GITCLI(7) | Git Manual | GITCLI(7) |
NAME¶
gitcli - git command line interface and conventions
SYNOPSIS¶
gitcli
DESCRIPTION¶
This manual describes the convention used throughout git CLI.
Many commands take revisions (most often "commits", but sometimes "tree-ish", depending on the context and command) and paths as their arguments. Here are the rules:
When writing a script that is expected to handle random user-input, it is a good practice to make it explicit which arguments are which by placing disambiguating -- at appropriate places.
Here are the rules regarding the "flags" that you should follow when you are scripting git:
ENHANCED OPTION PARSER¶
From the git 1.5.4 series and further, many git commands (not all of them at the time of the writing though) come with an enhanced option parser.
Here is an exhaustive list of the facilities provided by this option parser.
Magic Options¶
Commands which have the enhanced option parser activated all understand a couple of magic command line options:
-h
$ git describe -h usage: git describe [options] <committish>*
--contains find the tag that comes after the commit
--debug debug search strategy on stderr
--all use any ref in .git/refs
--tags use any tag in .git/refs/tags
--abbrev [<n>] use <n> digits to display SHA-1s
--candidates <n> consider <n> most recent tags (default: 10)
--help-all
Negating options¶
Options with long option names can be negated by prefixing --no-. For example, git branch has the option --track which is on by default. You can use --no-track to override that behaviour. The same goes for --color and --no-color.
Aggregating short options¶
Commands that support the enhanced option parser allow you to aggregate short options. This means that you can for example use git rm -rf or git clean -fdx.
Separating argument from the option¶
You can write the mandatory option parameter to an option as a separate word on the command line. That means that all the following uses work:
$ git foo --long-opt=Arg $ git foo --long-opt Arg $ git foo -oArg $ git foo -o Arg
However, this is NOT allowed for switches with an optional value, where the sticked form must be used:
$ git describe --abbrev HEAD # correct $ git describe --abbrev=10 HEAD # correct $ git describe --abbrev 10 HEAD # NOT WHAT YOU MEANT
NOTES ON FREQUENTLY CONFUSED OPTIONS¶
Many commands that can work on files in the working tree and/or in the index can take --cached and/or --index options. Sometimes people incorrectly think that, because the index was originally called cache, these two are synonyms. They are not — these two options mean very different things.
git apply command can be used with --cached and --index (but not at the same time). Usually the command only affects the files in the working tree, but with --index, it patches both the files and their index entries, and with --cached, it modifies only the index entries.
See also http://marc.info/?l=git&m=116563135620359 and http://marc.info/?l=git&m=119150393620273 for further information.
DOCUMENTATION¶
Documentation by Pierre Habouzit and the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org[1]>.
GIT¶
Part of the git(1) suite
NOTES¶
- 1.
- git@vger.kernel.org
02/03/2020 | Git 1.7.1 |