: + Enable grep search, which lists the files in currently selected + tree (directory) containing the given string; see linkgit:git-grep[1]. + This can be potentially CPU-intensive, of course. Enabled by default. ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via +repository's `gitweb.grep` configuration variable (boolean). + +pickaxe:: + Enable the so called pickaxe search, which will list the commits + that introduced or removed a given string in a file. This can be + practical and quite faster alternative to "blame" action, but it is + still potentially CPU-intensive. Enabled by default. ++ +The pickaxe search is described in linkgit:git-log[1] (the +description of `-S<string>` option, which refers to pickaxe entry in +linkgit:gitdiffcore[7] for more details). ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis by setting +repository's `gitweb.pickaxe` configuration variable (boolean). + +show-sizes:: + Enable showing size of blobs (ordinary files) in a "tree" view, in a + separate column, similar to what `ls -l` does; see description of + `-l` option in linkgit:git-ls-tree[1] manpage. This costs a bit of + I/O. Enabled by default. ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via +repository's `gitweb.showsizes` configuration variable (boolean). + +patches:: + Enable and configure "patches" view, which displays list of commits in email + (plain text) output format; see also linkgit:git-format-patch[1]. + The value is the maximum number of patches in a patchset generated + in "patches" view. Set the 'default' field to a list containing single + item of or to an empty list to disable patch view, or to a list + containing a single negative number to remove any limit. + Default value is 16. ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via +repository's `gitweb.patches` configuration variable (integer). + +avatar:: + Avatar support. When this feature is enabled, views such as + "shortlog" or "commit" will display an avatar associated with + the email of each committer and author. ++ +Currently available providers are *"gravatar"* and *"picon"*. +Only one provider at a time can be selected ('default' is one element list). +If an unknown provider is specified, the feature is disabled. +*Note* that some providers might require extra Perl packages to be +installed; see 'gitweb/INSTALL' for more details. ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via +repository's `gitweb.avatar` configuration variable. ++ +See also `%avatar_size` with pixel sizes for icons and avatars +("default" is used for one-line like "log" and "shortlog", "double" +is used for two-line like "commit", "commitdiff" or "tag"). If the +default font sizes or lineheights are changed (e.g. via adding extra +CSS stylesheet in `@stylesheets`), it may be appropriate to change +these values. + +highlight:: + Server-side syntax highlight support in "blob" view. It requires + `$highlight_bin` program to be available (see the description of + this variable in the "Configuration variables" section above), + and therefore is disabled by default. ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via +repository's `gitweb.highlight` configuration variable (boolean). + +remote_heads:: + Enable displaying remote heads (remote-tracking branches) in the "heads" + list. In most cases the list of remote-tracking branches is an + unnecessary internal private detail, and this feature is therefore + disabled by default. linkgit:git-instaweb[1], which is usually used + to browse local repositories, enables and uses this feature. ++ +This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via +repository's `gitweb.remote_heads` configuration variable (boolean). + + +The remaining features cannot be overridden on a per project basis. + +search:: + Enable text search, which will list the commits which match author, + committer or commit text to a given string; see the description of + `--author`, `--committer` and `--grep` options in linkgit:git-log[1] + manpage. Enabled by default. ++ +Project specific override is not supported. + +forks:: + If this feature is enabled, gitweb considers projects in + subdirectories of project root (basename) to be forks of existing + projects. For each project `$projname.git`, projects in the + `$projname/` directory and its subdirectories will not be + shown in the main projects list. Instead, a \'+' mark is shown + next to `$projname`, which links to a "forks" view that lists all + the forks (all projects in `$projname/` subdirectory). Additionally + a "forks" view for a project is linked from project summary page. ++ +If the project list is taken from a file (`$projects_list` points to a +file), forks are only recognized if they are listed after the main project +in that file. ++ +Project specific override is not supported. + +actions:: + Insert custom links to the action bar of all project pages. This + allows you to link to third-party scripts integrating into gitweb. ++ +The "default" value consists of a list of triplets in the form +`("<label>", "<link>", "<position>")` where "position" is the label +after which to insert the link, "link" is a format string where `%n` +expands to the project name, `%f` to the project path within the +filesystem (i.e. "$projectroot/$project"), `%h` to the current hash +(\'h' gitweb parameter) and `%b` to the current hash base +(\'hb' gitweb parameter); `%%` expands to \'%'. ++ +For example, at the time this page was written, the http://repo.or.cz[] +git hosting site set it to the following to enable graphical log +(using the third party tool *git-browser*): ++ +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +$feature{'actions'}{'default'} = + [ ('graphiclog', '/git-browser/by-commit.html?r=%n', 'summary')]; +---------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +This adds a link titled "graphiclog" after the "summary" link, leading to +`git-browser` script, passing `r=<project>` as a query parameter. ++ +Project specific override is not supported. + +timed:: + Enable displaying how much time and how many git commands it took to + generate and display each page in the page footer (at the bottom of + page). For example the footer might contain: "This page took 6.53325 + seconds and 13 git commands to generate." Disabled by default. ++ +Project specific override is not supported. + +javascript-timezone:: + Enable and configure the ability to change a common timezone for dates + in gitweb output via JavaScript. Dates in gitweb output include + authordate and committerdate in "commit", "commitdiff" and "log" + views, and taggerdate in "tag" view. Enabled by default. ++ +The value is a list of three values: a default timezone (for if the client +hasn't selected some other timezone and saved it in a cookie), a name of cookie +where to store selected timezone, and a CSS class used to mark up +dates for manipulation. If you want to turn this feature off, set "default" +to empty list: `[]`. ++ +Typical gitweb config files will only change starting (default) timezone, +and leave other elements at their default values: ++ +--------------------------------------------------------------------------- +$feature{'javascript-timezone'}{'default'}[0] = "utc"; +--------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +The example configuration presented here is guaranteed to be backwards +and forward compatible. ++ +Timezone values can be "local" (for local timezone that browser uses), "utc" +(what gitweb uses when JavaScript or this feature is disabled), or numerical +timezones in the form of "+/-HHMM", such as "+0200". ++ +Project specific override is not supported. + + +EXAMPLES +-------- + +To enable blame, pickaxe search, and snapshot support (allowing "tar.gz" and +"zip" snapshots), while allowing individual projects to turn them off, put +the following in your GITWEB_CONFIG file: + + $feature{'blame'}{'default'} = [1]; + $feature{'blame'}{'override'} = 1; + + $feature{'pickaxe'}{'default'} = [1]; + $feature{'pickaxe'}{'override'} = 1; + + $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} = ['zip', 'tgz']; + $feature{'snapshot'}{'override'} = 1; + +If you allow overriding for the snapshot feature, you can specify which +snapshot formats are globally disabled. You can also add any command line +options you want (such as setting the compression level). For instance, you +can disable Zip compressed snapshots and set *gzip*(1) to run at level 6 by +adding the following lines to your gitweb configuration file: + + $known_snapshot_formats{'zip'}{'disabled'} = 1; + $known_snapshot_formats{'tgz'}{'compressor'} = ['gzip','-6']; + +ENVIRONMENT +----------- +The location of per-instance and system-wide configuration files can be +overridden using the following environment variables: + +GITWEB_CONFIG:: + Sets location of per-instance configuration file. +GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM:: + Sets location of fallback system-wide configuration file. + This file is read only if per-instance one does not exist. +GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON:: + Sets location of common system-wide configuration file. + + +FILES +----- +gitweb_config.perl:: + This is default name of per-instance configuration file. The + format of this file is described above. +/etc/gitweb.conf:: + This is default name of fallback system-wide configuration + file. This file is used only if per-instance configuration + variable is not found. +/etc/gitweb-common.conf:: + This is default name of common system-wide configuration + file. + + +SEE ALSO +-------- +linkgit:gitweb[1], linkgit:git-instaweb[1] + +'gitweb/README', 'gitweb/INSTALL' + +GIT +--- +Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite diff --git a/Documentation/gitweb.txt b/Documentation/gitweb.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..605a085326 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/gitweb.txt @@ -0,0 +1,704 @@ +gitweb(1) +========= + +NAME +---- +gitweb - Git web interface (web frontend to Git repositories) + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +To get started with gitweb, run linkgit:git-instaweb[1] from a git repository. +This would configure and start your web server, and run web browser pointing to +gitweb. + + +DESCRIPTION +----------- +Gitweb provides a web interface to git repositories. It's features include: + +* Viewing multiple Git repositories with common root. +* Browsing every revision of the repository. +* Viewing the contents of files in the repository at any revision. +* Viewing the revision log of branches, history of files and directories, + see what was changed when, by who. +* Viewing the blame/annotation details of any file (if enabled). +* Generating RSS and Atom feeds of commits, for any branch. + The feeds are auto-discoverable in modern web browsers. +* Viewing everything that was changed in a revision, and step through + revisions one at a time, viewing the history of the repository. +* Finding commits which commit messages matches given search term. + +See http://git.kernel.org/?p=git/git.git;a=tree;f=gitweb[] or +http://repo.or.cz/w/git.git/tree/HEAD:/gitweb/[] for gitweb source code, +browsed using gitweb itself. + + +CONFIGURATION +------------- +Various aspects of gitweb's behavior can be controlled through the configuration +file 'gitweb_config.perl' or '/etc/gitweb.conf'. See the linkgit:gitweb.conf[5] +for details. + +Repositories +~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Gitweb can show information from one or more Git repositories. These +repositories have to be all on local filesystem, and have to share common +repository root, i.e. be all under a single parent repository (but see also +"Advanced web server setup" section, "Webserver configuration with multiple +projects' root" subsection). + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +our $projectroot = '/path/to/parent/directory'; +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +The default value for `$projectroot` is '/pub/git'. You can change it during +building gitweb via `GITWEB_PROJECTROOT` build configuration variable. + +By default all git repositories under `$projectroot` are visible and available +to gitweb. The list of projects is generated by default by scanning the +`$projectroot` directory for git repositories (for object databases to be +more exact; gitweb is not interested in a working area, and is best suited +to showing "bare" repositories). + +The name of repository in gitweb is path to it's `$GIT_DIR` (it's object +database) relative to `$projectroot`. Therefore the repository $repo can be +found at "$projectroot/$repo". + + +Projects list file format +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Instead of having gitweb find repositories by scanning filesystem +starting from $projectroot, you can provide a pre-generated list of +visible projects by setting `$projects_list` to point to a plain text +file with a list of projects (with some additional info). + +This file uses the following format: + +* One record (for project / repository) per line; does not support line +continuation (newline escaping). + +* Leading and trailing whitespace are ignored. + +* Whitespace separated fields; any run of whitespace can be used as field +separator (rules for Perl's "`split(" ", $line)`"). + +* Fields use modified URI encoding, defined in RFC 3986, section 2.1 +(Percent-Encoding), or rather "Query string encoding" (see +link:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Query_string#URL_encoding[]), the difference +being that SP (" ") can be encoded as "{plus}" (and therefore "{plus}" has to be +also percent-encoded). ++ +Reserved characters are: "%" (used for encoding), "{plus}" (can be used to +encode SPACE), all whitespace characters as defined in Perl, including SP, +TAB and LF, (used to separate fields in a record). + +* Currently recognized fields are: +<repository path>:: + path to repository GIT_DIR, relative to `$projectroot` +<repository owner>:: + displayed as repository owner, preferably full name, or email, + or both + +You can generate the projects list index file using the project_index action +(the 'TXT' link on projects list page) directly from gitweb; see also +"Generating projects list using gitweb" section below. + +Example contents: +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +foo.git Joe+R+Hacker+<joe@example.com> +foo/bar.git O+W+Ner+<owner@example.org> +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +By default this file controls only which projects are *visible* on projects +list page (note that entries that do not point to correctly recognized git +repositories won't be displayed by gitweb). Even if a project is not +visible on projects list page, you can view it nevertheless by hand-crafting +a gitweb URL. By setting `$strict_export` configuration variable (see +linkgit:gitweb.conf[5]) to true value you can allow viewing only of +repositories also shown on the overview page (i.e. only projects explicitly +listed in projects list file will be accessible). + + +Generating projects list using gitweb +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +We assume that GITWEB_CONFIG has its default Makefile value, namely +'gitweb_config.perl'. Put the following in 'gitweb_make_index.perl' file: +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +read_config_file("gitweb_config.perl"); +$projects_list = $projectroot; +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Then create the following script to get list of project in the format +suitable for GITWEB_LIST build configuration variable (or +`$projects_list` variable in gitweb config): + +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +#!/bin/sh + +export GITWEB_CONFIG="gitweb_make_index.perl" +export GATEWAY_INTERFACE="CGI/1.1" +export HTTP_ACCEPT="*/*" +export REQUEST_METHOD="GET" +export QUERY_STRING="a=project_index" + +perl -- /var/www/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Run this script and save its output to a file. This file could then be used +as projects list file, which means that you can set `$projects_list` to its +filename. + + +Controlling access to git repositories +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +By default all git repositories under `$projectroot` are visible and +available to gitweb. You can however configure how gitweb controls access +to repositories. + +* As described in "Projects list file format" section, you can control which +projects are *visible* by selectively including repositories in projects +list file, and setting `$projects_list` gitweb configuration variable to +point to it. With `$strict_export` set, projects list file can be used to +control which repositories are *available* as well. + +* You can configure gitweb to only list and allow viewing of the explicitly +exported repositories, via `$export_ok` variable in gitweb config file; see +linkgit:gitweb.conf[5] manpage. If it evaluates to true, gitweb shows +repositories only if this file named by `$export_ok` exists in its object +database (if directory has the magic file named `$export_ok`). ++ +For example linkgit:git-daemon[1] by default (unless `--export-all` option +is used) allows pulling only for those repositories that have +'git-daemon-export-ok' file. Adding ++ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- +our $export_ok = "git-daemon-export-ok"; +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +makes gitweb show and allow access only to those repositories that can be +fetched from via `git://` protocol. + +* Finally, it is possible to specify an arbitrary perl subroutine that will +be called for each repository to determine if it can be exported. The +subroutine receives an absolute path to the project (repository) as its only +parameter (i.e. "$projectroot/$project"). ++ +For example, if you use mod_perl to run the script, and have dumb +HTTP protocol authentication configured for your repositories, you +can use the following hook to allow access only if the user is +authorized to read the files: ++ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- +$export_auth_hook = sub { + use Apache2::SubRequest (); + use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(HTTP_OK); + my $path = "$_[0]/HEAD"; + my $r = Apache2::RequestUtil->request; + my $sub = $r->lookup_file($path); + return $sub->filename eq $path + && $sub->status == Apache2::Const::HTTP_OK; +}; +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +Per-repository gitweb configuration +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +You can configure individual repositories shown in gitweb by creating file +in the 'GIT_DIR' of git repository, or by setting some repo configuration +variable (in 'GIT_DIR/config', see linkgit:git-config[1]). + +You can use the following files in repository: + +README.html:: + A html file (HTML fragment) which is included on the gitweb project + "summary" page inside `<div>` block element. You can use it for longer + description of a project, to provide links (for example to project's + homepage), etc. This is recognized only if XSS prevention is off + (`$prevent_xss` is false, see linkgit:gitweb.conf[5]); a way to include + a README safely when XSS prevention is on may be worked out in the + future. + +description (or `gitweb.description`):: + Short (shortened to `$projects_list_description_width` in the projects + list page, which is 25 characters by default; see + linkgit:gitweb.conf[5]) single line description of a project (of a + repository). Plain text file; HTML will be escaped. By default set to ++ +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +Unnamed repository; edit this file to name it for gitweb. +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ++ +from the template during repository creation, usually installed in +'/usr/share/git-core/templates/'. You can use the `gitweb.description` repo +configuration variable, but the file takes precedence. + +category (or `gitweb.category`):: + Singe line category of a project, used to group projects if + `$projects_list_group_categories` is enabled. By default (file and + configuration variable absent), uncategorized projects are put in the + `$project_list_default_category` category. You can use the + `gitweb.category` repo configuration variable, but the file takes + precedence. ++ +The configuration variables `$projects_list_group_categories` and +`$project_list_default_category` are described in linkgit:gitweb.conf[5] + +cloneurl (or multiple-valued `gitweb.url`):: + File with repository URL (used for clone and fetch), one per line. + Displayed in the project summary page. You can use multiple-valued + `gitweb.url` repository configuration variable for that, but the file + takes precedence. ++ +This is per-repository enhancement / version of global prefix-based +`@git_base_url_list` gitweb configuration variable (see +linkgit:gitweb.conf[5]). + +gitweb.owner:: + You can use the `gitweb.owner` repository configuration variable to set + repository's owner. It is displayed in the project list and summary + page. ++ +If it's not set, filesystem directory's owner is used (via GECOS field, +i.e. real name field from *getpwuid*(3)) if `$projects_list` is unset +(gitweb scans `$projectroot` for repositories); if `$projects_list` +points to file with list of repositories, then project owner defaults to +value from this file for given repository. + +various `gitweb.*` config variables (in config):: + Read description of `%feature` hash for detailed list, and descriptions. + See also "Configuring gitweb features" section in linkgit:gitweb.conf[5] + + +ACTIONS, AND URLS +----------------- +Gitweb can use path_info (component) based URLs, or it can pass all necessary +information via query parameters. The typical gitweb URLs are broken down in to +five components: + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +.../gitweb.cgi/<repo>/<action>/<revision>:/<path>?<arguments> +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +repo:: + The repository the action will be performed on. ++ +All actions except for those that list all available projects, +in whatever form, require this parameter. + +action:: + The action that will be run. Defaults to 'projects_list' if repo + is not set, and to 'summary' otherwise. + +revision:: + Revision shown. Defaults to HEAD. + +path:: + The path within the <repository> that the action is performed on, + for those actions that require it. + +arguments:: + Any arguments that control the behaviour of the action. + +Some actions require or allow to specify two revisions, and sometimes even two +pathnames. In most general form such path_info (component) based gitweb URL +looks like this: + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +.../gitweb.cgi/<repo>/<action>/<revision_from>:/<path_from>..<revision_to>:/<path_to>?<arguments> +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +Each action is implemented as a subroutine, and must be present in %actions +hash. Some actions are disabled by default, and must be turned on via feature +mechanism. For example to enable 'blame' view add the following to gitweb +configuration file: + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +$feature{'blame'}{'default'} = [1]; +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +Actions: +~~~~~~~~ +The standard actions are: + +project_list:: + Lists the available Git repositories. This is the default command if no + repository is specified in the URL. + +summary:: + Displays summary about given repository. This is the default command if + no action is specified in URL, and only repository is specified. + +heads:: +remotes:: + Lists all local or all remote-tracking branches in given repository. ++ +The latter is not available by default, unless configured. + +tags:: + List all tags (lightweight and annotated) in given repository. + +blob:: +tree:: + Shows the files and directories in a given repository path, at given + revision. This is default command if no action is specified in the URL, + and path is given. + +blob_plain:: + Returns the raw data for the file in given repository, at given path and + revision. Links to this action are marked 'raw'. + +blobdiff:: + Shows the difference between two revisions of the same file. + +blame:: +blame_incremental:: + Shows the blame (also called annotation) information for a file. On a + per line basis it shows the revision in which that line was last changed + and the user that committed the change. The incremental version (which + if configured is used automatically when JavaScript is enabled) uses + Ajax to incrementally add blame info to the contents of given file. ++ +This action is disabled by default for performance reasons. + +commit:: +commitdiff:: + Shows information about a specific commit in a repository. The 'commit' + view shows information about commit in more detail, the 'commitdiff' + action shows changeset for given commit. + +patch:: + Returns the commit in plain text mail format, suitable for applying with + linkgit:git-am[1]. + +tag:: + Display specific annotated tag (tag object). + +log:: +shortlog:: + Shows log information (commit message or just commit subject) for a + given branch (starting from given revision). ++ +The 'shortlog' view is more compact; it shows one commit per line. + +history:: + Shows history of the file or directory in a given repository path, + starting from given revision (defaults to HEAD, i.e. default branch). ++ +This view is similar to 'shortlog' view. + +rss:: +atom:: + Generates an RSS (or Atom) feed of changes to repository. + + +WEBSERVER CONFIGURATION +----------------------- +This section explains how to configure some common webservers to run gitweb. In +all cases, `/path/to/gitweb` in the examples is the directory you ran installed +gitweb in, and contains `gitweb_config.perl`. + +If you've configured a web server that isn't listed here for gitweb, please send +in the instructions so they can be included in a future release. + +Apache as CGI +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Apache must be configured to support CGI scripts in the directory in +which gitweb is installed. Let's assume that it is '/var/www/cgi-bin' +directory. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ "/var/www/cgi-bin/" + +<Directory "/var/www/cgi-bin"> + Options Indexes FollowSymlinks ExecCGI + AllowOverride None + Order allow,deny + Allow from all +</Directory> +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +With that configuration the full path to browse repositories would be: + + http://server/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi + +Apache with mod_perl, via ModPerl::Registry +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +You can use mod_perl with gitweb. You must install Apache::Registry +(for mod_perl 1.x) or ModPerl::Registry (for mod_perl 2.x) to enable +this support. + +Assuming that gitweb is installed to '/var/www/perl', the following +Apache configuration (for mod_perl 2.x) is suitable. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +Alias /perl "/var/www/perl" + +<Directory "/var/www/perl"> + SetHandler perl-script + PerlResponseHandler ModPerl::Registry + PerlOptions +ParseHeaders + Options Indexes FollowSymlinks +ExecCGI + AllowOverride None + Order allow,deny + Allow from all +</Directory> +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +With that configuration the full path to browse repositories would be: + + http://server/perl/gitweb.cgi + +Apache with FastCGI +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Gitweb works with Apache and FastCGI. First you need to rename, copy +or symlink gitweb.cgi to gitweb.fcgi. Let's assume that gitweb is +installed in '/usr/share/gitweb' directory. The following Apache +configuration is suitable (UNTESTED!) + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +FastCgiServer /usr/share/gitweb/gitweb.cgi +ScriptAlias /gitweb /usr/share/gitweb/gitweb.cgi + +Alias /gitweb/static /usr/share/gitweb/static +<Directory /usr/share/gitweb/static> + SetHandler default-handler +</Directory> +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +With that configuration the full path to browse repositories would be: + + http://server/gitweb + + +ADVANCED WEB SERVER SETUP +------------------------- +All of those examples use request rewriting, and need `mod_rewrite` +(or equivalent; examples below are written for Apache). + +Single URL for gitweb and for fetching +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +If you want to have one URL for both gitweb and your `http://` +repositories, you can configure Apache like this: + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- +<VirtualHost *:80> + ServerName git.example.org + DocumentRoot /pub/git + SetEnv GITWEB_CONFIG /etc/gitweb.conf + + # turning on mod rewrite + RewriteEngine on + + # make the front page an internal rewrite to the gitweb script + RewriteRule ^/$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi + + # make access for "dumb clients" work + RewriteRule ^/(.*\.git/(?!/?(HEAD|info|objects|refs)).*)?$ \ + /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi%{REQUEST_URI} [L,PT] +</VirtualHost> +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +The above configuration expects your public repositories to live under +'/pub/git' and will serve them as `http://git.domain.org/dir-under-pub-git`, +both as cloneable GIT URL and as browseable gitweb interface. If you then +start your linkgit:git-daemon[1] with `--base-path=/pub/git --export-all` +then you can even use the `git://` URL with exactly the same path. + +Setting the environment variable `GITWEB_CONFIG` will tell gitweb to use the +named file (i.e. in this example '/etc/gitweb.conf') as a configuration for +gitweb. You don't really need it in above example; it is required only if +your configuration file is in different place than built-in (during +compiling gitweb) 'gitweb_config.perl' or '/etc/gitweb.conf'. See +linkgit:gitweb.conf[5] for details, especially information about precedence +rules. + +If you use the rewrite rules from the example you *might* also need +something like the following in your gitweb configuration file +('/etc/gitweb.conf' following example): +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +@stylesheets = ("/some/absolute/path/gitweb.css"); +$my_uri = "/"; +$home_link = "/"; +$per_request_config = 1; +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +Nowadays though gitweb should create HTML base tag when needed (to set base +URI for relative links), so it should work automatically. + + +Webserver configuration with multiple projects' root +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +If you want to use gitweb with several project roots you can edit your +Apache virtual host and gitweb configuration files in the following way. + +The virtual host configuration (in Apache configuration file) should look +like this: +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- +<VirtualHost *:80> + ServerName git.example.org + DocumentRoot /pub/git + SetEnv GITWEB_CONFIG /etc/gitweb.conf + + # turning on mod rewrite + RewriteEngine on + + # make the front page an internal rewrite to the gitweb script + RewriteRule ^/$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi [QSA,L,PT] + + # look for a public_git folder in unix users' home + # http://git.example.org/~<user>/ + RewriteRule ^/\~([^\/]+)(/|/gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi \ + [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/home/$1/public_git/,L,PT] + + # http://git.example.org/+<user>/ + #RewriteRule ^/\+([^\/]+)(/|/gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi \ + [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/home/$1/public_git/,L,PT] + + # http://git.example.org/user/<user>/ + #RewriteRule ^/user/([^\/]+)/(gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi \ + [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/home/$1/public_git/,L,PT] + + # defined list of project roots + RewriteRule ^/scm(/|/gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi \ + [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/pub/scm/,L,PT] + RewriteRule ^/var(/|/gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi \ + [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/var/git/,L,PT] + + # make access for "dumb clients" work + RewriteRule ^/(.*\.git/(?!/?(HEAD|info|objects|refs)).*)?$ \ + /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi%{REQUEST_URI} [L,PT] +</VirtualHost> +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Here actual project root is passed to gitweb via `GITWEB_PROJECT_ROOT` +environment variable from a web server, so you need to put the following +line in gitweb configuration file ('/etc/gitweb.conf' in above example): +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- +$projectroot = $ENV{'GITWEB_PROJECTROOT'} || "/pub/git"; +-------------------------------------------------------------------------- +*Note* that this requires to be set for each request, so either +`$per_request_config` must be false, or the above must be put in code +referenced by `$per_request_config`; + +These configurations enable two things. First, each unix user (`<user>`) of +the server will be able to browse through gitweb git repositories found in +'~/public_git/' with the following url: + + http://git.example.org/~<user>/ + +If you do not want this feature on your server just remove the second +rewrite rule. + +If you already use `mod_userdir` in your virtual host or you don't want to +use the \'~' as first character, just comment or remove the second rewrite +rule, and uncomment one of the following according to what you want. + +Second, repositories found in '/pub/scm/' and '/var/git/' will be accessible +through `http://git.example.org/scm/` and `http://git.example.org/var/`. +You can add as many project roots as you want by adding rewrite rules like +the third and the fourth. + + +PATH_INFO usage +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +If you enable PATH_INFO usage in gitweb by putting +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +$feature{'pathinfo'}{'default'} = [1]; +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +in your gitweb configuration file, it is possible to set up your server so +that it consumes and produces URLs in the form + + http://git.example.com/project.git/shortlog/sometag + +i.e. without 'gitweb.cgi' part, by using a configuration such as the +following. This configuration assumes that '/var/www/gitweb' is the +DocumentRoot of your webserver, contains the gitweb.cgi script and +complementary static files (stylesheet, favicon, JavaScript): + +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +<VirtualHost *:80> + ServerAlias git.example.com + + DocumentRoot /var/www/gitweb + + <Directory /var/www/gitweb> + Options ExecCGI + AddHandler cgi-script cgi + + DirectoryIndex gitweb.cgi + + RewriteEngine On + RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f + RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d + RewriteRule ^.* /gitweb.cgi/$0 [L,PT] + </Directory> +</VirtualHost> +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The rewrite rule guarantees that existing static files will be properly +served, whereas any other URL will be passed to gitweb as PATH_INFO +parameter. + +*Notice* that in this case you don't need special settings for +`@stylesheets`, `$my_uri` and `$home_link`, but you lose "dumb client" +access to your project .git dirs (described in "Single URL for gitweb and +for fetching" section). A possible workaround for the latter is the +following: in your project root dir (e.g. '/pub/git') have the projects +named *without* a .git extension (e.g. '/pub/git/project' instead of +'/pub/git/project.git') and configure Apache as follows: +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +<VirtualHost *:80> + ServerAlias git.example.com + + DocumentRoot /var/www/gitweb + + AliasMatch ^(/.*?)(\.git)(/.*)?$ /pub/git$1$3 + <Directory /var/www/gitweb> + Options ExecCGI + AddHandler cgi-script cgi + + DirectoryIndex gitweb.cgi + + RewriteEngine On + RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f + RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d + RewriteRule ^.* /gitweb.cgi/$0 [L,PT] + </Directory> +</VirtualHost> +---------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +The additional AliasMatch makes it so that + + http://git.example.com/project.git + +will give raw access to the project's git dir (so that the project can be +cloned), while + + http://git.example.com/project + +will provide human-friendly gitweb access. + +This solution is not 100% bulletproof, in the sense that if some project has +a named ref (branch, tag) starting with 'git/', then paths such as + + http://git.example.com/project/command/abranch..git/abranch + +will fail with a 404 error. + + +BUGS +---- +Please report any bugs or feature requests to git@vger.kernel.org, +putting "gitweb" in the subject of email. + +SEE ALSO +-------- +linkgit:gitweb.conf[5], linkgit:git-instaweb[1] + +'gitweb/README', 'gitweb/INSTALL' + +GIT +--- +Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite diff --git a/Documentation/howto/maintain-git.txt b/Documentation/howto/maintain-git.txt index d527b30770..8823a37067 100644 --- a/Documentation/howto/maintain-git.txt +++ b/Documentation/howto/maintain-git.txt @@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ by doing the following: - Update "What's cooking" message to review the updates to existing topics, newly added topics and graduated topics. - This step is helped with Meta/UWC script (where Meta/ contains + This step is helped with Meta/cook script (where Meta/ contains a checkout of the 'todo' branch). - Merge topics to 'next'. For each branch whose tip is not @@ -197,10 +197,9 @@ by doing the following: - Nothing is next-worthy; do not do anything. - - Rebase topics that do not have any commit in next yet. This - step is optional but sometimes is worth doing when an old - series that is not in next can take advantage of low-level - framework change that is merged to 'master' already. + - [** OBSOLETE **] Optionally rebase topics that do not have any commit + in next yet, when they can take advantage of low-level framework + change that is merged to 'master' already. $ git rebase master ai/topic @@ -209,7 +208,7 @@ by doing the following: pre-rebase hook to make sure that topics that are already in 'next' are not rebased beyond the merged commit. - - Rebuild "pu" to merge the tips of topics not in 'next'. + - [** OBSOLETE **] Rebuild "pu" to merge the tips of topics not in 'next'. $ git checkout pu $ git reset --hard next @@ -241,7 +240,7 @@ by doing the following: - Fetch html and man branches back from k.org, and push four integration branches and the two documentation branches to - repo.or.cz + repo.or.cz and other mirrors. Some observations to be made. diff --git a/Documentation/merge-options.txt b/Documentation/merge-options.txt index b613d4ed08..6bd0b041c3 100644 --- a/Documentation/merge-options.txt +++ b/Documentation/merge-options.txt @@ -7,6 +7,12 @@ With --no-commit perform the merge but pretend the merge failed and do not autocommit, to give the user a chance to inspect and further tweak the merge result before committing. +--edit:: +-e:: ++ + Invoke editor before committing successful merge to further + edit the default merge message. + --ff:: --no-ff:: Do not generate a merge commit if the merge resolved as diff --git a/Documentation/sequencer.txt b/Documentation/sequencer.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..3e6df338be --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/sequencer.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9 @@ +--reset:: + Forget about the current operation in progress. Can be used + to clear the sequencer state after a failed cherry-pick or + revert. + +--continue:: + Continue the operation in progress using the information in + '.git/sequencer'. Can be used to continue after resolving + conflicts in a failed cherry-pick or revert. diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-argv-array.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-argv-array.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..49b3d52952 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/technical/api-argv-array.txt @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +argv-array API +============== + +The argv-array API allows one to dynamically build and store +NULL-terminated lists. An argv-array maintains the invariant that the +`argv` member always points to a non-NULL array, and that the array is +always NULL-terminated at the element pointed to by `argv[argc]`. This +makes the result suitable for passing to functions expecting to receive +argv from main(), or the link:api-run-command.html[run-command API]. + +The link:api-string-list.html[string-list API] is similar, but cannot be +used for these purposes; instead of storing a straight string pointer, +it contains an item structure with a `util` field that is not compatible +with the traditional argv interface. + +Each `argv_array` manages its own memory. Any strings pushed into the +array are duplicated, and all memory is freed by argv_array_clear(). + +Data Structures +--------------- + +`struct argv_array`:: + + A single array. This should be initialized by assignment from + `ARGV_ARRAY_INIT`, or by calling `argv_array_init`. The `argv` + member contains the actual array; the `argc` member contains the + number of elements in the array, not including the terminating + NULL. + +Functions +--------- + +`argv_array_init`:: + Initialize an array. This is no different than assigning from + `ARGV_ARRAY_INIT`. + +`argv_array_push`:: + Push a copy of a string onto the end of the array. + +`argv_array_pushf`:: + Format a string and push it onto the end of the array. This is a + convenience wrapper combining `strbuf_addf` and `argv_array_push`. + +`argv_array_clear`:: + Free all memory associated with the array and return it to the + initial, empty state. diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-parse-options.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-parse-options.txt index f6a4a361bd..4b92514f60 100644 --- a/Documentation/technical/api-parse-options.txt +++ b/Documentation/technical/api-parse-options.txt @@ -135,9 +135,14 @@ There are some macros to easily define options: describes the group or an empty string. Start the description with an upper-case letter. -`OPT_BOOLEAN(short, long, &int_var, description)`:: - Introduce a boolean option. - `int_var` is incremented on each use. +`OPT_BOOL(short, long, &int_var, description)`:: + Introduce a boolean option. `int_var` is set to one with + `--option` and set to zero with `--no-option`. + +`OPT_COUNTUP(short, long, &int_var, description)`:: + Introduce a count-up option. + `int_var` is incremented on each use of `--option`, and + reset to zero with `--no-option`. `OPT_BIT(short, long, &int_var, description, mask)`:: Introduce a boolean option. @@ -148,8 +153,9 @@ There are some macros to easily define options: If used, `int_var` is bitwise-anded with the inverted `mask`. `OPT_SET_INT(short, long, &int_var, description, integer)`:: - Introduce a boolean option. - If used, set `int_var` to `integer`. + Introduce an integer option. + `int_var` is set to `integer` with `--option`, and + reset to zero with `--no-option`. `OPT_SET_PTR(short, long, &ptr_var, description, ptr)`:: Introduce a boolean option. @@ -198,6 +204,11 @@ There are some macros to easily define options: "auto", set `int_var` to 1 if stdout is a tty or a pager, 0 otherwise. +`OPT_NOOP_NOARG(short, long)`:: + Introduce an option that has no effect and takes no arguments. + Use it to hide deprecated options that are still to be recognized + and ignored silently. + The last element of the array must be `OPT_END()`. diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-sha1-array.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-sha1-array.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..4a4bae8109 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/technical/api-sha1-array.txt @@ -0,0 +1,79 @@ +sha1-array API +============== + +The sha1-array API provides storage and manipulation of sets of SHA1 +identifiers. The emphasis is on storage and processing efficiency, +making them suitable for large lists. Note that the ordering of items is +not preserved over some operations. + +Data Structures +--------------- + +`struct sha1_array`:: + + A single array of SHA1 hashes. This should be initialized by + assignment from `SHA1_ARRAY_INIT`. The `sha1` member contains + the actual data. The `nr` member contains the number of items in + the set. The `alloc` and `sorted` members are used internally, + and should not be needed by API callers. + +Functions +--------- + +`sha1_array_append`:: + Add an item to the set. The sha1 will be placed at the end of + the array (but note that some operations below may lose this + ordering). + +`sha1_array_sort`:: + Sort the elements in the array. + +`sha1_array_lookup`:: + Perform a binary search of the array for a specific sha1. + If found, returns the offset (in number of elements) of the + sha1. If not found, returns a negative integer. If the array is + not sorted, this function has the side effect of sorting it. + +`sha1_array_clear`:: + Free all memory associated with the array and return it to the + initial, empty state. + +`sha1_array_for_each_unique`:: + Efficiently iterate over each unique element of the list, + executing the callback function for each one. If the array is + not sorted, this function has the side effect of sorting it. + +Examples +-------- + +----------------------------------------- +void print_callback(const unsigned char sha1[20], + void *data) +{ + printf("%s\n", sha1_to_hex(sha1)); +} + +void some_func(void) +{ + struct sha1_array hashes = SHA1_ARRAY_INIT; + unsigned char sha1[20]; + + /* Read objects into our set */ + while (read_object_from_stdin(sha1)) + sha1_array_append(&hashes, sha1); + + /* Check if some objects are in our set */ + while (read_object_from_stdin(sha1)) { + if (sha1_array_lookup(&hashes, sha1) >= 0) + printf("it's in there!\n"); + + /* + * Print the unique set of objects. We could also have + * avoided adding duplicate objects in the first place, + * but we would end up re-sorting the array repeatedly. + * Instead, this will sort once and then skip duplicates + * in linear time. + */ + sha1_array_for_each_unique(&hashes, print_callback, NULL); +} +----------------------------------------- diff --git a/Documentation/technical/pack-protocol.txt b/Documentation/technical/pack-protocol.txt index a7004c63e7..546980c0a4 100644 --- a/Documentation/technical/pack-protocol.txt +++ b/Documentation/technical/pack-protocol.txt @@ -60,6 +60,13 @@ process on the server side over the Git protocol is this: "0039git-upload-pack /schacon/gitbook.git\0host=example.com\0" | nc -v example.com 9418 +If the server refuses the request for some reasons, it could abort +gracefully with an error message. + +---- + error-line = PKT-LINE("ERR" SP explanation-text) +---- + SSH Transport ------------- |