magit.info (540280B)
1 This is magit.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.8 from magit.texi. 2 3 Copyright (C) 2015-2024 Jonas Bernoulli 4 <emacs.magit@jonas.bernoulli.dev> 5 6 You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms 7 of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software 8 Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) 9 any later version. 10 11 This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU 14 General Public License for more details. 15 16 INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs 17 START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY 18 * Magit: (magit). Using Git from Emacs with Magit. 19 END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY 20 21 22 File: magit.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir) 23 24 Magit User Manual 25 ***************** 26 27 Magit is an interface to the version control system Git, implemented as 28 an Emacs package. Magit aspires to be a complete Git porcelain. While 29 we cannot (yet) claim that Magit wraps and improves upon each and every 30 Git command, it is complete enough to allow even experienced Git users 31 to perform almost all of their daily version control tasks directly from 32 within Emacs. While many fine Git clients exist, only Magit and Git 33 itself deserve to be called porcelains. 34 35 This manual is for Magit version 4.1.0. 36 37 Copyright (C) 2015-2024 Jonas Bernoulli 38 <emacs.magit@jonas.bernoulli.dev> 39 40 You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms 41 of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software 42 Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) 43 any later version. 44 45 This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 46 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 47 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU 48 General Public License for more details. 49 50 * Menu: 51 52 * Introduction:: 53 * Installation:: 54 * Getting Started:: 55 * Interface Concepts:: 56 * Inspecting:: 57 * Manipulating:: 58 * Transferring:: 59 * Miscellaneous:: 60 * Customizing:: 61 * Plumbing:: 62 * FAQ:: 63 * Debugging Tools:: 64 * Keystroke Index:: 65 * Function and Command Index:: 66 * Variable Index:: 67 68 — The Detailed Node Listing — 69 70 Installation 71 72 * Installing from Melpa:: 73 * Installing from the Git Repository:: 74 * Post-Installation Tasks:: 75 76 Interface Concepts 77 78 * Modes and Buffers:: 79 * Sections:: 80 * Transient Commands:: 81 * Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables:: 82 * Completion, Confirmation and the Selection: Completion Confirmation and the Selection. 83 * Mouse Support:: 84 * Running Git:: 85 86 Modes and Buffers 87 88 * Switching Buffers:: 89 * Naming Buffers:: 90 * Quitting Windows:: 91 * Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers:: 92 * Automatic Saving of File-Visiting Buffers:: 93 * Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers:: 94 95 96 Sections 97 98 * Section Movement:: 99 * Section Visibility:: 100 * Section Hooks:: 101 * Section Types and Values:: 102 * Section Options:: 103 104 105 Completion, Confirmation and the Selection 106 107 * Action Confirmation:: 108 * Completion and Confirmation:: 109 * The Selection:: 110 * The hunk-internal region:: 111 * Support for Completion Frameworks:: 112 * Additional Completion Options:: 113 114 115 Running Git 116 117 * Viewing Git Output:: 118 * Git Process Status:: 119 * Running Git Manually:: 120 * Git Executable:: 121 * Global Git Arguments:: 122 123 124 Inspecting 125 126 * Status Buffer:: 127 * Repository List:: 128 * Logging:: 129 * Diffing:: 130 * Ediffing:: 131 * References Buffer:: 132 * Bisecting:: 133 * Visiting Files and Blobs:: 134 * Blaming:: 135 136 Status Buffer 137 138 * Status Sections:: 139 * Status Header Sections:: 140 * Status Module Sections:: 141 * Status Options:: 142 143 144 Logging 145 146 * Refreshing Logs:: 147 * Log Buffer:: 148 * Log Margin:: 149 * Select from Log:: 150 * Reflog:: 151 * Cherries:: 152 153 154 Diffing 155 156 * Refreshing Diffs:: 157 * Commands Available in Diffs:: 158 * Diff Options:: 159 * Revision Buffer:: 160 161 162 References Buffer 163 164 * References Sections:: 165 166 167 Visiting Files and Blobs 168 169 * General-Purpose Visit Commands:: 170 * Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff:: 171 172 173 Manipulating 174 175 * Creating Repository:: 176 * Cloning Repository:: 177 * Staging and Unstaging:: 178 * Applying:: 179 * Committing:: 180 * Branching:: 181 * Merging:: 182 * Resolving Conflicts:: 183 * Rebasing:: 184 * Cherry Picking:: 185 * Resetting:: 186 * Stashing:: 187 188 Staging and Unstaging 189 190 * Staging from File-Visiting Buffers:: 191 192 193 Committing 194 195 * Initiating a Commit:: 196 * Editing Commit Messages:: 197 198 199 Branching 200 201 * The Two Remotes:: 202 * Branch Commands:: 203 * Branch Git Variables:: 204 * Auxiliary Branch Commands:: 205 206 207 Rebasing 208 209 * Editing Rebase Sequences:: 210 * Information About In-Progress Rebase:: 211 212 213 Cherry Picking 214 215 * Reverting:: 216 217 218 Transferring 219 220 * Remotes:: 221 * Fetching:: 222 * Pulling:: 223 * Pushing:: 224 * Plain Patches:: 225 * Maildir Patches:: 226 227 Remotes 228 229 * Remote Commands:: 230 * Remote Git Variables:: 231 232 233 Miscellaneous 234 235 * Tagging:: 236 * Notes:: 237 * Submodules:: 238 * Subtree:: 239 * Worktree:: 240 * Sparse checkouts:: 241 * Bundle:: 242 * Common Commands:: 243 * Wip Modes:: 244 * Commands for Buffers Visiting Files:: 245 * Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs:: 246 247 Submodules 248 249 * Listing Submodules:: 250 * Submodule Transient:: 251 252 253 Wip Modes 254 255 * Wip Graph:: 256 * Legacy Wip Modes:: 257 258 259 Customizing 260 261 * Per-Repository Configuration:: 262 * Essential Settings:: 263 264 Essential Settings 265 266 * Safety:: 267 * Performance:: 268 * Global Bindings:: 269 270 271 Plumbing 272 273 * Calling Git:: 274 * Section Plumbing:: 275 * Refreshing Buffers:: 276 * Conventions:: 277 278 Calling Git 279 280 * Getting a Value from Git:: 281 * Calling Git for Effect:: 282 283 284 Section Plumbing 285 286 * Creating Sections:: 287 * Section Selection:: 288 * Matching Sections:: 289 290 291 Conventions 292 293 * Theming Faces:: 294 295 296 FAQ 297 298 * FAQ - How to ...?:: 299 * FAQ - Issues and Errors:: 300 301 FAQ - How to ...? 302 303 * How to pronounce Magit?:: 304 * How to show git's output?:: 305 * How to install the gitman info manual?:: 306 * How to show diffs for gpg-encrypted files?:: 307 * How does branching and pushing work?:: 308 * Should I disable VC?:: 309 310 311 FAQ - Issues and Errors 312 313 * Magit is slow:: 314 * I changed several thousand files at once and now Magit is unusable:: 315 * I am having problems committing:: 316 * I am using MS Windows and cannot push with Magit:: 317 * I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell, but not in Magit: I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell but not in Magit. 318 * Expanding a file to show the diff causes it to disappear:: 319 * Point is wrong in the COMMIT_EDITMSG buffer:: 320 * The mode-line information isn't always up-to-date:: 321 * A branch and tag sharing the same name breaks SOMETHING:: 322 * My Git hooks work on the command-line but not inside Magit:: 323 * git-commit-mode isn't used when committing from the command-line:: 324 * Point ends up inside invisible text when jumping to a file-visiting buffer:: 325 * I am no longer able to save popup defaults:: 326 327 328 329 330 File: magit.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Installation, Prev: Top, Up: Top 331 332 1 Introduction 333 ************** 334 335 Magit is an interface to the version control system Git, implemented as 336 an Emacs package. Magit aspires to be a complete Git porcelain. While 337 we cannot (yet) claim that Magit wraps and improves upon each and every 338 Git command, it is complete enough to allow even experienced Git users 339 to perform almost all of their daily version control tasks directly from 340 within Emacs. While many fine Git clients exist, only Magit and Git 341 itself deserve to be called porcelains. 342 343 Staging and otherwise applying changes is one of the most important 344 features in a Git porcelain and here Magit outshines anything else, 345 including Git itself. Git’s own staging interface (‘git add --patch’) 346 is so cumbersome that many users only use it in exceptional cases. In 347 Magit staging a hunk or even just part of a hunk is as trivial as 348 staging all changes made to a file. 349 350 The most visible part of Magit’s interface is the status buffer, 351 which displays information about the current repository. Its content is 352 created by running several Git commands and making their output 353 actionable. Among other things, it displays information about the 354 current branch, lists unpulled and unpushed changes and contains 355 sections displaying the staged and unstaged changes. That might sound 356 noisy, but, since sections are collapsible, it’s not. 357 358 To stage or unstage a change one places the cursor on the change and 359 then types ‘s’ or ‘u’. The change can be a file or a hunk, or when the 360 region is active (i.e., when there is a selection) several files or 361 hunks, or even just part of a hunk. The change or changes that these 362 commands - and many others - would act on are highlighted. 363 364 Magit also implements several other "apply variants" in addition to 365 staging and unstaging. One can discard or reverse a change, or apply it 366 to the working tree. Git’s own porcelain only supports this for staging 367 and unstaging and you would have to do something like ‘git diff ... | 368 ??? | git apply ...’ to discard, revert, or apply a single hunk on the 369 command line. In fact that’s exactly what Magit does internally (which 370 is what lead to the term "apply variants"). 371 372 Magit isn’t just for Git experts, but it does assume some prior 373 experience with Git as well as Emacs. That being said, many users have 374 reported that using Magit was what finally taught them what Git is 375 capable of and how to use it to its fullest. Other users wished they 376 had switched to Emacs sooner so that they would have gotten their hands 377 on Magit earlier. 378 379 While one has to know the basic features of Emacs to be able to make 380 full use of Magit, acquiring just enough Emacs skills doesn’t take long 381 and is worth it, even for users who prefer other editors. Vim users are 382 advised to give Evil (https://github.com/emacs-evil/evil), the 383 "Extensible VI Layer for Emacs", and Spacemacs 384 (https://github.com/syl20bnr/spacemacs), an "Emacs starter-kit focused 385 on Evil" a try. 386 387 Magit provides a consistent and efficient Git porcelain. After a 388 short learning period, you will be able to perform most of your daily 389 version control tasks faster than you would on the command line. You 390 will likely also start using features that seemed too daunting in the 391 past. 392 393 Magit fully embraces Git. It exposes many advanced features using a 394 simple but flexible interface instead of only wrapping the trivial ones 395 like many GUI clients do. Of course Magit supports logging, cloning, 396 pushing, and other commands that usually don’t fail in spectacular ways; 397 but it also supports tasks that often cannot be completed in a single 398 step. Magit fully supports tasks such as merging, rebasing, 399 cherry-picking, reverting, and blaming by not only providing a command 400 to initiate these tasks but also by displaying context sensitive 401 information along the way and providing commands that are useful for 402 resolving conflicts and resuming the sequence after doing so. 403 404 Magit wraps and in many cases improves upon at least the following 405 Git porcelain commands: ‘add’, ‘am’, ‘bisect’, ‘blame’, ‘branch’, 406 ‘checkout’, ‘cherry’, ‘cherry-pick’, ‘clean’, ‘clone’, ‘commit’, 407 ‘config’, ‘describe’, ‘diff’, ‘fetch’, ‘format-patch’, ‘init’, ‘log’, 408 ‘merge’, ‘merge-tree’, ‘mv’, ‘notes’, ‘pull’, ‘rebase’, ‘reflog’, 409 ‘remote’, ‘request-pull’, ‘reset’, ‘revert’, ‘rm’, ‘show’, ‘stash’, 410 ‘submodule’, ‘subtree’, ‘tag’, and ‘worktree.’ Many more Magit porcelain 411 commands are implemented on top of Git plumbing commands. 412 413 414 File: magit.info, Node: Installation, Next: Getting Started, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top 415 416 2 Installation 417 ************** 418 419 Magit can be installed using Emacs’ package manager or manually from its 420 development repository. 421 422 * Menu: 423 424 * Installing from Melpa:: 425 * Installing from the Git Repository:: 426 * Post-Installation Tasks:: 427 428 429 File: magit.info, Node: Installing from Melpa, Next: Installing from the Git Repository, Up: Installation 430 431 2.1 Installing from Melpa 432 ========================= 433 434 Magit is available from Melpa and Melpa-Stable. If you haven’t used 435 Emacs’ package manager before, then it is high time you familiarize 436 yourself with it by reading the documentation in the Emacs manual, see 437 *note (emacs)Packages::. Then add one of the archives to 438 ‘package-archives’: 439 440 • To use Melpa: 441 442 (require 'package) 443 (add-to-list 'package-archives 444 '("melpa" . "https://melpa.org/packages/") t) 445 446 • To use Melpa-Stable: 447 448 (require 'package) 449 (add-to-list 'package-archives 450 '("melpa-stable" . "https://stable.melpa.org/packages/") t) 451 452 Once you have added your preferred archive, you need to update the 453 local package list using: 454 455 M-x package-refresh-contents RET 456 457 Once you have done that, you can install Magit and its dependencies 458 using: 459 460 M-x package-install RET magit RET 461 462 Now see *note Post-Installation Tasks::. 463 464 465 File: magit.info, Node: Installing from the Git Repository, Next: Post-Installation Tasks, Prev: Installing from Melpa, Up: Installation 466 467 2.2 Installing from the Git Repository 468 ====================================== 469 470 Magit depends on the ‘compat’, ‘dash’, ‘transient’ and ‘with-editor’ 471 libraries which are available from Melpa and Melpa-Stable. Install them 472 using ‘M-x package-install RET <package> RET’. Of course you may also 473 install them manually from their repository. 474 475 Then clone the Magit repository: 476 477 $ git clone https://github.com/magit/magit.git ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/magit 478 $ cd ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/magit 479 480 Then compile the libraries and generate the info manuals: 481 482 $ make 483 484 If you haven’t installed ‘compat’, ‘dash’, ‘transient’ and 485 ‘with-editor’ from Melpa or at ‘/path/to/magit/../<package>’, then you 486 have to tell ‘make’ where to find them. To do so create the file 487 ‘/path/to/magit/config.mk’ with the following content before running 488 ‘make’: 489 490 LOAD_PATH = -L ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/magit/lisp 491 LOAD_PATH += -L ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/dash 492 LOAD_PATH += -L ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/transient/lisp 493 LOAD_PATH += -L ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/with-editor/lisp 494 LOAD_PATH += -L ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/compat 495 496 Finally add this to your init file: 497 498 (add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/magit/lisp") 499 (require 'magit) 500 501 (with-eval-after-load 'info 502 (info-initialize) 503 (add-to-list 'Info-directory-list 504 "~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/magit/Documentation/")) 505 506 Of course if you installed the dependencies manually as well, then 507 you have to tell Emacs about them too, by prefixing the above with: 508 509 (add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/dash") 510 (add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/transient/lisp") 511 (add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/with-editor") 512 513 Note that you have to add the ‘lisp’ subdirectory to the ‘load-path’, 514 not the top-level of the repository, and that elements of ‘load-path’ 515 should not end with a slash, while those of ‘Info-directory-list’ 516 should. 517 518 Instead of requiring the feature ‘magit’, you could load just the 519 autoload definitions, by loading the file ‘magit-autoloads.el’. 520 521 (load "/path/to/magit/lisp/magit-autoloads") 522 523 Instead of running Magit directly from the repository by adding that 524 to the ‘load-path’, you might want to instead install it in some other 525 directory using ‘sudo make install’ and setting ‘load-path’ accordingly. 526 527 To update Magit use: 528 529 $ git pull 530 $ make 531 532 At times it might be necessary to run ‘make clean all’ instead. 533 534 To view all available targets use ‘make help’. 535 536 Now see *note Post-Installation Tasks::. 537 538 539 File: magit.info, Node: Post-Installation Tasks, Prev: Installing from the Git Repository, Up: Installation 540 541 2.3 Post-Installation Tasks 542 =========================== 543 544 After installing Magit you should verify that you are indeed using the 545 Magit, Git, and Emacs releases you think you are using. It’s best to 546 restart Emacs before doing so, to make sure you are not using an 547 outdated value for ‘load-path’. 548 549 M-x magit-version RET 550 551 should display something like 552 553 Magit 2.8.0, Git 2.10.2, Emacs 25.1.1, gnu/linux 554 555 Then you might also want to read about options that many users likely 556 want to customize. See *note Essential Settings::. 557 558 To be able to follow cross references to Git manpages found in this 559 manual, you might also have to manually install the ‘gitman’ info 560 manual, or advice ‘Info-follow-nearest-node’ to instead open the actual 561 manpage. See *note How to install the gitman info manual?::. 562 563 If you are completely new to Magit then see *note Getting Started::. 564 565 If you run into problems, then please see the *note FAQ::. Also see 566 the *note Debugging Tools::. 567 568 And last but not least please consider making a donation, to ensure 569 that I can keep working on Magit. See <https://magit.vc/donations>. 570 for various donation options. 571 572 573 File: magit.info, Node: Getting Started, Next: Interface Concepts, Prev: Installation, Up: Top 574 575 3 Getting Started 576 ***************** 577 578 This short tutorial describes the most essential features that many 579 Magitians use on a daily basis. It only scratches the surface but 580 should be enough to get you started. 581 582 IMPORTANT: It is safest if you clone some repository just for this 583 tutorial. Alternatively you can use an existing local repository, but 584 if you do that, then you should commit all uncommitted changes before 585 proceeding. 586 587 Type ‘C-x g’ to display information about the current Git repository 588 in a dedicated buffer, called the status buffer. 589 590 Most Magit commands are commonly invoked from the status buffer. It 591 can be considered the primary interface for interacting with Git using 592 Magit. Many other Magit buffers may exist at a given time, but they are 593 often created from this buffer. 594 595 Depending on what state your repository is in, this buffer may 596 contain sections titled "Staged changes", "Unstaged changes", "Unmerged 597 into origin/master", "Unpushed to origin/master", and many others. 598 599 Since we are starting from a safe state, which you can easily return 600 to (by doing a ‘git reset --hard PRE-MAGIT-STATE’), there currently are 601 no staged or unstaged changes. Edit some files and save the changes. 602 Then go back to the status buffer, while at the same time refreshing it, 603 by typing ‘C-x g’. (When the status buffer, or any Magit buffer for 604 that matter, is the current buffer, then you can also use just ‘g’ to 605 refresh it). 606 607 Move between sections using ‘p’ and ‘n’. Note that the bodies of 608 some sections are hidden. Type ‘TAB’ to expand or collapse the section 609 at point. You can also use ‘C-tab’ to cycle the visibility of the 610 current section and its children. Move to a file section inside the 611 section named "Unstaged changes" and type ‘s’ to stage the changes you 612 have made to that file. That file now appears under "Staged changes". 613 614 Magit can stage and unstage individual hunks, not just complete 615 files. Move to the file you have just staged, expand it using ‘TAB’, 616 move to one of the hunks using ‘n’, and unstage just that by typing ‘u’. 617 Note how the staging (‘s’) and unstaging (‘u’) commands operate on the 618 change at point. Many other commands behave the same way. 619 620 You can also un-/stage just part of a hunk. Inside the body of a 621 hunk section (move there using ‘C-n’), set the mark using ‘C-SPC’ and 622 move down until some added and/or removed lines fall inside the region 623 but not all of them. Again type ‘s’ to stage. 624 625 It is also possible to un-/stage multiple files at once. Move to a 626 file section, type ‘C-SPC’, move to the next file using ‘n’, and then 627 ‘s’ to stage both files. Note that both the mark and point have to be 628 on the headings of sibling sections for this to work. If the region 629 looks like it does in other buffers, then it doesn’t select Magit 630 sections that can be acted on as a unit. 631 632 And then of course you want to commit your changes. Type ‘c’. This 633 shows the available commit commands and arguments in a buffer at the 634 bottom of the frame. Each command and argument is prefixed with the key 635 that invokes/sets it. Do not worry about this for now. We want to 636 create a "normal" commit, which is done by typing ‘c’ again. 637 638 Now two new buffers appear. One is for writing the commit message, 639 the other shows a diff with the changes that you are about to commit. 640 Write a message and then type ‘C-c C-c’ to actually create the commit. 641 642 You probably don’t want to push the commit you just created because 643 you just committed some random changes, but if that is not the case you 644 could push it by typing ‘P’ to show all the available push commands and 645 arguments and then ‘p’ to push to a branch with the same name as the 646 local branch onto the remote configured as the push-remote. (If the 647 push-remote is not configured yet, then you would first be prompted for 648 the remote to push to.) 649 650 So far we have mentioned the commit and push menu commands. These 651 are probably among the menus you will be using the most, but many others 652 exist. To show a menu that lists all other menus (as well as the 653 various apply commands and some other essential commands), type ‘h’. 654 Try a few. (Such menus are also called "transient prefix commands" or 655 just "transients".) 656 657 The key bindings in that menu correspond to the bindings in Magit 658 buffers, including but not limited to the status buffer. So you could 659 type ‘h d’ to bring up the diff menu, but once you remember that "d" 660 stands for "diff", you would usually do so by just typing ‘d’. 661 662 This "prefix of prefixes" is useful even once you have memorized all 663 the bindings, as it can provide easy access to Magit commands from 664 non-Magit buffers. So, by default, it is globally bound to ‘C-x M-g’. 665 666 A similar menu featuring (for the most part) commands that act on 667 just the file being visited in the current buffer, is globally bound to 668 ‘C-c M-g’. That binding can also be used in buffers, which do not visit 669 a file, but then only a subset of the commands is available. 670 671 The global key bindings mentioned in the previous two paragraphs are 672 quite inconvenient. We recommend using ‘C-c g’ and ‘C-c f’ instead, but 673 cannot use those key sequences by default because they are strictly 674 reserved for bindings added by the user. See *note Global Bindings::, 675 if you want to explicitly opt-in to the recommended key bindings. 676 677 Magit also provides context menus and other mouse commands, see *note 678 Mouse Support::. 679 680 It is not necessary that you do so now, but if you stick with Magit, 681 then it is highly recommended that you read the next section too. 682 683 684 File: magit.info, Node: Interface Concepts, Next: Inspecting, Prev: Getting Started, Up: Top 685 686 4 Interface Concepts 687 ******************** 688 689 * Menu: 690 691 * Modes and Buffers:: 692 * Sections:: 693 * Transient Commands:: 694 * Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables:: 695 * Completion, Confirmation and the Selection: Completion Confirmation and the Selection. 696 * Mouse Support:: 697 * Running Git:: 698 699 700 File: magit.info, Node: Modes and Buffers, Next: Sections, Up: Interface Concepts 701 702 4.1 Modes and Buffers 703 ===================== 704 705 Magit provides several major-modes. For each of these modes there 706 usually exists only one buffer per repository. Separate modes and thus 707 buffers exist for commits, diffs, logs, and some other things. 708 709 Besides these special purpose buffers, there also exists an overview 710 buffer, called the *status buffer*. It’s usually from this buffer that 711 the user invokes Git commands, or creates or visits other buffers. 712 713 In this manual we often speak about "Magit buffers". By that we mean 714 buffers whose major-modes derive from ‘magit-mode’. 715 716 ‘M-x magit-toggle-buffer-lock’ 717 This command locks the current buffer to its value or if the buffer 718 is already locked, then it unlocks it. 719 720 Locking a buffer to its value prevents it from being reused to 721 display another value. The name of a locked buffer contains its 722 value, which allows telling it apart from other locked buffers and 723 the unlocked buffer. 724 725 Not all Magit buffers can be locked to their values; for example, 726 it wouldn’t make sense to lock a status buffer. 727 728 There can only be a single unlocked buffer using a certain 729 major-mode per repository. So when a buffer is being unlocked and 730 another unlocked buffer already exists for that mode and 731 repository, then the former buffer is instead deleted and the 732 latter is displayed in its place. 733 734 * Menu: 735 736 * Switching Buffers:: 737 * Naming Buffers:: 738 * Quitting Windows:: 739 * Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers:: 740 * Automatic Saving of File-Visiting Buffers:: 741 * Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers:: 742 743 744 File: magit.info, Node: Switching Buffers, Next: Naming Buffers, Up: Modes and Buffers 745 746 4.1.1 Switching Buffers 747 ----------------------- 748 749 -- Function: magit-display-buffer buffer &optional display-function 750 This function is a wrapper around ‘display-buffer’ and is used to 751 display any Magit buffer. It displays BUFFER in some window and, 752 unlike ‘display-buffer’, also selects that window, provided 753 ‘magit-display-buffer-noselect’ is ‘nil’. It also runs the hooks 754 mentioned below. 755 756 If optional DISPLAY-FUNCTION is non-nil, then that is used to 757 display the buffer. Usually that is ‘nil’ and the function 758 specified by ‘magit-display-buffer-function’ is used. 759 760 -- Variable: magit-display-buffer-noselect 761 When this is non-nil, then ‘magit-display-buffer’ only displays the 762 buffer but forgoes also selecting the window. This variable should 763 not be set globally, it is only intended to be let-bound, by code 764 that automatically updates "the other window". This is used for 765 example when the revision buffer is updated when you move inside 766 the log buffer. 767 768 -- User Option: magit-display-buffer-function 769 The function specified here is called by ‘magit-display-buffer’ 770 with one argument, a buffer, to actually display that buffer. This 771 function should call ‘display-buffer’ with that buffer as first and 772 a list of display actions as second argument. 773 774 Magit provides several functions, listed below, that are suitable 775 values for this option. If you want to use different rules, then a 776 good way of doing that is to start with a copy of one of these 777 functions and then adjust it to your needs. 778 779 Instead of using a wrapper around ‘display-buffer’, that function 780 itself can be used here, in which case the display actions have to 781 be specified by adding them to ‘display-buffer-alist’ instead. 782 783 To learn about display actions, see *note (elisp)Choosing Window::. 784 785 -- Function: magit-display-buffer-traditional buffer 786 This function is the current default value of the option 787 ‘magit-display-buffer-function’. Before that option and this 788 function were added, the behavior was hard-coded in many places all 789 over the code base but now all the rules are contained in this one 790 function (except for the "noselect" special case mentioned above). 791 792 -- Function: magit-display-buffer-same-window-except-diff-v1 793 This function displays most buffers in the currently selected 794 window. If a buffer’s mode derives from ‘magit-diff-mode’ or 795 ‘magit-process-mode’, it is displayed in another window. 796 797 -- Function: magit-display-buffer-fullframe-status-v1 798 This function fills the entire frame when displaying a status 799 buffer. Otherwise, it behaves like 800 ‘magit-display-buffer-traditional’. 801 802 -- Function: magit-display-buffer-fullframe-status-topleft-v1 803 This function fills the entire frame when displaying a status 804 buffer. It behaves like ‘magit-display-buffer-fullframe-status-v1’ 805 except that it displays buffers that derive from ‘magit-diff-mode’ 806 or ‘magit-process-mode’ to the top or left of the current buffer 807 rather than to the bottom or right. As a result, Magit buffers 808 tend to pop up on the same side as they would if 809 ‘magit-display-buffer-traditional’ were in use. 810 811 -- Function: magit-display-buffer-fullcolumn-most-v1 812 This function displays most buffers so that they fill the entire 813 height of the frame. However, the buffer is displayed in another 814 window if (1) the buffer’s mode derives from ‘magit-process-mode’, 815 or (2) the buffer’s mode derives from ‘magit-diff-mode’, provided 816 that the mode of the current buffer derives from ‘magit-log-mode’ 817 or ‘magit-cherry-mode’. 818 819 -- User Option: magit-pre-display-buffer-hook 820 This hook is run by ‘magit-display-buffer’ before displaying the 821 buffer. 822 823 -- Function: magit-save-window-configuration 824 This function saves the current window configuration. Later when 825 the buffer is buried, it may be restored by 826 ‘magit-restore-window-configuration’. 827 828 -- User Option: magit-post-display-buffer-hook 829 This hook is run by ‘magit-display-buffer’ after displaying the 830 buffer. 831 832 -- Function: magit-maybe-set-dedicated 833 This function remembers if a new window had to be created to 834 display the buffer, or whether an existing window was reused. This 835 information is later used by ‘magit-mode-quit-window’, to determine 836 whether the window should be deleted when its last Magit buffer is 837 buried. 838 839 840 File: magit.info, Node: Naming Buffers, Next: Quitting Windows, Prev: Switching Buffers, Up: Modes and Buffers 841 842 4.1.2 Naming Buffers 843 -------------------- 844 845 -- User Option: magit-generate-buffer-name-function 846 The function used to generate the names of Magit buffers. 847 848 Such a function should take the options 849 ‘magit-uniquify-buffer-names’ as well as ‘magit-buffer-name-format’ 850 into account. If it doesn’t, then should be clearly stated in the 851 doc-string. And if it supports %-sequences beyond those mentioned 852 in the doc-string of the option ‘magit-buffer-name-format’, then 853 its own doc-string should describe the additions. 854 855 -- Function: magit-generate-buffer-name-default-function mode 856 This function returns a buffer name suitable for a buffer whose 857 major-mode is MODE and which shows information about the repository 858 in which ‘default-directory’ is located. 859 860 This function uses ‘magit-buffer-name-format’ and supporting all of 861 the %-sequences mentioned the documentation of that option. It 862 also respects the option ‘magit-uniquify-buffer-names’. 863 864 -- User Option: magit-buffer-name-format 865 The format string used to name Magit buffers. 866 867 At least the following %-sequences are supported: 868 869 • ‘%m’ 870 871 The name of the major-mode, but with the ‘-mode’ suffix 872 removed. 873 874 • ‘%M’ 875 876 Like ‘%m’ but abbreviate ‘magit-status-mode’ as ‘magit’. 877 878 • ‘%v’ 879 880 The value the buffer is locked to, in parentheses, or an empty 881 string if the buffer is not locked to a value. 882 883 • ‘%V’ 884 885 Like ‘%v’, but the string is prefixed with a space, unless it 886 is an empty string. 887 888 • ‘%t’ 889 890 The top-level directory of the working tree of the repository, 891 or if ‘magit-uniquify-buffer-names’ is non-nil an abbreviation 892 of that. 893 894 • ‘%x’ 895 896 If ‘magit-uniquify-buffer-names’ is nil "*", otherwise the 897 empty string. Due to limitations of the ‘uniquify’ package, 898 buffer names must end with the path. 899 900 The value should always contain ‘%m’ or ‘%M’, ‘%v’ or ‘%V’, and 901 ‘%t’. If ‘magit-uniquify-buffer-names’ is non-nil, then the value 902 must end with ‘%t’ or ‘%t%x’. See issue #2841. 903 904 -- User Option: magit-uniquify-buffer-names 905 This option controls whether the names of Magit buffers are 906 uniquified. If the names are not being uniquified, then they 907 contain the full path of the top-level of the working tree of the 908 corresponding repository. If they are being uniquified, then they 909 end with the basename of the top-level, or if that would conflict 910 with the name used for other buffers, then the names of all these 911 buffers are adjusted until they no longer conflict. 912 913 This is done using the ‘uniquify’ package; customize its options to 914 control how buffer names are uniquified. 915 916 917 File: magit.info, Node: Quitting Windows, Next: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers, Prev: Naming Buffers, Up: Modes and Buffers 918 919 4.1.3 Quitting Windows 920 ---------------------- 921 922 ‘q’ (‘magit-mode-bury-buffer’) 923 This command buries or kills the current Magit buffer. The 924 function specified by option ‘magit-bury-buffer-function’ is used 925 to bury the buffer when called without a prefix argument or to kill 926 it when called with a single prefix argument. 927 928 When called with two or more prefix arguments then it always kills 929 all Magit buffers, associated with the current project, including 930 the current buffer. 931 932 -- User Option: magit-bury-buffer-function 933 The function used to actually bury or kill the current buffer. 934 935 ‘magit-mode-bury-buffer’ calls this function with one argument. If 936 the argument is non-nil, then the function has to kill the current 937 buffer. Otherwise it has to bury it alive. The default value 938 currently is ‘magit-mode-quit-window’. 939 940 -- Function: magit-restore-window-configuration kill-buffer 941 Bury or kill the current buffer using ‘quit-window’, which is 942 called with KILL-BUFFER as first and the selected window as second 943 argument. 944 945 Then restore the window configuration that existed right before the 946 current buffer was displayed in the selected frame. Unfortunately 947 that also means that point gets adjusted in all the buffers, which 948 are being displayed in the selected frame. 949 950 -- Function: magit-mode-quit-window kill-buffer 951 Bury or kill the current buffer using ‘quit-window’, which is 952 called with KILL-BUFFER as first and the selected window as second 953 argument. 954 955 Then, if the window was originally created to display a Magit 956 buffer and the buried buffer was the last remaining Magit buffer 957 that was ever displayed in the window, then that is deleted. 958 959 960 File: magit.info, Node: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers, Next: Automatic Saving of File-Visiting Buffers, Prev: Quitting Windows, Up: Modes and Buffers 961 962 4.1.4 Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers 963 ------------------------------------------- 964 965 After running a command which may change the state of the current 966 repository, the current Magit buffer and the corresponding status buffer 967 are refreshed. The status buffer can be automatically refreshed 968 whenever a buffer is saved to a file inside the respective repository by 969 adding a hook, like so: 970 971 (with-eval-after-load 'magit-mode 972 (add-hook 'after-save-hook 'magit-after-save-refresh-status t)) 973 974 Automatically refreshing Magit buffers ensures that the displayed 975 information is up-to-date most of the time but can lead to a noticeable 976 delay in big repositories. Other Magit buffers are not refreshed to 977 keep the delay to a minimum and also because doing so can sometimes be 978 undesirable. 979 980 Buffers can also be refreshed explicitly, which is useful in buffers 981 that weren’t current during the last refresh and after changes were made 982 to the repository outside of Magit. 983 984 ‘g’ (‘magit-refresh’) 985 This command refreshes the current buffer if its major mode derives 986 from ‘magit-mode’ as well as the corresponding status buffer. 987 988 If the option ‘magit-revert-buffers’ calls for it, then it also 989 reverts all unmodified buffers that visit files being tracked in 990 the current repository. 991 992 ‘G’ (‘magit-refresh-all’) 993 This command refreshes all Magit buffers belonging to the current 994 repository and also reverts all unmodified buffers that visit files 995 being tracked in the current repository. 996 997 The file-visiting buffers are always reverted, even if 998 ‘magit-revert-buffers’ is nil. 999 1000 -- User Option: magit-refresh-buffer-hook 1001 This hook is run in each Magit buffer that was refreshed during the 1002 current refresh - normally the current buffer and the status 1003 buffer. 1004 1005 -- User Option: magit-refresh-status-buffer 1006 When this option is non-nil, then the status buffer is 1007 automatically refreshed after running git for side-effects, in 1008 addition to the current Magit buffer, which is always refreshed 1009 automatically. 1010 1011 Only set this to nil after exhausting all other options to improve 1012 performance. 1013 1014 -- Function: magit-after-save-refresh-status 1015 This function is intended to be added to ‘after-save-hook’. After 1016 doing that the corresponding status buffer is refreshed whenever a 1017 buffer is saved to a file inside a repository. 1018 1019 Note that refreshing a Magit buffer is done by re-creating its 1020 contents from scratch, which can be slow in large repositories. If 1021 you are not satisfied with Magit’s performance, then you should 1022 obviously not add this function to that hook. 1023 1024 1025 File: magit.info, Node: Automatic Saving of File-Visiting Buffers, Next: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers, Prev: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers, Up: Modes and Buffers 1026 1027 4.1.5 Automatic Saving of File-Visiting Buffers 1028 ----------------------------------------------- 1029 1030 File-visiting buffers are by default saved at certain points in time. 1031 This doesn’t guarantee that Magit buffers are always up-to-date, but, 1032 provided one only edits files by editing them in Emacs and uses only 1033 Magit to interact with Git, one can be fairly confident. When in doubt 1034 or after outside changes, type ‘g’ (‘magit-refresh’) to save and refresh 1035 explicitly. 1036 1037 -- User Option: magit-save-repository-buffers 1038 This option controls whether file-visiting buffers are saved before 1039 certain events. 1040 1041 If this is non-nil then all modified file-visiting buffers 1042 belonging to the current repository may be saved before running 1043 commands, before creating new Magit buffers, and before explicitly 1044 refreshing such buffers. If this is ‘dontask’ then this is done 1045 without user intervention. If it is ‘t’ then the user has to 1046 confirm each save. 1047 1048 1049 File: magit.info, Node: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers, Prev: Automatic Saving of File-Visiting Buffers, Up: Modes and Buffers 1050 1051 4.1.6 Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers 1052 -------------------------------------------------- 1053 1054 By default Magit automatically reverts buffers that are visiting files 1055 that are being tracked in a Git repository, after they have changed on 1056 disk. When using Magit one often changes files on disk by running Git, 1057 i.e., "outside Emacs", making this a rather important feature. 1058 1059 For example, if you discard a change in the status buffer, then that 1060 is done by running ‘git apply --reverse ...’, and Emacs considers the 1061 file to have "changed on disk". If Magit did not automatically revert 1062 the buffer, then you would have to type ‘M-x revert-buffer RET RET’ in 1063 the visiting buffer before you could continue making changes. 1064 1065 -- User Option: magit-auto-revert-mode 1066 When this mode is enabled, then buffers that visit tracked files 1067 are automatically reverted after the visited files change on disk. 1068 1069 -- User Option: global-auto-revert-mode 1070 When this mode is enabled, then any file-visiting buffer is 1071 automatically reverted after the visited file changes on disk. 1072 1073 If you like buffers that visit tracked files to be automatically 1074 reverted, then you might also like any buffer to be reverted, not 1075 just those visiting tracked files. If that is the case, then 1076 enable this mode _instead of_ ‘magit-auto-revert-mode’. 1077 1078 -- User Option: magit-auto-revert-immediately 1079 This option controls whether Magit reverts buffers immediately. 1080 1081 If this is non-nil and either ‘global-auto-revert-mode’ or 1082 ‘magit-auto-revert-mode’ is enabled, then Magit immediately reverts 1083 buffers by explicitly calling ‘auto-revert-buffers’ after running 1084 Git for side-effects. 1085 1086 If ‘auto-revert-use-notify’ is non-nil (and file notifications are 1087 actually supported), then ‘magit-auto-revert-immediately’ does not 1088 have to be non-nil, because the reverts happen immediately anyway. 1089 1090 If ‘magit-auto-revert-immediately’ and ‘auto-revert-use-notify’ are 1091 both ‘nil’, then reverts happen after ‘auto-revert-interval’ 1092 seconds of user inactivity. That is not desirable. 1093 1094 -- User Option: auto-revert-use-notify 1095 This option controls whether file notification functions should be 1096 used. Note that this variable unfortunately defaults to ‘t’ even 1097 on systems on which file notifications cannot be used. 1098 1099 -- User Option: magit-auto-revert-tracked-only 1100 This option controls whether ‘magit-auto-revert-mode’ only reverts 1101 tracked files or all files that are located inside Git 1102 repositories, including untracked files and files located inside 1103 Git’s control directory. 1104 1105 -- User Option: auto-revert-mode 1106 The global mode ‘magit-auto-revert-mode’ works by turning on this 1107 local mode in the appropriate buffers (but 1108 ‘global-auto-revert-mode’ is implemented differently). You can 1109 also turn it on or off manually, which might be necessary if Magit 1110 does not notice that a previously untracked file now is being 1111 tracked or vice-versa. 1112 1113 -- User Option: auto-revert-stop-on-user-input 1114 This option controls whether the arrival of user input suspends the 1115 automatic reverts for ‘auto-revert-interval’ seconds. 1116 1117 -- User Option: auto-revert-interval 1118 This option controls how many seconds Emacs waits for before 1119 resuming suspended reverts. 1120 1121 -- User Option: auto-revert-buffer-list-filter 1122 This option specifies an additional filter used by 1123 ‘auto-revert-buffers’ to determine whether a buffer should be 1124 reverted or not. 1125 1126 This option is provided by Magit, which also advises 1127 ‘auto-revert-buffers’ to respect it. Magit users who do not turn 1128 on the local mode ‘auto-revert-mode’ themselves, are best served by 1129 setting the value to ‘magit-auto-revert-repository-buffer-p’. 1130 1131 However the default is nil, so as not to disturb users who do use 1132 the local mode directly. If you experience delays when running 1133 Magit commands, then you should consider using one of the 1134 predicates provided by Magit - especially if you also use Tramp. 1135 1136 Users who do turn on ‘auto-revert-mode’ in buffers in which Magit 1137 doesn’t do that for them, should likely not use any filter. Users 1138 who turn on ‘global-auto-revert-mode’, do not have to worry about 1139 this option, because it is disregarded if the global mode is 1140 enabled. 1141 1142 -- User Option: auto-revert-verbose 1143 This option controls whether Emacs reports when a buffer has been 1144 reverted. 1145 1146 The options with the ‘auto-revert-’ prefix are located in the Custom 1147 group named ‘auto-revert’. The other, Magit-specific, options are 1148 located in the ‘magit’ group. 1149 1150 * Menu: 1151 1152 * Risk of Reverting Automatically:: 1153 1154 1155 File: magit.info, Node: Risk of Reverting Automatically, Up: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers 1156 1157 Risk of Reverting Automatically 1158 ............................... 1159 1160 For the vast majority of users, automatically reverting file-visiting 1161 buffers after they have changed on disk is harmless. 1162 1163 If a buffer is modified (i.e., it contains changes that haven’t been 1164 saved yet), then Emacs will refuse to automatically revert it. If you 1165 save a previously modified buffer, then that results in what is seen by 1166 Git as an uncommitted change. Git will then refuse to carry out any 1167 commands that would cause these changes to be lost. In other words, if 1168 there is anything that could be lost, then either Git or Emacs will 1169 refuse to discard the changes. 1170 1171 However, if you use file-visiting buffers as a sort of ad hoc 1172 "staging area", then the automatic reverts could potentially cause data 1173 loss. So far I have heard from only one user who uses such a workflow. 1174 1175 An example: You visit some file in a buffer, edit it, and save the 1176 changes. Then, outside of Emacs (or at least not using Magit or by 1177 saving the buffer) you change the file on disk again. At this point the 1178 buffer is the only place where the intermediate version still exists. 1179 You have saved the changes to disk, but that has since been overwritten. 1180 Meanwhile Emacs considers the buffer to be unmodified (because you have 1181 not made any changes to it since you last saved it to the visited file) 1182 and therefore would not object to it being automatically reverted. At 1183 this point an Auto-Revert mode would kick in. It would check whether 1184 the buffer is modified and since that is not the case it would revert 1185 it. The intermediate version would be lost. (Actually you could still 1186 get it back using the ‘undo’ command.) 1187 1188 If your workflow depends on Emacs preserving the intermediate version 1189 in the buffer, then you have to disable all Auto-Revert modes. But 1190 please consider that such a workflow would be dangerous even without 1191 using an Auto-Revert mode, and should therefore be avoided. If Emacs 1192 crashes or if you quit Emacs by mistake, then you would also lose the 1193 buffer content. There would be no autosave file still containing the 1194 intermediate version (because that was deleted when you saved the 1195 buffer) and you would not be asked whether you want to save the buffer 1196 (because it isn’t modified). 1197 1198 1199 File: magit.info, Node: Sections, Next: Transient Commands, Prev: Modes and Buffers, Up: Interface Concepts 1200 1201 4.2 Sections 1202 ============ 1203 1204 Magit buffers are organized into nested sections, which can be collapsed 1205 and expanded, similar to how sections are handled in Org mode. Each 1206 section also has a type, and some sections also have a value. For each 1207 section type there can also be a local keymap, shared by all sections of 1208 that type. 1209 1210 Taking advantage of the section value and type, many commands operate 1211 on the current section, or when the region is active and selects 1212 sections of the same type, all of the selected sections. Commands that 1213 only make sense for a particular section type (as opposed to just 1214 behaving differently depending on the type) are usually bound in section 1215 type keymaps. 1216 1217 * Menu: 1218 1219 * Section Movement:: 1220 * Section Visibility:: 1221 * Section Hooks:: 1222 * Section Types and Values:: 1223 * Section Options:: 1224 1225 1226 File: magit.info, Node: Section Movement, Next: Section Visibility, Up: Sections 1227 1228 4.2.1 Section Movement 1229 ---------------------- 1230 1231 To move within a section use the usual keys (‘C-p’, ‘C-n’, ‘C-b’, ‘C-f’ 1232 etc), whose global bindings are not shadowed. To move to another 1233 section use the following commands. 1234 1235 ‘p’ (‘magit-section-backward’) 1236 When not at the beginning of a section, then move to the beginning 1237 of the current section. At the beginning of a section, instead 1238 move to the beginning of the previous visible section. 1239 1240 ‘n’ (‘magit-section-forward’) 1241 Move to the beginning of the next visible section. 1242 1243 ‘M-p’ (‘magit-section-backward-siblings’) 1244 Move to the beginning of the previous sibling section. If there is 1245 no previous sibling section, then move to the parent section 1246 instead. 1247 1248 ‘M-n’ (‘magit-section-forward-siblings’) 1249 Move to the beginning of the next sibling section. If there is no 1250 next sibling section, then move to the parent section instead. 1251 1252 ‘^’ (‘magit-section-up’) 1253 Move to the beginning of the parent of the current section. 1254 1255 The above commands all call the hook ‘magit-section-movement-hook’. 1256 Any of the functions listed below can be used as members of this hook. 1257 1258 You might want to remove some of the functions that Magit adds using 1259 ‘add-hook’. In doing so you have to make sure you do not attempt to 1260 remove function that haven’t even been added yet, for example: 1261 1262 (with-eval-after-load 'magit-diff 1263 (remove-hook 'magit-section-movement-hook 1264 'magit-hunk-set-window-start)) 1265 1266 -- Variable: magit-section-movement-hook 1267 This hook is run by all of the above movement commands, after 1268 arriving at the destination. 1269 1270 -- Function: magit-hunk-set-window-start 1271 This hook function ensures that the beginning of the current 1272 section is visible, provided it is a ‘hunk’ section. Otherwise, it 1273 does nothing. 1274 1275 Loading ‘magit-diff’ adds this function to the hook. 1276 1277 -- Function: magit-section-set-window-start 1278 This hook function ensures that the beginning of the current 1279 section is visible, regardless of the section’s type. If you add 1280 this to ‘magit-section-movement-hook’, then you must remove the 1281 hunk-only variant in turn. 1282 1283 -- Function: magit-log-maybe-show-more-commits 1284 This hook function only has an effect in log buffers, and ‘point’ 1285 is on the "show more" section. If that is the case, then it 1286 doubles the number of commits that are being shown. 1287 1288 Loading ‘magit-log’ adds this function to the hook. 1289 1290 -- Function: magit-log-maybe-update-revision-buffer 1291 When moving inside a log buffer, then this function updates the 1292 revision buffer, provided it is already being displayed in another 1293 window of the same frame. 1294 1295 Loading ‘magit-log’ adds this function to the hook. 1296 1297 -- Function: magit-log-maybe-update-blob-buffer 1298 When moving inside a log buffer and another window of the same 1299 frame displays a blob buffer, then this function instead displays 1300 the blob buffer for the commit at point in that window. 1301 1302 -- Function: magit-status-maybe-update-revision-buffer 1303 When moving inside a status buffer, then this function updates the 1304 revision buffer, provided it is already being displayed in another 1305 window of the same frame. 1306 1307 -- Function: magit-status-maybe-update-stash-buffer 1308 When moving inside a status buffer, then this function updates the 1309 stash buffer, provided it is already being displayed in another 1310 window of the same frame. 1311 1312 -- Function: magit-status-maybe-update-blob-buffer 1313 When moving inside a status buffer and another window of the same 1314 frame displays a blob buffer, then this function instead displays 1315 the blob buffer for the commit at point in that window. 1316 1317 -- Function: magit-stashes-maybe-update-stash-buffer 1318 When moving inside a buffer listing stashes, then this function 1319 updates the stash buffer, provided it is already being displayed in 1320 another window of the same frame. 1321 1322 -- User Option: magit-update-other-window-delay 1323 Delay before automatically updating the other window. 1324 1325 When moving around in certain buffers, then certain other buffers, 1326 which are being displayed in another window, may optionally be 1327 updated to display information about the section at point. 1328 1329 When holding down a key to move by more than just one section, then 1330 that would update that buffer for each section on the way. To 1331 prevent that, updating the revision buffer is delayed, and this 1332 option controls for how long. For optimal experience you might 1333 have to adjust this delay and/or the keyboard repeat rate and delay 1334 of your graphical environment or operating system. 1335 1336 1337 File: magit.info, Node: Section Visibility, Next: Section Hooks, Prev: Section Movement, Up: Sections 1338 1339 4.2.2 Section Visibility 1340 ------------------------ 1341 1342 Magit provides many commands for changing the visibility of sections, 1343 but all you need to get started are the next two. 1344 1345 ‘<TAB>’ (‘magit-section-toggle’) 1346 Toggle the visibility of the body of the current section. 1347 1348 ‘C-c <TAB>’ (‘magit-section-cycle’) 1349 ‘C-<tab>’ (‘magit-section-cycle’) 1350 Cycle the visibility of current section and its children. 1351 1352 If this command is invoked using ‘C-<tab>’ and that is globally 1353 bound to ‘tab-next’, then this command pivots to behave like that 1354 command, and you must instead use ‘C-c TAB’ to cycle section 1355 visibility. 1356 1357 If you would like to keep using ‘C-<tab>’ to cycle section 1358 visibility but also want to use ‘tab-bar-mode’, then you have to 1359 prevent that mode from using this key and instead bind another key 1360 to ‘tab-next’. Because ‘tab-bar-mode’ does not use a mode map but 1361 instead manipulates the global map, this involves advising 1362 ‘tab-bar--define-keys’. 1363 1364 ‘M-<tab>’ (‘magit-section-cycle-diffs’) 1365 Cycle the visibility of diff-related sections in the current 1366 buffer. 1367 1368 ‘S-<tab>’ (‘magit-section-cycle-global’) 1369 Cycle the visibility of all sections in the current buffer. 1370 1371 ‘1’ (‘magit-section-show-level-1’) 1372 ‘2’ (‘magit-section-show-level-2’) 1373 ‘3’ (‘magit-section-show-level-3’) 1374 ‘4’ (‘magit-section-show-level-4’) 1375 Show sections surrounding the current section up to level N. 1376 1377 ‘M-1’ (‘magit-section-show-level-1-all’) 1378 ‘M-2’ (‘magit-section-show-level-2-all’) 1379 ‘M-3’ (‘magit-section-show-level-3-all’) 1380 ‘M-4’ (‘magit-section-show-level-4-all’) 1381 Show all sections up to level N. 1382 1383 Some functions, which are used to implement the above commands, are 1384 also exposed as commands themselves. By default no keys are bound to 1385 these commands, as they are generally perceived to be much less useful. 1386 But your mileage may vary. 1387 1388 -- Command: magit-section-show 1389 Show the body of the current section. 1390 1391 -- Command: magit-section-hide 1392 Hide the body of the current section. 1393 1394 -- Command: magit-section-show-headings 1395 Recursively show headings of children of the current section. Only 1396 show the headings. Previously shown text-only bodies are hidden. 1397 1398 -- Command: magit-section-show-children 1399 Recursively show the bodies of children of the current section. 1400 With a prefix argument show children down to the level of the 1401 current section, and hide deeper children. 1402 1403 -- Command: magit-section-hide-children 1404 Recursively hide the bodies of children of the current section. 1405 1406 -- Command: magit-section-toggle-children 1407 Toggle visibility of bodies of children of the current section. 1408 1409 When a buffer is first created then some sections are shown expanded 1410 while others are not. This is hard coded. When a buffer is refreshed 1411 then the previous visibility is preserved. The initial visibility of 1412 certain sections can also be overwritten using the hook 1413 ‘magit-section-set-visibility-hook’. 1414 1415 -- User Option: magit-section-initial-visibility-alist 1416 This options can be used to override the initial visibility of 1417 sections. In the future it will also be used to define the 1418 defaults, but currently a section’s default is still hardcoded. 1419 1420 The value is an alist. Each element maps a section type or lineage 1421 to the initial visibility state for such sections. The state has 1422 to be one of ‘show’ or ‘hide’, or a function that returns one of 1423 these symbols. A function is called with the section as the only 1424 argument. 1425 1426 Use the command ‘magit-describe-section-briefly’ to determine a 1427 section’s lineage or type. The vector in the output is the section 1428 lineage and the type is the first element of that vector. 1429 Wildcards can be used, see ‘magit-section-match’. 1430 1431 -- User Option: magit-section-cache-visibility 1432 This option controls for which sections the previous visibility 1433 state should be restored if a section disappears and later appears 1434 again. The value is a boolean or a list of section types. If t, 1435 then the visibility of all sections is cached. Otherwise this is 1436 only done for sections whose type matches one of the listed types. 1437 1438 This requires that the function ‘magit-section-cached-visibility’ 1439 is a member of ‘magit-section-set-visibility-hook’. 1440 1441 -- Variable: magit-section-set-visibility-hook 1442 This hook is run when first creating a buffer and also when 1443 refreshing an existing buffer, and is used to determine the 1444 visibility of the section currently being inserted. 1445 1446 Each function is called with one argument, the section being 1447 inserted. It should return ‘hide’ or ‘show’, or to leave the 1448 visibility undefined ‘nil’. If no function decides on the 1449 visibility and the buffer is being refreshed, then the visibility 1450 is preserved; or if the buffer is being created, then the hard 1451 coded default is used. 1452 1453 Usually this should only be used to set the initial visibility but 1454 not during refreshes. If ‘magit-insert-section--oldroot’ is 1455 non-nil, then the buffer is being refreshed and these functions 1456 should immediately return ‘nil’. 1457 1458 -- User Option: magit-section-visibility-indicator 1459 This option controls whether and how to indicate that a section can 1460 be expanded/collapsed. 1461 1462 If nil, then no visibility indicators are shown. Otherwise the 1463 value has to have one of these two forms: 1464 1465 • ‘(EXPANDABLE-BITMAP . COLLAPSIBLE-BITMAP)’ 1466 1467 Both values have to be variables whose values are fringe 1468 bitmaps. In this case every section that can be expanded or 1469 collapsed gets an indicator in the left fringe. 1470 1471 To provide extra padding around the indicator, set 1472 ‘left-fringe-width’ in ‘magit-mode-hook’, e.g.: 1473 1474 (add-hook 'magit-mode-hook (lambda () 1475 (setq left-fringe-width 20))) 1476 1477 • ‘(STRING . BOOLEAN)’ 1478 1479 In this case STRING (usually an ellipsis) is shown at the end 1480 of the heading of every collapsed section. Expanded sections 1481 get no indicator. The cdr controls whether the appearance of 1482 these ellipsis take section highlighting into account. Doing 1483 so might potentially have an impact on performance, while not 1484 doing so is kinda ugly. 1485 1486 1487 File: magit.info, Node: Section Hooks, Next: Section Types and Values, Prev: Section Visibility, Up: Sections 1488 1489 4.2.3 Section Hooks 1490 ------------------- 1491 1492 Which sections are inserted into certain buffers is controlled with 1493 hooks. This includes the status and the refs buffers. For other 1494 buffers, e.g., log and diff buffers, this is not possible. The command 1495 ‘magit-describe-section’ can be used to see which hook (if any) was 1496 responsible for inserting the section at point. 1497 1498 For buffers whose sections can be customized by the user, a hook 1499 variable called ‘magit-TYPE-sections-hook’ exists. This hook should be 1500 changed using ‘magit-add-section-hook’. Avoid using ‘add-hooks’ or the 1501 Custom interface. 1502 1503 The various available section hook variables are described later in 1504 this manual along with the appropriate "section inserter functions". 1505 1506 -- Function: magit-add-section-hook hook function &optional at append 1507 local 1508 Add the function FUNCTION to the value of section hook HOOK. 1509 1510 Add FUNCTION at the beginning of the hook list unless optional 1511 APPEND is non-nil, in which case FUNCTION is added at the end. If 1512 FUNCTION already is a member then move it to the new location. 1513 1514 If optional AT is non-nil and a member of the hook list, then add 1515 FUNCTION next to that instead. Add before or after AT, or replace 1516 AT with FUNCTION depending on APPEND. If APPEND is the symbol 1517 ‘replace’, then replace AT with FUNCTION. For any other non-nil 1518 value place FUNCTION right after AT. If nil, then place FUNCTION 1519 right before AT. If FUNCTION already is a member of the list but 1520 AT is not, then leave FUNCTION where ever it already is. 1521 1522 If optional LOCAL is non-nil, then modify the hook’s buffer-local 1523 value rather than its global value. This makes the hook local by 1524 copying the default value. That copy is then modified. 1525 1526 HOOK should be a symbol. If HOOK is void, it is first set to nil. 1527 HOOK’s value must not be a single hook function. FUNCTION should 1528 be a function that takes no arguments and inserts one or multiple 1529 sections at point, moving point forward. FUNCTION may choose not 1530 to insert its section(s), when doing so would not make sense. It 1531 should not be abused for other side-effects. 1532 1533 To remove a function from a section hook, use ‘remove-hook’. 1534 1535 1536 File: magit.info, Node: Section Types and Values, Next: Section Options, Prev: Section Hooks, Up: Sections 1537 1538 4.2.4 Section Types and Values 1539 ------------------------------ 1540 1541 Each section has a type, for example ‘hunk’, ‘file’, and ‘commit’. 1542 Instances of certain section types also have a value. The value of a 1543 section of type ‘file’, for example, is a file name. 1544 1545 Users usually do not have to worry about a section’s type and value, 1546 but knowing them can be handy at times. 1547 1548 ‘H’ (‘magit-describe-section’) 1549 This command shows information about the section at point in a 1550 separate buffer. 1551 1552 -- Command: magit-describe-section-briefly 1553 This command shows information about the section at point in the 1554 echo area, as ‘#<magit-section VALUE [TYPE PARENT-TYPE...] 1555 BEGINNING-END>’. 1556 1557 Many commands behave differently depending on the type of the section 1558 at point and/or somehow consume the value of that section. But that is 1559 only one of the reasons why the same key may do something different, 1560 depending on what section is current. 1561 1562 Additionally for each section type a keymap *might* be defined, named 1563 ‘magit-TYPE-section-map’. That keymap is used as text property keymap 1564 of all text belonging to any section of the respective type. If such a 1565 map does not exist for a certain type, then you can define it yourself, 1566 and it will automatically be used. 1567 1568 1569 File: magit.info, Node: Section Options, Prev: Section Types and Values, Up: Sections 1570 1571 4.2.5 Section Options 1572 --------------------- 1573 1574 This section describes options that have an effect on more than just a 1575 certain type of sections. As you can see there are not many of those. 1576 1577 -- User Option: magit-section-show-child-count 1578 Whether to append the number of children to section headings. This 1579 only affects sections that could benefit from this information. 1580 1581 1582 File: magit.info, Node: Transient Commands, Next: Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables, Prev: Sections, Up: Interface Concepts 1583 1584 4.3 Transient Commands 1585 ====================== 1586 1587 Many Magit commands are implemented as *transient* commands. First the 1588 user invokes a *prefix* command, which causes its *infix* arguments and 1589 *suffix* commands to be displayed in the echo area. The user then 1590 optionally sets some infix arguments and finally invokes one of the 1591 suffix commands. 1592 1593 This is implemented in the library ‘transient’. Earlier Magit 1594 releases used the package ‘magit-popup’ and even earlier versions 1595 library ‘magit-key-mode’. 1596 1597 Transient is documented in *note (transient)Top::. 1598 1599 ‘C-x M-g’ (‘magit-dispatch’) 1600 ‘C-c g’ (‘magit-dispatch’) 1601 This transient prefix command binds most of Magit’s other prefix 1602 commands as suffix commands and displays them in a temporary buffer 1603 until one of them is invoked. Invoking such a sub-prefix causes 1604 the suffixes of that command to be bound and displayed instead of 1605 those of ‘magit-dispatch’. 1606 1607 This command is also, or especially, useful outside Magit buffers, 1608 so Magit by default binds it to ‘C-c M-g’ in the global keymap. 1609 ‘C-c g’ would be a better binding, but we cannot use that by 1610 default, because that key sequence is reserved for the user. See 1611 *note Global Bindings:: to learn more default and recommended key 1612 bindings. 1613 1614 1615 File: magit.info, Node: Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables, Next: Completion Confirmation and the Selection, Prev: Transient Commands, Up: Interface Concepts 1616 1617 4.4 Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables 1618 ============================================ 1619 1620 The infix arguments of many of Magit’s transient prefix commands cease 1621 to have an effect once the ‘git’ command that is called with those 1622 arguments has returned. Commands that create a commit are a good 1623 example for this. If the user changes the arguments, then that only 1624 affects the next invocation of a suffix command. If the same transient 1625 prefix command is later invoked again, then the arguments are initially 1626 reset to the default value. This default value can be set for the 1627 current Emacs session or saved permanently, see *note (transient)Saving 1628 Values::. It is also possible to cycle through previously used sets of 1629 arguments using ‘C-M-p’ and ‘C-M-n’, see *note (transient)Using 1630 History::. 1631 1632 However the infix arguments of many other transient commands continue 1633 to have an effect even after the ‘git’ command that was called with 1634 those arguments has returned. The most important commands like this are 1635 those that display a diff or log in a dedicated buffer. Their arguments 1636 obviously continue to have an effect for as long as the respective diff 1637 or log is being displayed. Furthermore the used arguments are stored in 1638 buffer-local variables for future reference. 1639 1640 For commands in the second group it isn’t always desirable to reset 1641 their arguments to the global value when the transient prefix command is 1642 invoked again. 1643 1644 As mentioned above, it is possible to cycle through previously used 1645 sets of arguments while a transient popup is visible. That means that 1646 we could always reset the infix arguments to the default because the set 1647 of arguments that is active in the existing buffer is only a few ‘C-M-p’ 1648 away. Magit can be configured to behave like that, but because I expect 1649 that most users would not find that very convenient, it is not the 1650 default. 1651 1652 Also note that it is possible to change the diff and log arguments 1653 used in the current buffer (including the status buffer, which contains 1654 both diff and log sections) using the respective "refresh" transient 1655 prefix commands on ‘D’ and ‘L’. (‘d’ and ‘l’ on the other hand are 1656 intended to change *what* diff or log is being displayed. It is 1657 possible to also change *how* the diff or log is being displayed at the 1658 same time, but if you only want to do the latter, then you should use 1659 the refresh variants.) Because these secondary diff and log transient 1660 prefixes are about *changing* the arguments used in the current buffer, 1661 they *always* start out with the set of arguments that are currently in 1662 effect in that buffer. 1663 1664 Some commands are usually invoked directly even though they can also 1665 be invoked as the suffix of a transient prefix command. Most 1666 prominently ‘magit-show-commit’ is usually invoked by typing ‘RET’ while 1667 point is on a commit in a log, but it can also be invoked from the 1668 ‘magit-diff’ transient prefix. 1669 1670 When such a command is invoked directly, then it is important to 1671 reuse the arguments as specified by the respective buffer-local values, 1672 instead of using the default arguments. Imagine you press ‘RET’ in a 1673 log to display the commit at point in a different buffer and then use 1674 ‘D’ to change how the diff is displayed in that buffer. And then you 1675 press ‘RET’ on another commit to show that instead and the diff 1676 arguments are reset to the default. Not cool; so Magit does not do that 1677 by default. 1678 1679 -- User Option: magit-prefix-use-buffer-arguments 1680 This option controls whether the infix arguments initially shown in 1681 certain transient prefix commands are based on the arguments that 1682 are currently in effect in the buffer that their suffixes update. 1683 1684 The ‘magit-diff’ and ‘magit-log’ transient prefix commands are 1685 affected by this option. 1686 1687 -- User Option: magit-direct-use-buffer-arguments 1688 This option controls whether certain commands, when invoked 1689 directly (i.e., not as the suffix of a transient prefix command), 1690 use the arguments that are currently active in the buffer that they 1691 are about to update. The alternative is to use the default value 1692 for these arguments, which might change the arguments that are used 1693 in the buffer. 1694 1695 Valid values for both of the above options are: 1696 1697 • ‘always’: Always use the set of arguments that is currently active 1698 in the respective buffer, provided that buffer exists of course. 1699 • ‘selected’ or ‘t’: Use the set of arguments from the respective 1700 buffer, but only if it is displayed in a window of the current 1701 frame. This is the default for both variables. 1702 • ‘current’: Use the set of arguments from the respective buffer, but 1703 only if it is the current buffer. 1704 • ‘never’: Never use the set of arguments from the respective buffer. 1705 1706 I am afraid it gets more complicated still: 1707 1708 • The global diff and log arguments are set for each supported mode 1709 individually. The diff arguments for example have different values 1710 in ‘magit-diff-mode’, ‘magit-revision-mode’, 1711 ‘magit-merge-preview-mode’ and ‘magit-status-mode’ buffers. 1712 Setting or saving the value for one mode does not change the value 1713 for other modes. The history however is shared. 1714 1715 • When ‘magit-show-commit’ is invoked directly from a log buffer, 1716 then the file filter is picked up from that buffer, not from the 1717 revision buffer or the mode’s global diff arguments. 1718 1719 • Even though they are suffixes of the diff prefix 1720 ‘magit-show-commit’ and ‘magit-stash-show’ do not use the diff 1721 buffer used by the diff commands, instead they use the dedicated 1722 revision and stash buffers. 1723 1724 At the time you invoke the diff prefix it is unknown to Magit which 1725 of the suffix commands you are going to invoke. While not certain, 1726 more often than not users invoke one of the commands that use the 1727 diff buffer, so the initial infix arguments are those used in that 1728 buffer. However if you invoke one of these commands directly, then 1729 Magit knows that it should use the arguments from the revision 1730 resp. stash buffer. 1731 1732 • The log prefix also features reflog commands, but these commands do 1733 not use the log arguments. 1734 1735 • If ‘magit-show-refs’ is invoked from a ‘magit-refs-mode’ buffer, 1736 then it acts as a refresh prefix and therefore unconditionally uses 1737 the buffer’s arguments as initial arguments. If it is invoked 1738 elsewhere with a prefix argument, then it acts as regular prefix 1739 and therefore respects ‘magit-prefix-use-buffer-arguments’. If it 1740 is invoked elsewhere without a prefix argument, then it acts as a 1741 direct command and therefore respects 1742 ‘magit-direct-use-buffer-arguments’. 1743 1744 1745 File: magit.info, Node: Completion Confirmation and the Selection, Next: Mouse Support, Prev: Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables, Up: Interface Concepts 1746 1747 4.5 Completion, Confirmation and the Selection 1748 ============================================== 1749 1750 * Menu: 1751 1752 * Action Confirmation:: 1753 * Completion and Confirmation:: 1754 * The Selection:: 1755 * The hunk-internal region:: 1756 * Support for Completion Frameworks:: 1757 * Additional Completion Options:: 1758 1759 1760 File: magit.info, Node: Action Confirmation, Next: Completion and Confirmation, Up: Completion Confirmation and the Selection 1761 1762 4.5.1 Action Confirmation 1763 ------------------------- 1764 1765 By default many actions that could potentially lead to data loss have to 1766 be confirmed. This includes many very common actions, so this can 1767 quickly become annoying. Many of these actions can be undone and if you 1768 have thought about how to undo certain mistakes, then it should be safe 1769 to disable confirmation for the respective actions. 1770 1771 The option ‘magit-no-confirm’ can be used to tell Magit to perform 1772 certain actions without the user having to confirm them. Note that 1773 while this option can only be used to disable confirmation for a 1774 specific set of actions, the next section explains another way of 1775 telling Magit to ask fewer questions. 1776 1777 -- User Option: magit-no-confirm 1778 The value of this option is a list of symbols, representing actions 1779 that do not have to be confirmed by the user before being carried 1780 out. 1781 1782 By default many potentially dangerous commands ask the user for 1783 confirmation. Each of the below symbols stands for an action 1784 which, when invoked unintentionally or without being fully aware of 1785 the consequences, could lead to tears. In many cases there are 1786 several commands that perform variations of a certain action, so we 1787 don’t use the command names but more generic symbols. 1788 1789 • Applying changes: 1790 1791 • ‘discard’ Discarding one or more changes (i.e., hunks or 1792 the complete diff for a file) loses that change, 1793 obviously. 1794 1795 • ‘reverse’ Reverting one or more changes can usually be 1796 undone by reverting the reversion. 1797 1798 • ‘stage-all-changes’, ‘unstage-all-changes’ When there are 1799 both staged and unstaged changes, then un-/staging 1800 everything would destroy that distinction. Of course 1801 that also applies when un-/staging a single change, but 1802 then less is lost and one does that so often that having 1803 to confirm every time would be unacceptable. 1804 1805 • Files: 1806 1807 • ‘delete’ When a file that isn’t yet tracked by Git is 1808 deleted, then it is completely lost, not just the last 1809 changes. Very dangerous. 1810 1811 • ‘trash’ Instead of deleting a file it can also be move to 1812 the system trash. Obviously much less dangerous than 1813 deleting it. 1814 1815 Also see option ‘magit-delete-by-moving-to-trash’. 1816 1817 • ‘resurrect’ A deleted file can easily be resurrected by 1818 "deleting" the deletion, which is done using the same 1819 command that was used to delete the same file in the 1820 first place. 1821 1822 • ‘untrack’ Untracking a file can be undone by tracking it 1823 again. 1824 1825 • ‘rename’ Renaming a file can easily be undone. 1826 1827 • Sequences: 1828 1829 • ‘reset-bisect’ Aborting (known to Git as "resetting") a 1830 bisect operation loses all information collected so far. 1831 1832 • ‘abort-cherry-pick’ Aborting a cherry-pick throws away 1833 all conflict resolutions which have already been carried 1834 out by the user. 1835 1836 • ‘abort-revert’ Aborting a revert throws away all conflict 1837 resolutions which have already been carried out by the 1838 user. 1839 1840 • ‘abort-rebase’ Aborting a rebase throws away all already 1841 modified commits, but it’s possible to restore those from 1842 the reflog. 1843 1844 • ‘abort-merge’ Aborting a merge throws away all conflict 1845 resolutions which have already been carried out by the 1846 user. 1847 1848 • ‘merge-dirty’ Merging with a dirty worktree can make it 1849 hard to go back to the state before the merge was 1850 initiated. 1851 1852 • References: 1853 1854 • ‘delete-unmerged-branch’ Once a branch has been deleted, 1855 it can only be restored using low-level recovery tools 1856 provided by Git. And even then the reflog is gone. The 1857 user always has to confirm the deletion of a branch by 1858 accepting the default choice (or selecting another 1859 branch), but when a branch has not been merged yet, also 1860 make sure the user is aware of that. 1861 1862 • ‘delete-pr-remote’ When deleting a branch that was 1863 created from a pull-request and if no other branches 1864 still exist on that remote, then ‘magit-branch-delete’ 1865 offers to delete the remote as well. This should be safe 1866 because it only happens if no other refs exist in the 1867 remotes namespace, and you can recreate the remote if 1868 necessary. 1869 1870 • ‘drop-stashes’ Dropping a stash is dangerous because Git 1871 stores stashes in the reflog. Once a stash is removed, 1872 there is no going back without using low-level recovery 1873 tools provided by Git. When a single stash is dropped, 1874 then the user always has to confirm by accepting the 1875 default (or selecting another). This action only 1876 concerns the deletion of multiple stashes at once. 1877 1878 • Publishing: 1879 1880 • ‘set-and-push’ When pushing to the upstream or the 1881 push-remote and that isn’t actually configured yet, then 1882 the user can first set the target. If s/he confirms the 1883 default too quickly, then s/he might end up pushing to 1884 the wrong branch and if the remote repository is 1885 configured to disallow fixing such mistakes, then that 1886 can be quite embarrassing and annoying. 1887 1888 • Edit published history: 1889 1890 Without adding these symbols here, you will be warned before 1891 editing commits that have already been pushed to one of the 1892 branches listed in ‘magit-published-branches’. 1893 1894 • ‘amend-published’ Affects most commands that amend to 1895 "HEAD". 1896 1897 • ‘rebase-published’ Affects commands that perform 1898 interactive rebases. This includes commands from the 1899 commit transient that modify a commit other than "HEAD", 1900 namely the various fixup and squash variants. 1901 1902 • ‘edit-published’ Affects the commands 1903 ‘magit-edit-line-commit’ and 1904 ‘magit-diff-edit-hunk-commit’. These two commands make 1905 it quite easy to accidentally edit a published commit, so 1906 you should think twice before configuring them not to ask 1907 for confirmation. 1908 1909 To disable confirmation completely, add all three symbols here 1910 or set ‘magit-published-branches’ to ‘nil’. 1911 1912 • Various: 1913 1914 • ‘stash-apply-3way’ When a stash cannot be applied using 1915 ‘git stash apply’, then Magit uses ‘git apply’ instead, 1916 possibly using the ‘--3way’ argument, which isn’t always 1917 perfectly safe. See also ‘magit-stash-apply’. 1918 1919 • ‘kill-process’ There seldom is a reason to kill a 1920 process. 1921 1922 • Global settings: 1923 1924 Instead of adding all of the above symbols to the value of 1925 this option, you can also set it to the atom ‘t’, which has 1926 the same effect as adding all of the above symbols. Doing 1927 that most certainly is a bad idea, especially because other 1928 symbols might be added in the future. So even if you don’t 1929 want to be asked for confirmation for any of these actions, 1930 you are still better of adding all of the respective symbols 1931 individually. 1932 1933 When ‘magit-wip-before-change-mode’ is enabled, then the 1934 following actions can be undone fairly easily: ‘discard’, 1935 ‘reverse’, ‘stage-all-changes’, and ‘unstage-all-changes’. If 1936 and only if this mode is enabled, then ‘safe-with-wip’ has the 1937 same effect as adding all of these symbols individually. 1938 1939 1940 File: magit.info, Node: Completion and Confirmation, Next: The Selection, Prev: Action Confirmation, Up: Completion Confirmation and the Selection 1941 1942 4.5.2 Completion and Confirmation 1943 --------------------------------- 1944 1945 Many Magit commands ask the user to select from a list of possible 1946 things to act on, while offering the most likely choice as the default. 1947 For many of these commands the default is the thing at point, provided 1948 that it actually is a valid thing to act on. For many commands that act 1949 on a branch, the current branch serves as the default if there is no 1950 branch at point. 1951 1952 These commands combine asking for confirmation and asking for a 1953 target to act on into a single action. The user can confirm the default 1954 target using ‘RET’ or abort using ‘C-g’. This is similar to a 1955 ‘y-or-n-p’ prompt, but the keys to confirm or abort differ. 1956 1957 At the same time the user is also given the opportunity to select 1958 another target, which is useful because for some commands and/or in some 1959 situations you might want to select the action before selecting the 1960 target by moving to it. 1961 1962 However you might find that for some commands you always want to use 1963 the default target, if any, or even that you want the command to act on 1964 the default without requiring any confirmation at all. The option 1965 ‘magit-dwim-selection’ can be used to configure certain commands to that 1966 effect. 1967 1968 Note that when the region is active then many commands act on the 1969 things that are selected using a mechanism based on the region, in many 1970 cases after asking for confirmation. This region-based mechanism is 1971 called the "selection" and is described in detail in the next section. 1972 When a selection exists that is valid for the invoked command, then that 1973 command never offers to act on something else, and whether it asks for 1974 confirmation is not controlled by this option. 1975 1976 Also note that Magit asks for confirmation of certain actions that 1977 are not coupled with completion (or the selection). Such dialogs are 1978 also not affected by this option and are described in the previous 1979 section. 1980 1981 -- User Option: magit-dwim-selection 1982 This option can be used to tell certain commands to use the thing at 1983 point instead of asking the user to select a candidate to act on, with 1984 or without confirmation. 1985 1986 The value has the form ‘((COMMAND nil|PROMPT DEFAULT)...)’. 1987 1988 • COMMAND is the command that should not prompt for a choice. To 1989 have an effect, the command has to use the function 1990 ‘magit-completing-read’ or a utility function which in turn uses 1991 that function. 1992 1993 • If the command uses ‘magit-completing-read’ multiple times, then 1994 PROMPT can be used to only affect one of these uses. PROMPT, if 1995 non-nil, is a regular expression that is used to match against the 1996 PROMPT argument passed to ‘magit-completing-read’. 1997 1998 • DEFAULT specifies how to use the default. If it is ‘t’, then the 1999 DEFAULT argument passed to ‘magit-completing-read’ is used without 2000 confirmation. If it is ‘ask’, then the user is given a chance to 2001 abort. DEFAULT can also be ‘nil’, in which case the entry has no 2002 effect. 2003 2004 2005 File: magit.info, Node: The Selection, Next: The hunk-internal region, Prev: Completion and Confirmation, Up: Completion Confirmation and the Selection 2006 2007 4.5.3 The Selection 2008 ------------------- 2009 2010 If the region is active, then many Magit commands act on the things that 2011 are selected using a mechanism based on the region instead of one single 2012 thing. When the region is not active, then these commands act on the 2013 thing at point or read a single thing to act on. This is described in 2014 the previous section — this section only covers how multiple things are 2015 selected, how that is visualized, and how certain commands behave when 2016 that is the case. 2017 2018 Magit’s mechanism for selecting multiple things, or rather sections 2019 that represent these things, is based on the Emacs region, but the area 2020 that Magit considers to be selected is typically larger than the region 2021 and additional restrictions apply. 2022 2023 Magit makes a distinction between a region that qualifies as forming 2024 a valid Magit selection and a region that does not. If the region does 2025 not qualify, then it is displayed as it is in other Emacs buffers. If 2026 the region does qualify as a Magit selection, then the selection is 2027 always visualized, while the region itself is only visualized if it 2028 begins and ends on the same line. 2029 2030 For a region to qualify as a Magit selection, it must begin in the 2031 heading of one section and end in the heading of a sibling section. 2032 Note that if the end of the region is at the very beginning of section 2033 heading (i.e., at the very beginning of a line) then that section is 2034 considered to be *inside* the selection. 2035 2036 This is not consistent with how the region is normally treated in 2037 Emacs — if the region ends at the beginning of a line, then that line is 2038 outside the region. Due to how Magit visualizes the selection, it 2039 should be obvious that this difference exists. 2040 2041 Not every command acts on every valid selection. Some commands do 2042 not even consider the location of point, others may act on the section 2043 at point but not support acting on the selection, and even commands that 2044 do support the selection of course only do so if it selects things that 2045 they can act on. 2046 2047 This is the main reason why the selection must include the section at 2048 point. Even if a selection exists, the invoked command may disregard 2049 it, in which case it may act on the current section only. It is much 2050 safer to only act on the current section but not the other selected 2051 sections than it is to act on the current section *instead* of the 2052 selected sections. The latter would be much more surprising and if the 2053 current section always is part of the selection, then that cannot 2054 happen. 2055 2056 -- Variable: magit-keep-region-overlay 2057 This variable controls whether the region is visualized as usual 2058 even when a valid Magit selection or a hunk-internal region exists. 2059 See the doc-string for more information. 2060 2061 2062 File: magit.info, Node: The hunk-internal region, Next: Support for Completion Frameworks, Prev: The Selection, Up: Completion Confirmation and the Selection 2063 2064 4.5.4 The hunk-internal region 2065 ------------------------------ 2066 2067 Somewhat related to the Magit selection described in the previous 2068 section is the hunk-internal region. 2069 2070 Like the selection, the hunk-internal region is based on the Emacs 2071 region but causes that region to not be visualized as it would in other 2072 Emacs buffers, and includes the line on which the region ends even if it 2073 ends at the very beginning of that line. 2074 2075 Unlike the selection, which is based on a region that must begin in 2076 the heading of one section and ends in the section of a sibling section, 2077 the hunk-internal region must begin inside the *body* of a hunk section 2078 and end in the body of the *same* section. 2079 2080 The hunk-internal region is honored by "apply" commands, which can, 2081 among other targets, act on a hunk. If the hunk-internal region is 2082 active, then such commands act only on the marked part of the hunk 2083 instead of on the complete hunk. 2084 2085 2086 File: magit.info, Node: Support for Completion Frameworks, Next: Additional Completion Options, Prev: The hunk-internal region, Up: Completion Confirmation and the Selection 2087 2088 4.5.5 Support for Completion Frameworks 2089 --------------------------------------- 2090 2091 The built-in option ‘completing-read-function’ specifies the low-level 2092 function used by ‘completing-read’ to ask a user to select from a list 2093 of choices. Its default value is ‘completing-read-default’. 2094 Alternative completion frameworks typically activate themselves by 2095 substituting their own implementation. 2096 2097 Mostly for historic reasons Magit provides a similar option named 2098 ‘magit-completing-read-function’, which only controls the low-level 2099 function used by ‘magit-completing-read’. This option also makes it 2100 possible to use a different completing mechanism for Magit than for the 2101 rest of Emacs, but doing that is not recommend. 2102 2103 You most likely don’t have to customize the magit-specific option to 2104 use an alternative completion framework. For example, if you enable 2105 ‘ivy-mode’, then Magit will respect that, and if you enable ‘helm-mode’, 2106 then you are done too. 2107 2108 However if you want to use Ido, then ‘ido-mode’ won’t do the trick. 2109 You will also have to install the ‘ido-completing-read+’ package and use 2110 ‘magit-ido-completing-read’ as ‘magit-completing-read-function’. 2111 2112 -- User Option: magit-completing-read-function 2113 The value of this variable is the low-level function used to 2114 perform completion by code that uses ‘magit-completing-read’ (as 2115 opposed to the built-in ‘completing-read’). 2116 2117 The default value, ‘magit-builtin-completing-read’, is suitable for 2118 the standard completion mechanism, ‘ivy-mode’, and ‘helm-mode’ at 2119 least. 2120 2121 The built-in ‘completing-read’ and ‘completing-read-default’ are 2122 *not* suitable to be used here. ‘magit-builtin-completing-read’ 2123 performs some additional work, and any function used in its place 2124 has to do the same. 2125 2126 -- Function: magit-builtin-completing-read prompt choices &optional 2127 predicate require-match initial-input hist def 2128 This function performs completion using the built-in 2129 ‘completing-read’ and does some additional magit-specific work. 2130 2131 -- Function: magit-ido-completing-read prompt choices &optional 2132 predicate require-match initial-input hist def 2133 This function performs completion using ‘ido-completing-read+’ from 2134 the package by the same name (which you have to explicitly install) 2135 and does some additional magit-specific work. 2136 2137 We have to use ‘ido-completing-read+’ instead of the 2138 ‘ido-completing-read’ that comes with Ido itself, because the 2139 latter, while intended as a drop-in replacement, cannot serve that 2140 purpose because it violates too many of the implicit conventions. 2141 2142 -- Function: magit-completing-read prompt choices &optional predicate 2143 require-match initial-input hist def fallback 2144 This is the function that Magit commands use when they need the 2145 user to select a single thing to act on. The arguments have the 2146 same meaning as for ‘completing-read’, except for FALLBACK, which 2147 is unique to this function and is described below. 2148 2149 Instead of asking the user to choose from a list of possible 2150 candidates, this function may just return the default specified by 2151 DEF, with or without requiring user confirmation. Whether that is 2152 the case depends on PROMPT, ‘this-command’ and 2153 ‘magit-dwim-selection’. See the documentation of the latter for 2154 more information. 2155 2156 If it does read a value in the minibuffer, then this function acts 2157 similar to ‘completing-read’, except for the following: 2158 2159 • COLLECTION must be a list of choices. A function is not 2160 supported. 2161 2162 • If REQUIRE-MATCH is ‘nil’ and the user exits without a choice, 2163 then ‘nil’ is returned instead of an empty string. 2164 2165 • If REQUIRE-MATCH is non-nil and the users exits without a 2166 choice, an user-error is raised. 2167 2168 • FALLBACK specifies a secondary default that is only used if 2169 the primary default DEF is ‘nil’. The secondary default is 2170 not subject to ‘magit-dwim-selection’ — if DEF is ‘nil’ but 2171 FALLBACK is not, then this function always asks the user to 2172 choose a candidate, just as if both defaults were ‘nil’. 2173 2174 • ‘format-prompt’ is called on PROMPT and DEF (or FALLBACK if 2175 DEF is ‘nil’). This appends ": " to the prompt and may also 2176 add the default to the prompt, using the format specified by 2177 ‘minibuffer-default-prompt-format’ and depending on 2178 ‘magit-completing-read-default-prompt-predicate’. 2179 2180 2181 File: magit.info, Node: Additional Completion Options, Prev: Support for Completion Frameworks, Up: Completion Confirmation and the Selection 2182 2183 4.5.6 Additional Completion Options 2184 ----------------------------------- 2185 2186 -- User Option: magit-list-refs-sortby 2187 For many commands that read a ref or refs from the user, the value 2188 of this option can be used to control the order of the refs. Valid 2189 values include any key accepted by the ‘--sort’ flag of ‘git 2190 for-each-ref’. By default, refs are sorted alphabetically by their 2191 full name (e.g., "refs/heads/master"). 2192 2193 2194 File: magit.info, Node: Mouse Support, Next: Running Git, Prev: Completion Confirmation and the Selection, Up: Interface Concepts 2195 2196 4.6 Mouse Support 2197 ================= 2198 2199 Double clicking on a section heading toggles the visibility of its body, 2200 if any. Likewise clicking in the left fringe toggles the visibility of 2201 the appropriate section. 2202 2203 A context menu is provided but has to be enabled explicitly. In 2204 Emacs 28 and greater, enable the global mode ‘context-menu-mode’. If 2205 you use an older Emacs release, set 2206 ‘magit-section-show-context-menu-for-emacs<28’. 2207 2208 2209 File: magit.info, Node: Running Git, Prev: Mouse Support, Up: Interface Concepts 2210 2211 4.7 Running Git 2212 =============== 2213 2214 * Menu: 2215 2216 * Viewing Git Output:: 2217 * Git Process Status:: 2218 * Running Git Manually:: 2219 * Git Executable:: 2220 * Global Git Arguments:: 2221 2222 2223 File: magit.info, Node: Viewing Git Output, Next: Git Process Status, Up: Running Git 2224 2225 4.7.1 Viewing Git Output 2226 ------------------------ 2227 2228 Magit runs Git either for side-effects (e.g., when pushing) or to get 2229 some value (e.g., the name of the current branch). 2230 2231 When Git is run for side-effects, the process output is logged in a 2232 per-repository log buffer, which can be consulted using the 2233 ‘magit-process’ command when things don’t go as expected. 2234 2235 The output/errors for up to ‘magit-process-log-max’ Git commands are 2236 retained. 2237 2238 ‘$’ (‘magit-process’) 2239 This commands displays the process buffer for the current 2240 repository. 2241 2242 Inside that buffer, the usual key bindings for navigating and showing 2243 sections are available. There is one additional command. 2244 2245 ‘k’ (‘magit-process-kill’) 2246 This command kills the process represented by the section at point. 2247 2248 -- Variable: magit-git-debug 2249 This option controls whether additional reporting of git errors is 2250 enabled. 2251 2252 Magit basically calls git for one of these two reasons: for 2253 side-effects or to do something with its standard output. 2254 2255 When git is run for side-effects then its output, including error 2256 messages, go into the process buffer which is shown when using ‘$’. 2257 2258 When git’s output is consumed in some way, then it would be too 2259 expensive to also insert it into this buffer, but when this option 2260 is non-nil and git returns with a non-zero exit status, then at 2261 least its standard error is inserted into this buffer. 2262 2263 This is only intended for debugging purposes. Do not enable this 2264 permanently, that would negatively affect performance. 2265 2266 This is only intended for debugging purposes. Do not enable this 2267 permanently, that would negatively affect performance. Also note 2268 that just because git exits with a non-zero exit status and prints 2269 an error message that usually doesn’t mean that it is an error as 2270 far as Magit is concerned, which is another reason we usually hide 2271 these error messages. Whether some error message is relevant in 2272 the context of some unexpected behavior has to be judged on a case 2273 by case basis. 2274 2275 The command ‘magit-toggle-git-debug’ changes the value of this 2276 variable. 2277 2278 -- Variable: magit-process-extreme-logging 2279 This option controls whether ‘magit-process-file’ logs to the 2280 ‘*Messages*’ buffer. 2281 2282 Only intended for temporary use when you try to figure out how 2283 Magit uses Git behind the scene. Output that normally goes to the 2284 magit-process buffer continues to go there. Not all output goes to 2285 either of these two buffers. 2286 2287 2288 File: magit.info, Node: Git Process Status, Next: Running Git Manually, Prev: Viewing Git Output, Up: Running Git 2289 2290 4.7.2 Git Process Status 2291 ------------------------ 2292 2293 When a Git process is running for side-effects, Magit displays an 2294 indicator in the mode line, using the ‘magit-mode-line-process’ face. 2295 2296 If the Git process exits successfully, the process indicator is 2297 removed from the mode line immediately. 2298 2299 In the case of a Git error, the process indicator is not removed, but 2300 is instead highlighted with the ‘magit-mode-line-process-error’ face, 2301 and the error details from the process buffer are provided as a tooltip 2302 for mouse users. This error indicator persists in the mode line until 2303 the next magit buffer refresh. 2304 2305 If you do not wish process errors to be indicated in the mode line, 2306 customize the ‘magit-process-display-mode-line-error’ user option. 2307 2308 Process errors are additionally indicated at the top of the status 2309 buffer. 2310 2311 2312 File: magit.info, Node: Running Git Manually, Next: Git Executable, Prev: Git Process Status, Up: Running Git 2313 2314 4.7.3 Running Git Manually 2315 -------------------------- 2316 2317 While Magit provides many Emacs commands to interact with Git, it does 2318 not cover everything. In those cases your existing Git knowledge will 2319 come in handy. Magit provides some commands for running arbitrary Git 2320 commands by typing them into the minibuffer, instead of having to switch 2321 to a shell. 2322 2323 ‘!’ (‘magit-run’) 2324 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 2325 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 2326 2327 ‘! !’ (‘magit-git-command-topdir’) 2328 This command reads a command from the user and executes it in the 2329 top-level directory of the current working tree. 2330 2331 The string "git " is used as initial input when prompting the user 2332 for the command. It can be removed to run another command. 2333 2334 ‘:’ (‘magit-git-command’) 2335 ‘! p’ 2336 This command reads a command from the user and executes it in 2337 ‘default-directory’. With a prefix argument the command is 2338 executed in the top-level directory of the current working tree 2339 instead. 2340 2341 The string "git " is used as initial input when prompting the user 2342 for the command. It can be removed to run another command. 2343 2344 ‘! s’ (‘magit-shell-command-topdir’) 2345 This command reads a command from the user and executes it in the 2346 top-level directory of the current working tree. 2347 2348 ‘! S’ (‘magit-shell-command’) 2349 This command reads a command from the user and executes it in 2350 ‘default-directory’. With a prefix argument the command is 2351 executed in the top-level directory of the current working tree 2352 instead. 2353 2354 -- User Option: magit-shell-command-verbose-prompt 2355 Whether the prompt, used by the above commands when reading a shell 2356 command, shows the directory in which it will be run. 2357 2358 These suffix commands start external gui tools. 2359 2360 ‘! k’ (‘magit-run-gitk’) 2361 This command runs ‘gitk’ in the current repository. 2362 2363 ‘! a’ (‘magit-run-gitk-all’) 2364 This command runs ‘gitk --all’ in the current repository. 2365 2366 ‘! b’ (‘magit-run-gitk-branches’) 2367 This command runs ‘gitk --branches’ in the current repository. 2368 2369 ‘! g’ (‘magit-run-git-gui’) 2370 This command runs ‘git gui’ in the current repository. 2371 2372 ‘! m’ (‘magit-git-mergetool’) 2373 This command runs ‘git mergetool --gui’ in the current repository. 2374 2375 With a prefix argument this acts as a transient prefix command, 2376 allowing the user to select the mergetool and change some settings. 2377 2378 2379 File: magit.info, Node: Git Executable, Next: Global Git Arguments, Prev: Running Git Manually, Up: Running Git 2380 2381 4.7.4 Git Executable 2382 -------------------- 2383 2384 When Magit calls Git, then it may do so using the absolute path to the 2385 ‘git’ executable, or using just its name. 2386 2387 When running ‘git’ locally and the ‘system-type’ is ‘windows-nt’ (any 2388 Windows version) or ‘darwin’ (macOS) then ‘magit-git-executable’ is set 2389 to an absolute path when Magit is loaded. 2390 2391 On Windows it is necessary to use an absolute path because Git comes 2392 with several wrapper scripts for the actual ‘git’ binary, which are also 2393 placed on ‘$PATH’, and using one of these wrappers instead of the binary 2394 would degrade performance horribly. For some macOS users using just the 2395 name of the executable also performs horribly, so we avoid doing that on 2396 that platform as well. On other platforms, using just the name seems to 2397 work just fine. 2398 2399 Using an absolute path when running ‘git’ on a remote machine over 2400 Tramp, would be problematic to use an absolute path that is suitable on 2401 the local machine, so a separate option is used to control the name or 2402 path that is used on remote machines. 2403 2404 -- User Option: magit-git-executable 2405 The ‘git’ executable used by Magit on the local host. This should 2406 be either the absolute path to the executable, or the string "git" 2407 to let Emacs find the executable itself, using the standard 2408 mechanism for doing such things. 2409 2410 -- User Option: magit-remote-git-executable 2411 The ‘git’ executable used by Magit on remote machines over Tramp. 2412 Normally this should be just the string "git". Consider 2413 customizing ‘tramp-remote-path’ instead of this option. 2414 2415 If Emacs is unable to find the correct executable, then you can work 2416 around that by explicitly setting the value of one of these two options. 2417 Doing that should be considered a kludge; it is better to make sure that 2418 the order in ‘exec-path’ or ‘tramp-remote-path’ is correct. 2419 2420 Note that ‘exec-path’ is set based on the value of the ‘PATH’ 2421 environment variable that is in effect when Emacs is started. If you 2422 set ‘PATH’ in your shell’s init files, then that only has an effect on 2423 Emacs if you start it from that shell (because the environment of a 2424 process is only passed to its child processes, not to arbitrary other 2425 processes). If that is not how you start Emacs, then the 2426 ‘exec-path-from-shell’ package can help; though honestly I consider that 2427 a kludge too. 2428 2429 The command ‘magit-debug-git-executable’ can be useful to find out 2430 where Emacs is searching for ‘git’. 2431 2432 ‘M-x magit-debug-git-executable’ 2433 This command displays a buffer with information about 2434 ‘magit-git-executable’ and ‘magit-remote-git-executable’. 2435 2436 ‘M-x magit-version’ 2437 This command shows the currently used versions of Magit, Git, and 2438 Emacs in the echo area. Non-interactively this just returns the 2439 Magit version. 2440 2441 2442 File: magit.info, Node: Global Git Arguments, Prev: Git Executable, Up: Running Git 2443 2444 4.7.5 Global Git Arguments 2445 -------------------------- 2446 2447 -- User Option: magit-git-global-arguments 2448 The arguments set here are used every time the git executable is 2449 run as a subprocess. They are placed right after the executable 2450 itself and before the git command - as in ‘git HERE... COMMAND 2451 REST’. For valid arguments see *note (gitman)git::. 2452 2453 Be careful what you add here, especially if you are using Tramp to 2454 connect to servers with ancient Git versions. Never remove 2455 anything that is part of the default value, unless you really know 2456 what you are doing. And think very hard before adding something; 2457 it will be used every time Magit runs Git for any purpose. 2458 2459 2460 File: magit.info, Node: Inspecting, Next: Manipulating, Prev: Interface Concepts, Up: Top 2461 2462 5 Inspecting 2463 ************ 2464 2465 The functionality provided by Magit can be roughly divided into three 2466 groups: inspecting existing data, manipulating existing data or adding 2467 new data, and transferring data. Of course that is a rather crude 2468 distinction that often falls short, but it’s more useful than no 2469 distinction at all. This section is concerned with inspecting data, the 2470 next two with manipulating and transferring it. Then follows a section 2471 about miscellaneous functionality, which cannot easily be fit into this 2472 distinction. 2473 2474 Of course other distinctions make sense too, e.g., Git’s distinction 2475 between porcelain and plumbing commands, which for the most part is 2476 equivalent to Emacs’ distinction between interactive commands and 2477 non-interactive functions. All of the sections mentioned before are 2478 mainly concerned with the porcelain – Magit’s plumbing layer is 2479 described later. 2480 2481 * Menu: 2482 2483 * Status Buffer:: 2484 * Repository List:: 2485 * Logging:: 2486 * Diffing:: 2487 * Ediffing:: 2488 * References Buffer:: 2489 * Bisecting:: 2490 * Visiting Files and Blobs:: 2491 * Blaming:: 2492 2493 2494 File: magit.info, Node: Status Buffer, Next: Repository List, Up: Inspecting 2495 2496 5.1 Status Buffer 2497 ================= 2498 2499 While other Magit buffers contain, e.g., one particular diff or one 2500 particular log, the status buffer contains the diffs for staged and 2501 unstaged changes, logs for unpushed and unpulled commits, lists of 2502 stashes and untracked files, and information related to the current 2503 branch. 2504 2505 During certain incomplete operations – for example when a merge 2506 resulted in a conflict – additional information is displayed that helps 2507 proceeding with or aborting the operation. 2508 2509 The command ‘magit-status’ displays the status buffer belonging to 2510 the current repository in another window. This command is used so often 2511 that it should be bound globally. We recommend using ‘C-x g’: 2512 2513 (global-set-key (kbd "C-x g") 'magit-status) 2514 2515 ‘C-x g’ (‘magit-status’) 2516 When invoked from within an existing Git repository, then this 2517 command shows the status of that repository in a buffer. 2518 2519 If the current directory isn’t located within a Git repository, 2520 then this command prompts for an existing repository or an 2521 arbitrary directory, depending on the option 2522 ‘magit-repository-directories’, and the status for the selected 2523 repository is shown instead. 2524 2525 • If that option specifies any existing repositories, then the 2526 user is asked to select one of them. 2527 2528 • Otherwise the user is asked to select an arbitrary directory 2529 using regular file-name completion. If the selected directory 2530 is the top-level directory of an existing working tree, then 2531 the status buffer for that is shown. 2532 2533 • Otherwise the user is offered to initialize the selected 2534 directory as a new repository. After creating the repository 2535 its status buffer is shown. 2536 2537 These fallback behaviors can also be forced using one or more 2538 prefix arguments: 2539 2540 • With two prefix arguments (or more precisely a numeric prefix 2541 value of 16 or greater) an arbitrary directory is read, which 2542 is then acted on as described above. The same could be 2543 accomplished using the command ‘magit-init’. 2544 2545 • With a single prefix argument an existing repository is read 2546 from the user, or if no repository can be found based on the 2547 value of ‘magit-repository-directories’, then the behavior is 2548 the same as with two prefix arguments. 2549 2550 -- User Option: magit-repository-directories 2551 List of directories that are Git repositories or contain Git 2552 repositories. 2553 2554 Each element has the form ‘(DIRECTORY . DEPTH)’. DIRECTORY has to 2555 be a directory or a directory file-name, a string. DEPTH, an 2556 integer, specifies the maximum depth to look for Git repositories. 2557 If it is 0, then only add DIRECTORY itself. 2558 2559 This option controls which repositories are being listed by 2560 ‘magit-list-repositories’. It also affects ‘magit-status’ (which 2561 see) in potentially surprising ways (see above). 2562 2563 -- Command: magit-status-quick 2564 This command is an alternative to ‘magit-status’ that usually 2565 avoids refreshing the status buffer. 2566 2567 If the status buffer of the current Git repository exists but isn’t 2568 being displayed in the selected frame, then it is displayed without 2569 being refreshed. 2570 2571 If the status buffer is being displayed in the selected frame, then 2572 this command refreshes it. 2573 2574 Prefix arguments have the same meaning as for ‘magit-status’, and 2575 additionally cause the buffer to be refresh. 2576 2577 To use this command add this to your init file: 2578 2579 (global-set-key (kbd "C-x g") 'magit-status-quick). 2580 2581 If you do that and then for once want to redisplay the buffer and 2582 also immediately refresh it, then type ‘C-x g’ followed by ‘g’. 2583 2584 A possible alternative command is 2585 ‘magit-display-repository-buffer’. It supports displaying any 2586 existing Magit buffer that belongs to the current repository; not 2587 just the status buffer. 2588 2589 -- Command: ido-enter-magit-status 2590 From an Ido prompt used to open a file, instead drop into 2591 ‘magit-status’. This is similar to ‘ido-magic-delete-char’, which, 2592 despite its name, usually causes a Dired buffer to be created. 2593 2594 To make this command available, use something like: 2595 2596 (add-hook 'ido-setup-hook 2597 (lambda () 2598 (define-key ido-completion-map 2599 (kbd \"C-x g\") 'ido-enter-magit-status))) 2600 2601 Starting with Emacs 25.1 the Ido keymaps are defined just once 2602 instead of every time Ido is invoked, so now you can modify it like 2603 pretty much every other keymap: 2604 2605 (define-key ido-common-completion-map 2606 (kbd \"C-x g\") 'ido-enter-magit-status) 2607 2608 * Menu: 2609 2610 * Status Sections:: 2611 * Status Header Sections:: 2612 * Status Module Sections:: 2613 * Status Options:: 2614 2615 2616 File: magit.info, Node: Status Sections, Next: Status Header Sections, Up: Status Buffer 2617 2618 5.1.1 Status Sections 2619 --------------------- 2620 2621 The contents of status buffers is controlled using the hook 2622 ‘magit-status-sections-hook’. See *note Section Hooks:: to learn about 2623 such hooks and how to customize them. 2624 2625 -- User Option: magit-status-sections-hook 2626 Hook run to insert sections into a status buffer. 2627 2628 The first function on that hook by default is 2629 ‘magit-insert-status-headers’; it is described in the next section. By 2630 default the following functions are also members of that hook: 2631 2632 -- Function: magit-insert-merge-log 2633 Insert section for the on-going merge. Display the heads that are 2634 being merged. If no merge is in progress, do nothing. 2635 2636 -- Function: magit-insert-rebase-sequence 2637 Insert section for the on-going rebase sequence. If no such 2638 sequence is in progress, do nothing. 2639 2640 -- Function: magit-insert-am-sequence 2641 Insert section for the on-going patch applying sequence. If no 2642 such sequence is in progress, do nothing. 2643 2644 -- Function: magit-insert-sequencer-sequence 2645 Insert section for the on-going cherry-pick or revert sequence. If 2646 no such sequence is in progress, do nothing. 2647 2648 -- Function: magit-insert-bisect-output 2649 While bisecting, insert section with output from ‘git bisect’. 2650 2651 -- Function: magit-insert-bisect-rest 2652 While bisecting, insert section visualizing the bisect state. 2653 2654 -- Function: magit-insert-bisect-log 2655 While bisecting, insert section logging bisect progress. 2656 2657 -- Function: magit-insert-untracked-files 2658 Maybe insert a list or tree of untracked files. 2659 2660 Do so depending on the value of ‘status.showUntrackedFiles’. Note 2661 that even if the value is ‘all’, Magit still initially only shows 2662 directories. But the directory sections can then be expanded using 2663 ‘TAB’. 2664 2665 -- Function: magit-insert-unstaged-changes 2666 Insert section showing unstaged changes. 2667 2668 -- Function: magit-insert-staged-changes 2669 Insert section showing staged changes. 2670 2671 -- Function: magit-insert-stashes &optional ref heading 2672 Insert the ‘stashes’ section showing reflog for "refs/stash". If 2673 optional REF is non-nil show reflog for that instead. If optional 2674 HEADING is non-nil use that as section heading instead of 2675 "Stashes:". 2676 2677 -- Function: magit-insert-unpulled-from-upstream 2678 Insert section showing commits that haven’t been pulled from the 2679 upstream branch yet. 2680 2681 -- Function: magit-insert-unpulled-from-pushremote 2682 Insert section showing commits that haven’t been pulled from the 2683 push-remote branch yet. 2684 2685 -- Function: magit-insert-unpushed-to-upstream 2686 Insert section showing commits that haven’t been pushed to the 2687 upstream yet. 2688 2689 -- Function: magit-insert-unpushed-to-pushremote 2690 Insert section showing commits that haven’t been pushed to the 2691 push-remote yet. 2692 2693 The following functions can also be added to the above hook: 2694 2695 -- Function: magit-insert-tracked-files 2696 Insert a tree of tracked files. 2697 2698 -- Function: magit-insert-ignored-files 2699 Insert a tree of ignored files. Its possible to limit the logs in 2700 the current buffer to a certain directory using ‘D = f <DIRECTORY> 2701 RET g’. If you do that, then that that also affects this command. 2702 2703 The log filter can be used to limit to multiple files. In that 2704 case this function only respects the first of the files and only if 2705 it is a directory. 2706 2707 -- Function: magit-insert-skip-worktree-files 2708 Insert a tree of skip-worktree files. If the first element of 2709 ‘magit-buffer-diff-files’ is a directory, then limit the list to 2710 files below that. The value of that variable can be set using ‘D 2711 -- DIRECTORY RET g’. 2712 2713 -- Function: magit-insert-assumed-unchanged-files 2714 Insert a tree of files that are assumed to be unchanged. If the 2715 first element of ‘magit-buffer-diff-files’ is a directory, then 2716 limit the list to files below that. The value of that variable can 2717 be set using ‘D -- DIRECTORY RET g’. 2718 2719 -- Function: magit-insert-unpulled-or-recent-commits 2720 Insert section showing unpulled or recent commits. If an upstream 2721 is configured for the current branch and it is ahead of the current 2722 branch, then show the missing commits. Otherwise, show the last 2723 ‘magit-log-section-commit-count’ commits. 2724 2725 -- Function: magit-insert-recent-commits 2726 Insert section showing the last ‘magit-log-section-commit-count’ 2727 commits. 2728 2729 -- User Option: magit-log-section-commit-count 2730 How many recent commits ‘magit-insert-recent-commits’ and 2731 ‘magit-insert-unpulled-or-recent-commits’ (provided there are no 2732 unpulled commits) show. 2733 2734 -- Function: magit-insert-unpulled-cherries 2735 Insert section showing unpulled commits. Like 2736 ‘magit-insert-unpulled-commits’ but prefix each commit that has not 2737 been applied yet (i.e., a commit with a patch-id not shared with 2738 any local commit) with "+", and all others with "-". 2739 2740 -- Function: magit-insert-unpushed-cherries 2741 Insert section showing unpushed commits. Like 2742 ‘magit-insert-unpushed-commits’ but prefix each commit which has 2743 not been applied to upstream yet (i.e., a commit with a patch-id 2744 not shared with any upstream commit) with "+" and all others with 2745 "-". 2746 2747 See *note References Buffer:: for some more section inserters, which 2748 could be used here. 2749 2750 2751 File: magit.info, Node: Status Header Sections, Next: Status Module Sections, Prev: Status Sections, Up: Status Buffer 2752 2753 5.1.2 Status Header Sections 2754 ---------------------------- 2755 2756 The contents of status buffers is controlled using the hook 2757 ‘magit-status-sections-hook’ (see *note Status Sections::). 2758 2759 By default ‘magit-insert-status-headers’ is the first member of that 2760 hook variable. 2761 2762 -- Function: magit-insert-status-headers 2763 Insert headers sections appropriate for ‘magit-status-mode’ 2764 buffers. The sections are inserted by running the functions on the 2765 hook ‘magit-status-headers-hook’. 2766 2767 -- User Option: magit-status-headers-hook 2768 Hook run to insert headers sections into the status buffer. 2769 2770 This hook is run by ‘magit-insert-status-headers’, which in turn 2771 has to be a member of ‘magit-status-sections-hook’ to be used at 2772 all. 2773 2774 By default the following functions are members of the above hook: 2775 2776 -- Function: magit-insert-error-header 2777 Insert a header line showing the message about the Git error that 2778 just occurred. 2779 2780 This function is only aware of the last error that occur when Git 2781 was run for side-effects. If, for example, an error occurs while 2782 generating a diff, then that error won’t be inserted. Refreshing 2783 the status buffer causes this section to disappear again. 2784 2785 -- Function: magit-insert-diff-filter-header 2786 Insert a header line showing the effective diff filters. 2787 2788 -- Function: magit-insert-head-branch-header 2789 Insert a header line about the current branch or detached ‘HEAD’. 2790 2791 -- Function: magit-insert-upstream-branch-header 2792 Insert a header line about the branch that is usually pulled into 2793 the current branch. 2794 2795 -- Function: magit-insert-push-branch-header 2796 Insert a header line about the branch that the current branch is 2797 usually pushed to. 2798 2799 -- Function: magit-insert-tags-header 2800 Insert a header line about the current and/or next tag, along with 2801 the number of commits between the tag and ‘HEAD’. 2802 2803 The following functions can also be added to the above hook: 2804 2805 -- Function: magit-insert-repo-header 2806 Insert a header line showing the path to the repository top-level. 2807 2808 -- Function: magit-insert-remote-header 2809 Insert a header line about the remote of the current branch. 2810 2811 If no remote is configured for the current branch, then fall back 2812 showing the "origin" remote, or if that does not exist the first 2813 remote in alphabetic order. 2814 2815 -- Function: magit-insert-user-header 2816 Insert a header line about the current user. 2817 2818 2819 File: magit.info, Node: Status Module Sections, Next: Status Options, Prev: Status Header Sections, Up: Status Buffer 2820 2821 5.1.3 Status Module Sections 2822 ---------------------------- 2823 2824 The contents of status buffers is controlled using the hook 2825 ‘magit-status-sections-hook’ (see *note Status Sections::). 2826 2827 By default ‘magit-insert-modules’ is _not_ a member of that hook 2828 variable. 2829 2830 -- Function: magit-insert-modules 2831 Insert submodule sections. 2832 2833 Hook ‘magit-module-sections-hook’ controls which module sections 2834 are inserted, and option ‘magit-module-sections-nested’ controls 2835 whether they are wrapped in an additional section. 2836 2837 -- User Option: magit-module-sections-hook 2838 Hook run by ‘magit-insert-modules’. 2839 2840 -- User Option: magit-module-sections-nested 2841 This option controls whether ‘magit-insert-modules’ wraps inserted 2842 sections in an additional section. 2843 2844 If this is non-nil, then only a single top-level section is 2845 inserted. If it is nil, then all sections listed in 2846 ‘magit-module-sections-hook’ become top-level sections. 2847 2848 -- Function: magit-insert-modules-overview 2849 Insert sections for all submodules. For each section insert the 2850 path, the branch, and the output of ‘git describe --tags’, or, 2851 failing that, the abbreviated HEAD commit hash. 2852 2853 Press ‘RET’ on such a submodule section to show its own status 2854 buffer. Press ‘RET’ on the "Modules" section to display a list of 2855 submodules in a separate buffer. This shows additional information 2856 not displayed in the super-repository’s status buffer. 2857 2858 -- Function: magit-insert-modules-unpulled-from-upstream 2859 Insert sections for modules that haven’t been pulled from the 2860 upstream yet. These sections can be expanded to show the 2861 respective commits. 2862 2863 -- Function: magit-insert-modules-unpulled-from-pushremote 2864 Insert sections for modules that haven’t been pulled from the 2865 push-remote yet. These sections can be expanded to show the 2866 respective commits. 2867 2868 -- Function: magit-insert-modules-unpushed-to-upstream 2869 Insert sections for modules that haven’t been pushed to the 2870 upstream yet. These sections can be expanded to show the 2871 respective commits. 2872 2873 -- Function: magit-insert-modules-unpushed-to-pushremote 2874 Insert sections for modules that haven’t been pushed to the 2875 push-remote yet. These sections can be expanded to show the 2876 respective commits. 2877 2878 2879 File: magit.info, Node: Status Options, Prev: Status Module Sections, Up: Status Buffer 2880 2881 5.1.4 Status Options 2882 -------------------- 2883 2884 -- User Option: magit-status-margin 2885 This option specifies whether the margin is initially shown in 2886 Magit-Status mode buffers and how it is formatted. 2887 2888 The value has the form ‘(INIT STYLE WIDTH AUTHOR AUTHOR-WIDTH)’. 2889 2890 • If INIT is non-nil, then the margin is shown initially. 2891 • STYLE controls how to format the author or committer date. It 2892 can be one of ‘age’ (to show the age of the commit), 2893 ‘age-abbreviated’ (to abbreviate the time unit to a 2894 character), or a string (suitable for ‘format-time-string’) to 2895 show the actual date. Option 2896 ‘magit-log-margin-show-committer-date’ controls which date is 2897 being displayed. 2898 • WIDTH controls the width of the margin. This exists for 2899 forward compatibility and currently the value should not be 2900 changed. 2901 • AUTHOR controls whether the name of the author is also shown 2902 by default. 2903 • AUTHOR-WIDTH has to be an integer. When the name of the 2904 author is shown, then this specifies how much space is used to 2905 do so. 2906 2907 Also see the proceeding section for more options concerning status 2908 buffers. 2909 2910 2911 File: magit.info, Node: Repository List, Next: Logging, Prev: Status Buffer, Up: Inspecting 2912 2913 5.2 Repository List 2914 =================== 2915 2916 -- Command: magit-list-repositories 2917 This command displays a list of repositories in a separate buffer. 2918 2919 The option ‘magit-repository-directories’ controls which 2920 repositories are displayed. 2921 2922 -- User Option: magit-repolist-columns 2923 This option controls what columns are displayed by the command 2924 ‘magit-list-repositories’ and how they are displayed. 2925 2926 Each element has the form ‘(HEADER WIDTH FORMAT PROPS)’. 2927 2928 HEADER is the string displayed in the header. WIDTH is the width 2929 of the column. FORMAT is a function that is called with one 2930 argument, the repository identification (usually its basename), and 2931 with ‘default-directory’ bound to the toplevel of its working tree. 2932 It has to return a string to be inserted or nil. PROPS is an alist 2933 that supports the keys ‘:right-align’, ‘:pad-right’ and ‘:sort’. 2934 2935 The ‘:sort’ function has a weird interface described in the 2936 docstring of ‘tabulated-list--get-sort’. Alternatively ‘<’ and 2937 ‘magit-repolist-version<’ can be used as those functions are 2938 automatically replaced with functions that satisfy the interface. 2939 Set ‘:sort’ to ‘nil’ to inhibit sorting; if unspecified, then the 2940 column is sortable using the default sorter. 2941 2942 You may wish to display a range of numeric columns using just one 2943 character per column and without any padding between columns, in 2944 which case you should use an appropriate HEADER, set WIDTH to 1, 2945 and set ‘:pad-right’ to 9. ‘+’ is substituted for numbers higher 2946 than 9. 2947 2948 The following functions can be added to the above option: 2949 2950 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-ident 2951 This function inserts the identification of the repository. 2952 Usually this is just its basename. 2953 2954 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-path 2955 This function inserts the absolute path of the repository. 2956 2957 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-version 2958 This function inserts a description of the repository’s ‘HEAD’ 2959 revision. 2960 2961 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-branch 2962 This function inserts the name of the current branch. 2963 2964 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-upstream 2965 This function inserts the name of the upstream branch of the 2966 current branch. 2967 2968 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-branches 2969 This function inserts the number of branches. 2970 2971 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-stashes 2972 This function inserts the number of stashes. 2973 2974 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-flag 2975 This function inserts a flag as specified by 2976 ‘magit-repolist-column-flag-alist’. 2977 2978 By default this indicates whether there are uncommitted changes. 2979 2980 • ‘N’ if there is at least one untracked file. 2981 • ‘U’ if there is at least one unstaged file. 2982 • ‘S’ if there is at least one staged file. 2983 2984 Only the first one of these that applies is shown. 2985 2986 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-flags 2987 This functions insert all flags as specified by 2988 ‘magit-repolist-column-flag-alist’. 2989 2990 This is an alternative to function ‘magit-repolist-column-flag’, 2991 which only lists the first one found. 2992 2993 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-unpulled-from-upstream 2994 This function inserts the number of upstream commits not in the 2995 current branch. 2996 2997 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-unpulled-from-pushremote 2998 This function inserts the number of commits in the push branch but 2999 not the current branch. 3000 3001 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-unpushed-to-upstream 3002 This function inserts the number of commits in the current branch 3003 but not its upstream. 3004 3005 -- Function: magit-repolist-column-unpushed-to-pushremote 3006 This function inserts the number of commits in the current branch 3007 but not its push branch. 3008 3009 The following commands are available in repolist buffers: 3010 3011 ‘<RET>’ (‘magit-repolist-status’) 3012 This command shows the status for the repository at point. 3013 3014 ‘m’ (‘magit-repolist-mark’) 3015 This command marks the repository at point. 3016 3017 ‘u’ (‘magit-repolist-unmark’) 3018 This command unmarks the repository at point. 3019 3020 ‘f’ (‘magit-repolist-fetch’) 3021 This command fetches all marked repositories. If no repositories 3022 are marked, then it offers to fetch all displayed repositories. 3023 3024 ‘5’ (‘magit-repolist-find-file-other-frame’) 3025 This command reads a relative file-name (without completion) and 3026 opens the respective file in each marked repository in a new frame. 3027 If no repositories are marked, then it offers to do this for all 3028 displayed repositories. 3029 3030 3031 File: magit.info, Node: Logging, Next: Diffing, Prev: Repository List, Up: Inspecting 3032 3033 5.3 Logging 3034 =========== 3035 3036 The status buffer contains logs for the unpushed and unpulled commits, 3037 but that obviously isn’t enough. The transient prefix command 3038 ‘magit-log’, on ‘l’, features several suffix commands, which show a 3039 specific log in a separate log buffer. 3040 3041 Like other transient prefix commands, ‘magit-log’ also features 3042 several infix arguments that can be changed before invoking one of the 3043 suffix commands. However, in the case of the log transient, these 3044 arguments may be taken from those currently in use in the current 3045 repository’s log buffer, depending on the value of 3046 ‘magit-prefix-use-buffer-arguments’ (see *note Transient Arguments and 3047 Buffer Variables::). 3048 3049 For information about the various arguments, see *note 3050 (gitman)git-log::. The switch ‘++order=VALUE’ is converted to one of 3051 ‘--author-date-order’, ‘--date-order’, or ‘--topo-order’ before being 3052 passed to ‘git log’. 3053 3054 The log transient also features several reflog commands. See *note 3055 Reflog::. 3056 3057 ‘l’ (‘magit-log’) 3058 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 3059 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 3060 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 3061 3062 ‘l l’ (‘magit-log-current’) 3063 Show log for the current branch. When ‘HEAD’ is detached or with a 3064 prefix argument, show log for one or more revs read from the 3065 minibuffer. 3066 3067 ‘l h’ (‘magit-log-head’) 3068 Show log for ‘HEAD’. 3069 3070 ‘l u’ (‘magit-log-related’) 3071 Show log for the current branch, its upstream and its push target. 3072 When the upstream is a local branch, then also show its own 3073 upstream. When ‘HEAD’ is detached, then show log for that, the 3074 previously checked out branch and its upstream and push-target. 3075 3076 ‘l o’ (‘magit-log-other’) 3077 Show log for one or more revs read from the minibuffer. The user 3078 can input any revision or revisions separated by a space, or even 3079 ranges, but only branches, tags, and a representation of the commit 3080 at point are available as completion candidates. 3081 3082 ‘l L’ (‘magit-log-branches’) 3083 Show log for all local branches and ‘HEAD’. 3084 3085 ‘l b’ (‘magit-log-all-branches’) 3086 Show log for all local and remote branches and ‘HEAD’. 3087 3088 ‘l a’ (‘magit-log-all’) 3089 Show log for all references and ‘HEAD’. 3090 3091 Two additional commands that show the log for the file or blob that 3092 is being visited in the current buffer exists, see *note Commands for 3093 Buffers Visiting Files::. The command ‘magit-cherry’ also shows a log, 3094 see *note Cherries::. 3095 3096 * Menu: 3097 3098 * Refreshing Logs:: 3099 * Log Buffer:: 3100 * Log Margin:: 3101 * Select from Log:: 3102 * Reflog:: 3103 * Cherries:: 3104 3105 3106 File: magit.info, Node: Refreshing Logs, Next: Log Buffer, Up: Logging 3107 3108 5.3.1 Refreshing Logs 3109 --------------------- 3110 3111 The transient prefix command ‘magit-log-refresh’, on ‘L’, can be used to 3112 change the log arguments used in the current buffer, without changing 3113 which log is shown. This works in dedicated log buffers, but also in 3114 the status buffer. 3115 3116 ‘L’ (‘magit-log-refresh’) 3117 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 3118 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 3119 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 3120 3121 ‘L g’ (‘magit-log-refresh’) 3122 This suffix command sets the local log arguments for the current 3123 buffer. 3124 3125 ‘L s’ (‘magit-log-set-default-arguments’) 3126 This suffix command sets the default log arguments for buffers of 3127 the same type as that of the current buffer. Other existing 3128 buffers of the same type are not affected because their local 3129 values have already been initialized. 3130 3131 ‘L w’ (‘magit-log-save-default-arguments’) 3132 This suffix command sets the default log arguments for buffers of 3133 the same type as that of the current buffer, and saves the value 3134 for future sessions. Other existing buffers of the same type are 3135 not affected because their local values have already been 3136 initialized. 3137 3138 ‘L L’ (‘magit-toggle-margin’) 3139 Show or hide the margin. 3140 3141 3142 File: magit.info, Node: Log Buffer, Next: Log Margin, Prev: Refreshing Logs, Up: Logging 3143 3144 5.3.2 Log Buffer 3145 ---------------- 3146 3147 ‘L’ (‘magit-log-refresh’) 3148 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 3149 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 3150 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 3151 3152 See *note Refreshing Logs::. 3153 3154 ‘q’ (‘magit-log-bury-buffer’) 3155 Bury the current buffer or the revision buffer in the same frame. 3156 Like ‘magit-mode-bury-buffer’ (which see) but with a negative 3157 prefix argument instead bury the revision buffer, provided it is 3158 displayed in the current frame. 3159 3160 ‘C-c C-b’ (‘magit-go-backward’) 3161 Move backward in current buffer’s history. 3162 3163 ‘C-c C-f’ (‘magit-go-forward’) 3164 Move forward in current buffer’s history. 3165 3166 ‘C-c C-n’ (‘magit-log-move-to-parent’) 3167 Move to a parent of the current commit. By default, this is the 3168 first parent, but a numeric prefix can be used to specify another 3169 parent. 3170 3171 ‘j’ (‘magit-log-move-to-revision’) 3172 Read a revision and move to it in current log buffer. 3173 3174 If the chosen reference or revision isn’t being displayed in the 3175 current log buffer, then inform the user about that and do nothing 3176 else. 3177 3178 If invoked outside any log buffer, then display the log buffer of 3179 the current repository first; creating it if necessary. 3180 3181 ‘<SPC>’ (‘magit-diff-show-or-scroll-up’) 3182 Update the commit or diff buffer for the thing at point. 3183 3184 Either show the commit or stash at point in the appropriate buffer, 3185 or if that buffer is already being displayed in the current frame 3186 and contains information about that commit or stash, then instead 3187 scroll the buffer up. If there is no commit or stash at point, 3188 then prompt for a commit. 3189 3190 ‘<DEL>’ (‘magit-diff-show-or-scroll-down’) 3191 Update the commit or diff buffer for the thing at point. 3192 3193 Either show the commit or stash at point in the appropriate buffer, 3194 or if that buffer is already being displayed in the current frame 3195 and contains information about that commit or stash, then instead 3196 scroll the buffer down. If there is no commit or stash at point, 3197 then prompt for a commit. 3198 3199 ‘=’ (‘magit-log-toggle-commit-limit’) 3200 Toggle the number of commits the current log buffer is limited to. 3201 If the number of commits is currently limited, then remove that 3202 limit. Otherwise set it to 256. 3203 3204 ‘+’ (‘magit-log-double-commit-limit’) 3205 Double the number of commits the current log buffer is limited to. 3206 3207 ‘-’ (‘magit-log-half-commit-limit’) 3208 Half the number of commits the current log buffer is limited to. 3209 3210 -- User Option: magit-log-auto-more 3211 Insert more log entries automatically when moving past the last 3212 entry. Only considered when moving past the last entry with 3213 ‘magit-goto-*-section’ commands. 3214 3215 -- User Option: magit-log-show-refname-after-summary 3216 Whether to show the refnames after the commit summaries. This is 3217 useful if you use really long branch names. 3218 3219 -- User Option: magit-log-show-color-graph-limit 3220 When showing more commits than specified by this option, then the 3221 ‘--color’ argument, if specified, is silently dropped. This is 3222 necessary because the ‘ansi-color’ library, which is used to turn 3223 control sequences into faces, is just too slow. 3224 3225 -- User Option: magit-log-show-signatures-limit 3226 When showing more commits than specified by this option, then the 3227 ‘--show-signature’ argument, if specified, is silently dropped. 3228 This is necessary because checking the signature of a large number 3229 of commits is just too slow. 3230 3231 Magit displays references in logs a bit differently from how Git does 3232 it. 3233 3234 Local branches are blue and remote branches are green. Of course 3235 that depends on the used theme, as do the colors used for other types of 3236 references. The current branch has a box around it, as do remote 3237 branches that are their respective remote’s ‘HEAD’ branch. 3238 3239 If a local branch and its push-target point at the same commit, then 3240 their names are combined to preserve space and to make that relationship 3241 visible. For example: 3242 3243 origin/feature 3244 [green][blue-] 3245 3246 instead of 3247 3248 feature origin/feature 3249 [blue-] [green-------] 3250 3251 Also note that while the transient features the ‘--show-signature’ 3252 argument, that won’t actually be used when enabled, because Magit 3253 defaults to use just one line per commit. Instead the commit colorized 3254 to indicate the validity of the signed commit object, using the faces 3255 named ‘magit-signature-*’ (which see). 3256 3257 For a description of ‘magit-log-margin’ see *note Log Margin::. 3258 3259 3260 File: magit.info, Node: Log Margin, Next: Select from Log, Prev: Log Buffer, Up: Logging 3261 3262 5.3.3 Log Margin 3263 ---------------- 3264 3265 In buffers which show one or more logs, it is possible to show 3266 additional information about each commit in the margin. The options 3267 used to configure the margin are named ‘magit-INFIX-margin’, where INFIX 3268 is the same as in the respective major-mode ‘magit-INFIX-mode’. In 3269 regular log buffers that would be ‘magit-log-margin’. 3270 3271 -- User Option: magit-log-margin 3272 This option specifies whether the margin is initially shown in 3273 Magit-Log mode buffers and how it is formatted. 3274 3275 The value has the form ‘(INIT STYLE WIDTH AUTHOR AUTHOR-WIDTH)’. 3276 3277 • If INIT is non-nil, then the margin is shown initially. 3278 • STYLE controls how to format the author or committer date. It 3279 can be one of ‘age’ (to show the age of the commit), 3280 ‘age-abbreviated’ (to abbreviate the time unit to a 3281 character), or a string (suitable for ‘format-time-string’) to 3282 show the actual date. Option 3283 ‘magit-log-margin-show-committer-date’ controls which date is 3284 being displayed. 3285 • WIDTH controls the width of the margin. This exists for 3286 forward compatibility and currently the value should not be 3287 changed. 3288 • AUTHOR controls whether the name of the author is also shown 3289 by default. 3290 • AUTHOR-WIDTH has to be an integer. When the name of the 3291 author is shown, then this specifies how much space is used to 3292 do so. 3293 3294 You can change the STYLE and AUTHOR-WIDTH of all ‘magit-INFIX-margin’ 3295 options to the same values by customizing ‘magit-log-margin’ *before* 3296 ‘magit’ is loaded. If you do that, then the respective values for the 3297 other options will default to what you have set for that variable. 3298 Likewise if you set INIT in ‘magit-log-margin’ to ‘nil’, then that is 3299 used in the default of all other options. But setting it to ‘t’, i.e. 3300 re-enforcing the default for that option, does not carry to other 3301 options. 3302 3303 -- User Option: magit-log-margin-show-committer-date 3304 This option specifies whether to show the committer date in the 3305 margin. This option only controls whether the committer date is 3306 displayed instead of the author date. Whether some date is 3307 displayed in the margin and whether the margin is displayed at all 3308 is controlled by other options. 3309 3310 ‘L’ (‘magit-margin-settings’) 3311 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands, 3312 each of which changes the appearance of the margin in some way. 3313 3314 In some buffers that support the margin, ‘L’ is instead bound to 3315 ‘magit-log-refresh’, but that transient features the same commands, and 3316 then some other unrelated commands. 3317 3318 ‘L L’ (‘magit-toggle-margin’) 3319 This command shows or hides the margin. 3320 3321 ‘L l’ (‘magit-cycle-margin-style’) 3322 This command cycles the style used for the margin. 3323 3324 ‘L d’ (‘magit-toggle-margin-details’) 3325 This command shows or hides details in the margin. 3326 3327 3328 File: magit.info, Node: Select from Log, Next: Reflog, Prev: Log Margin, Up: Logging 3329 3330 5.3.4 Select from Log 3331 --------------------- 3332 3333 When the user has to select a recent commit that is reachable from 3334 ‘HEAD’, using regular completion would be inconvenient (because most 3335 humans cannot remember hashes or "HEAD~5", at least not without double 3336 checking). Instead a log buffer is used to select the commit, which has 3337 the advantage that commits are presented in order and with the commit 3338 message. 3339 3340 Such selection logs are used when selecting the beginning of a rebase 3341 and when selecting the commit to be squashed into. 3342 3343 In addition to the key bindings available in all log buffers, the 3344 following additional key bindings are available in selection log 3345 buffers: 3346 3347 ‘C-c C-c’ (‘magit-log-select-pick’) 3348 Select the commit at point and act on it. Call 3349 ‘magit-log-select-pick-function’ with the selected commit as 3350 argument. 3351 3352 ‘C-c C-k’ (‘magit-log-select-quit’) 3353 Abort selecting a commit, don’t act on any commit. 3354 3355 -- User Option: magit-log-select-margin 3356 This option specifies whether the margin is initially shown in 3357 Magit-Log-Select mode buffers and how it is formatted. 3358 3359 The value has the form ‘(INIT STYLE WIDTH AUTHOR AUTHOR-WIDTH)’. 3360 3361 • If INIT is non-nil, then the margin is shown initially. 3362 • STYLE controls how to format the author or committer date. It 3363 can be one of ‘age’ (to show the age of the commit), 3364 ‘age-abbreviated’ (to abbreviate the time unit to a 3365 character), or a string (suitable for ‘format-time-string’) to 3366 show the actual date. Option 3367 ‘magit-log-margin-show-committer-date’ controls which date is 3368 being displayed. 3369 • WIDTH controls the width of the margin. This exists for 3370 forward compatibility and currently the value should not be 3371 changed. 3372 • AUTHOR controls whether the name of the author is also shown 3373 by default. 3374 • AUTHOR-WIDTH has to be an integer. When the name of the 3375 author is shown, then this specifies how much space is used to 3376 do so. 3377 3378 3379 File: magit.info, Node: Reflog, Next: Cherries, Prev: Select from Log, Up: Logging 3380 3381 5.3.5 Reflog 3382 ------------ 3383 3384 Also see *note (gitman)git-reflog::. 3385 3386 These reflog commands are available from the log transient. See 3387 *note Logging::. 3388 3389 ‘l r’ (‘magit-reflog-current’) 3390 Display the reflog of the current branch. 3391 3392 ‘l O’ (‘magit-reflog-other’) 3393 Display the reflog of a branch or another ref. 3394 3395 ‘l H’ (‘magit-reflog-head’) 3396 Display the ‘HEAD’ reflog. 3397 3398 -- User Option: magit-reflog-margin 3399 This option specifies whether the margin is initially shown in 3400 Magit-Reflog mode buffers and how it is formatted. 3401 3402 The value has the form ‘(INIT STYLE WIDTH AUTHOR AUTHOR-WIDTH)’. 3403 3404 • If INIT is non-nil, then the margin is shown initially. 3405 • STYLE controls how to format the author or committer date. It 3406 can be one of ‘age’ (to show the age of the commit), 3407 ‘age-abbreviated’ (to abbreviate the time unit to a 3408 character), or a string (suitable for ‘format-time-string’) to 3409 show the actual date. Option 3410 ‘magit-log-margin-show-committer-date’ controls which date is 3411 being displayed. 3412 • WIDTH controls the width of the margin. This exists for 3413 forward compatibility and currently the value should not be 3414 changed. 3415 • AUTHOR controls whether the name of the author is also shown 3416 by default. 3417 • AUTHOR-WIDTH has to be an integer. When the name of the 3418 author is shown, then this specifies how much space is used to 3419 do so. 3420 3421 3422 File: magit.info, Node: Cherries, Prev: Reflog, Up: Logging 3423 3424 5.3.6 Cherries 3425 -------------- 3426 3427 Cherries are commits that haven’t been applied upstream (yet), and are 3428 usually visualized using a log. Each commit is prefixed with ‘-’ if it 3429 has an equivalent in the upstream and ‘+’ if it does not, i.e., if it is 3430 a cherry. 3431 3432 The command ‘magit-cherry’ shows cherries for a single branch, but 3433 the references buffer (see *note References Buffer::) can show cherries 3434 for multiple "upstreams" at once. 3435 3436 Also see *note (gitman)git-reflog::. 3437 3438 ‘Y’ (‘magit-cherry’) 3439 Show commits that are in a certain branch but that have not been 3440 merged in the upstream branch. 3441 3442 -- User Option: magit-cherry-margin 3443 This option specifies whether the margin is initially shown in 3444 Magit-Cherry mode buffers and how it is formatted. 3445 3446 The value has the form ‘(INIT STYLE WIDTH AUTHOR AUTHOR-WIDTH)’. 3447 3448 • If INIT is non-nil, then the margin is shown initially. 3449 • STYLE controls how to format the author or committer date. It 3450 can be one of ‘age’ (to show the age of the commit), 3451 ‘age-abbreviated’ (to abbreviate the time unit to a 3452 character), or a string (suitable for ‘format-time-string’) to 3453 show the actual date. Option 3454 ‘magit-log-margin-show-committer-date’ controls which date is 3455 being displayed. 3456 • WIDTH controls the width of the margin. This exists for 3457 forward compatibility and currently the value should not be 3458 changed. 3459 • AUTHOR controls whether the name of the author is also shown 3460 by default. 3461 • AUTHOR-WIDTH has to be an integer. When the name of the 3462 author is shown, then this specifies how much space is used to 3463 do so. 3464 3465 3466 File: magit.info, Node: Diffing, Next: Ediffing, Prev: Logging, Up: Inspecting 3467 3468 5.4 Diffing 3469 =========== 3470 3471 The status buffer contains diffs for the staged and unstaged commits, 3472 but that obviously isn’t enough. The transient prefix command 3473 ‘magit-diff’, on ‘d’, features several suffix commands, which show a 3474 specific diff in a separate diff buffer. 3475 3476 Like other transient prefix commands, ‘magit-diff’ also features 3477 several infix arguments that can be changed before invoking one of the 3478 suffix commands. However, in the case of the diff transient, these 3479 arguments may be taken from those currently in use in the current 3480 repository’s diff buffer, depending on the value of 3481 ‘magit-prefix-use-buffer-arguments’ (see *note Transient Arguments and 3482 Buffer Variables::). 3483 3484 Also see *note (gitman)git-diff::. 3485 3486 ‘d’ (‘magit-diff’) 3487 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 3488 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 3489 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 3490 3491 ‘d d’ (‘magit-diff-dwim’) 3492 Show changes for the thing at point. 3493 3494 ‘d r’ (‘magit-diff-range’) 3495 Show differences between two commits. 3496 3497 RANGE should be a range (A..B or A...B) but can also be a single 3498 commit. If one side of the range is omitted, then it defaults to 3499 ‘HEAD’. If just a commit is given, then changes in the working 3500 tree relative to that commit are shown. 3501 3502 If the region is active, use the revisions on the first and last 3503 line of the region. With a prefix argument, instead of diffing the 3504 revisions, choose a revision to view changes along, starting at the 3505 common ancestor of both revisions (i.e., use a "..." range). 3506 3507 ‘d w’ (‘magit-diff-working-tree’) 3508 Show changes between the current working tree and the ‘HEAD’ 3509 commit. With a prefix argument show changes between the working 3510 tree and a commit read from the minibuffer. 3511 3512 ‘d s’ (‘magit-diff-staged’) 3513 Show changes between the index and the ‘HEAD’ commit. With a 3514 prefix argument show changes between the index and a commit read 3515 from the minibuffer. 3516 3517 ‘d u’ (‘magit-diff-unstaged’) 3518 Show changes between the working tree and the index. 3519 3520 ‘d p’ (‘magit-diff-paths’) 3521 Show changes between any two files on disk. 3522 3523 All of the above suffix commands update the repository’s diff buffer. 3524 The diff transient also features two commands which show differences in 3525 another buffer: 3526 3527 ‘d c’ (‘magit-show-commit’) 3528 Show the commit at point. If there is no commit at point or with a 3529 prefix argument, prompt for a commit. 3530 3531 ‘d t’ (‘magit-stash-show’) 3532 Show all diffs of a stash in a buffer. 3533 3534 Two additional commands that show the diff for the file or blob that 3535 is being visited in the current buffer exists, see *note Commands for 3536 Buffers Visiting Files::. 3537 3538 * Menu: 3539 3540 * Refreshing Diffs:: 3541 * Commands Available in Diffs:: 3542 * Diff Options:: 3543 * Revision Buffer:: 3544 3545 3546 File: magit.info, Node: Refreshing Diffs, Next: Commands Available in Diffs, Up: Diffing 3547 3548 5.4.1 Refreshing Diffs 3549 ---------------------- 3550 3551 The transient prefix command ‘magit-diff-refresh’, on ‘D’, can be used 3552 to change the diff arguments used in the current buffer, without 3553 changing which diff is shown. This works in dedicated diff buffers, but 3554 also in the status buffer. 3555 3556 (There is one exception; diff arguments cannot be changed in buffers 3557 created by ‘magit-merge-preview’ because the underlying Git command does 3558 not support these arguments.) 3559 3560 ‘D’ (‘magit-diff-refresh’) 3561 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 3562 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 3563 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 3564 3565 ‘D g’ (‘magit-diff-refresh’) 3566 This suffix command sets the local diff arguments for the current 3567 buffer. 3568 3569 ‘D s’ (‘magit-diff-set-default-arguments’) 3570 This suffix command sets the default diff arguments for buffers of 3571 the same type as that of the current buffer. Other existing 3572 buffers of the same type are not affected because their local 3573 values have already been initialized. 3574 3575 ‘D w’ (‘magit-diff-save-default-arguments’) 3576 This suffix command sets the default diff arguments for buffers of 3577 the same type as that of the current buffer, and saves the value 3578 for future sessions. Other existing buffers of the same type are 3579 not affected because their local values have already been 3580 initialized. 3581 3582 ‘D t’ (‘magit-diff-toggle-refine-hunk’) 3583 This command toggles hunk refinement on or off. 3584 3585 ‘D r’ (‘magit-diff-switch-range-type’) 3586 This command converts the diff range type from "revA..revB" to 3587 "revB...revA", or vice versa. 3588 3589 ‘D f’ (‘magit-diff-flip-revs’) 3590 This command swaps revisions in the diff range from "revA..revB" to 3591 "revB..revA", or vice versa. 3592 3593 ‘D F’ (‘magit-diff-toggle-file-filter’) 3594 This command toggles the file restriction of the diffs in the 3595 current buffer, allowing you to quickly switch between viewing all 3596 the changes in the commit and the restricted subset. As a special 3597 case, when this command is called from a log buffer, it toggles the 3598 file restriction in the repository’s revision buffer, which is 3599 useful when you display a revision from a log buffer that is 3600 restricted to a file or files. 3601 3602 In addition to the above transient, which allows changing any of the 3603 supported arguments, there also exist some commands that change only a 3604 particular argument. 3605 3606 ‘-’ (‘magit-diff-less-context’) 3607 This command decreases the context for diff hunks by COUNT lines. 3608 3609 ‘+’ (‘magit-diff-more-context’) 3610 This command increases the context for diff hunks by COUNT lines. 3611 3612 ‘0’ (‘magit-diff-default-context’) 3613 This command resets the context for diff hunks to the default 3614 height. 3615 3616 The following commands quickly change what diff is being displayed 3617 without having to using one of the diff transient. 3618 3619 ‘C-c C-d’ (‘magit-diff-while-committing’) 3620 While committing, this command shows the changes that are about to 3621 be committed. While amending, invoking the command again toggles 3622 between showing just the new changes or all the changes that will 3623 be committed. 3624 3625 This binding is available in the diff buffer as well as the commit 3626 message buffer. 3627 3628 ‘C-c C-b’ (‘magit-go-backward’) 3629 This command moves backward in current buffer’s history. 3630 3631 ‘C-c C-f’ (‘magit-go-forward’) 3632 This command moves forward in current buffer’s history. 3633 3634 3635 File: magit.info, Node: Commands Available in Diffs, Next: Diff Options, Prev: Refreshing Diffs, Up: Diffing 3636 3637 5.4.2 Commands Available in Diffs 3638 --------------------------------- 3639 3640 Some commands are only available if point is inside a diff. 3641 3642 ‘magit-diff-visit-file’ and related commands visit the appropriate 3643 version of the file that the diff at point is about. Likewise 3644 ‘magit-diff-visit-worktree-file’ and related commands visit the worktree 3645 version of the file that the diff at point is about. See *note Visiting 3646 Files and Blobs from a Diff:: for more information and the key bindings. 3647 3648 ‘C-c C-t’ (‘magit-diff-trace-definition’) 3649 This command shows a log for the definition at point. 3650 3651 -- User Option: magit-log-trace-definition-function 3652 The function specified by this option is used by 3653 ‘magit-log-trace-definition’ to determine the function at point. 3654 For major-modes that have special needs, you could set the local 3655 value using the mode’s hook. 3656 3657 ‘C-c C-e’ (‘magit-diff-edit-hunk-commit’) 3658 From a hunk, this command edits the respective commit and visits 3659 the file. 3660 3661 First it visits the file being modified by the hunk at the correct 3662 location using ‘magit-diff-visit-file’. This actually visits a 3663 blob. When point is on a diff header, not within an individual 3664 hunk, then this visits the blob the first hunk is about. 3665 3666 Then it invokes ‘magit-edit-line-commit’, which uses an interactive 3667 rebase to make the commit editable, or if that is not possible 3668 because the commit is not reachable from ‘HEAD’ by checking out 3669 that commit directly. This also causes the actual worktree file to 3670 be visited. 3671 3672 Neither the blob nor the file buffer are killed when finishing the 3673 rebase. If that is undesirable, then it might be better to use 3674 ‘magit-rebase-edit-commit’ instead of this command. 3675 3676 ‘j’ (‘magit-jump-to-diffstat-or-diff’) 3677 This command jumps to the diffstat or diff. When point is on a 3678 file inside the diffstat section, then jump to the respective diff 3679 section. Otherwise, jump to the diffstat section or a child 3680 thereof. 3681 3682 The next two commands are not specific to Magit-Diff mode (or and 3683 Magit buffer for that matter), but it might be worth pointing out that 3684 they are available here too. 3685 3686 ‘<SPC>’ (‘scroll-up’) 3687 This command scrolls text upward. 3688 3689 ‘<DEL>’ (‘scroll-down’) 3690 This command scrolls text downward. 3691 3692 3693 File: magit.info, Node: Diff Options, Next: Revision Buffer, Prev: Commands Available in Diffs, Up: Diffing 3694 3695 5.4.3 Diff Options 3696 ------------------ 3697 3698 -- User Option: magit-diff-refine-hunk 3699 Whether to show word-granularity differences within diff hunks. 3700 3701 • ‘nil’ Never show fine differences. 3702 • ‘t’ Show fine differences for the current diff hunk only. 3703 • ‘all’ Show fine differences for all displayed diff hunks. 3704 3705 -- User Option: magit-diff-refine-ignore-whitespace 3706 Whether to ignore whitespace changes in word-granularity 3707 differences. 3708 3709 -- User Option: magit-diff-adjust-tab-width 3710 Whether to adjust the width of tabs in diffs. 3711 3712 Determining the correct width can be expensive if it requires 3713 opening large and/or many files, so the widths are cached in the 3714 variable ‘magit-diff--tab-width-cache’. Set that to nil to 3715 invalidate the cache. 3716 3717 • ‘nil’ Never adjust tab width. Use ‘tab-width’s value from the 3718 Magit buffer itself instead. 3719 3720 • ‘t’ If the corresponding file-visiting buffer exits, then use 3721 ‘tab-width’’s value from that buffer. Doing this is cheap, so 3722 this value is used even if a corresponding cache entry exists. 3723 3724 • ‘always’ If there is no such buffer, then temporarily visit 3725 the file to determine the value. 3726 3727 • NUMBER Like ‘always’, but don’t visit files larger than NUMBER 3728 bytes. 3729 3730 -- User Option: magit-diff-paint-whitespace 3731 Specify where to highlight whitespace errors. 3732 3733 See ‘magit-diff-highlight-trailing’, 3734 ‘magit-diff-highlight-indentation’. The symbol ‘t’ means in all 3735 diffs, ‘status’ means only in the status buffer, and nil means 3736 nowhere. 3737 3738 • ‘nil’ Never highlight whitespace errors. 3739 • ‘t’ Highlight whitespace errors everywhere. 3740 • ‘uncommitted’ Only highlight whitespace errors in diffs 3741 showing uncommitted changes. For backward compatibility 3742 ‘status’ is treated as a synonym. 3743 3744 -- User Option: magit-diff-paint-whitespace-lines 3745 Specify in what kind of lines to highlight whitespace errors. 3746 3747 • ‘t’ Highlight only in added lines. 3748 • ‘both’ Highlight in added and removed lines. 3749 • ‘all’ Highlight in added, removed and context lines. 3750 3751 -- User Option: magit-diff-highlight-trailing 3752 Whether to highlight whitespace at the end of a line in diffs. 3753 Used only when ‘magit-diff-paint-whitespace’ is non-nil. 3754 3755 -- User Option: magit-diff-highlight-indentation 3756 This option controls whether to highlight the indentation in case 3757 it used the "wrong" indentation style. Indentation is only 3758 highlighted if ‘magit-diff-paint-whitespace’ is also non-nil. 3759 3760 The value is an alist of the form ‘((REGEXP . INDENT)...)’. The 3761 path to the current repository is matched against each element in 3762 reverse order. Therefore if a REGEXP matches, then earlier 3763 elements are not tried. 3764 3765 If the used INDENT is ‘tabs’, highlight indentation with tabs. If 3766 INDENT is an integer, highlight indentation with at least that many 3767 spaces. Otherwise, highlight neither. 3768 3769 -- User Option: magit-diff-hide-trailing-cr-characters 3770 Whether to hide ^M characters at the end of a line in diffs. 3771 3772 -- User Option: magit-diff-highlight-hunk-region-functions 3773 This option specifies the functions used to highlight the 3774 hunk-internal region. 3775 3776 ‘magit-diff-highlight-hunk-region-dim-outside’ overlays the outside 3777 of the hunk internal selection with a face that causes the added 3778 and removed lines to have the same background color as context 3779 lines. This function should not be removed from the value of this 3780 option. 3781 3782 ‘magit-diff-highlight-hunk-region-using-overlays’ and 3783 ‘magit-diff-highlight-hunk-region-using-underline’ emphasize the 3784 region by placing delimiting horizontal lines before and after it. 3785 Both of these functions have glitches which cannot be fixed due to 3786 limitations of Emacs’ display engine. For more information see 3787 <https://github.com/magit/magit/issues/2758> ff. 3788 3789 Instead of, or in addition to, using delimiting horizontal lines, 3790 to emphasize the boundaries, you may wish to emphasize the text 3791 itself, using ‘magit-diff-highlight-hunk-region-using-face’. 3792 3793 In terminal frames it’s not possible to draw lines as the overlay 3794 and underline variants normally do, so there they fall back to 3795 calling the face function instead. 3796 3797 -- User Option: magit-diff-unmarked-lines-keep-foreground 3798 This option controls whether added and removed lines outside the 3799 hunk-internal region only lose their distinct background color or 3800 also the foreground color. Whether the outside of the region is 3801 dimmed at all depends on 3802 ‘magit-diff-highlight-hunk-region-functions’. 3803 3804 -- User Option: magit-diff-extra-stat-arguments 3805 This option specifies additional arguments to be used alongside 3806 ‘--stat’. 3807 3808 The value is a list of zero or more arguments or a function that 3809 takes no argument and returns such a list. These arguments are 3810 allowed here: ‘--stat-width’, ‘--stat-name-width’, 3811 ‘--stat-graph-width’ and ‘--compact-summary’. Also see *note 3812 (gitman)git-diff::. 3813 3814 3815 File: magit.info, Node: Revision Buffer, Prev: Diff Options, Up: Diffing 3816 3817 5.4.4 Revision Buffer 3818 --------------------- 3819 3820 -- User Option: magit-revision-insert-related-refs 3821 Whether to show related branches in revision buffers. 3822 3823 • ‘nil’ Don’t show any related branches. 3824 • ‘t’ Show related local branches. 3825 • ‘all’ Show related local and remote branches. 3826 • ‘mixed’ Show all containing branches and local merged 3827 branches. 3828 3829 -- User Option: magit-revision-show-gravatars 3830 Whether to show gravatar images in revision buffers. 3831 3832 If ‘nil’, then don’t insert any gravatar images. If ‘t’, then 3833 insert both images. If ‘author’ or ‘committer’, then insert only 3834 the respective image. 3835 3836 If you have customized the option ‘magit-revision-headers-format’ 3837 and want to insert the images then you might also have to specify 3838 where to do so. In that case the value has to be a cons-cell of 3839 two regular expressions. The car specifies where to insert the 3840 author’s image. The top half of the image is inserted right after 3841 the matched text, the bottom half on the next line in the same 3842 column. The cdr specifies where to insert the committer’s image, 3843 accordingly. Either the car or the cdr may be nil." 3844 3845 -- User Option: magit-revision-use-hash-sections 3846 Whether to turn hashes inside the commit message into sections. 3847 3848 If non-nil, then hashes inside the commit message are turned into 3849 ‘commit’ sections. There is a trade off to be made between 3850 performance and reliability: 3851 3852 • ‘slow’ calls git for every word to be absolutely sure. 3853 • ‘quick’ skips words less than seven characters long. 3854 • ‘quicker’ additionally skips words that don’t contain a 3855 number. 3856 • ‘quickest’ uses all words that are at least seven characters 3857 long and which contain at least one number as well as at least 3858 one letter. 3859 3860 If nil, then no hashes are turned into sections, but you can still 3861 visit the commit at point using "RET". 3862 3863 The diffs shown in the revision buffer may be automatically 3864 restricted to a subset of the changed files. If the revision buffer is 3865 displayed from a log buffer, the revision buffer will share the same 3866 file restriction as that log buffer (also see the command 3867 ‘magit-diff-toggle-file-filter’). 3868 3869 -- User Option: magit-revision-filter-files-on-follow 3870 Whether showing a commit from a log buffer honors the log’s file 3871 filter when the log arguments include ‘--follow’. 3872 3873 When this option is nil, displaying a commit from a log ignores the 3874 log’s file filter if the log arguments include ‘--follow’. Doing 3875 so avoids showing an empty diff in revision buffers for commits 3876 before a rename event. In such cases, the ‘--patch’ argument of 3877 the log transient can be used to show the file-restricted diffs 3878 inline. 3879 3880 Set this option to non-nil to keep the log’s file restriction even 3881 if ‘--follow’ is present in the log arguments. 3882 3883 If the revision buffer is not displayed from a log buffer, the file 3884 restriction is determined as usual (see *note Transient Arguments and 3885 Buffer Variables::). 3886 3887 3888 File: magit.info, Node: Ediffing, Next: References Buffer, Prev: Diffing, Up: Inspecting 3889 3890 5.5 Ediffing 3891 ============ 3892 3893 This section describes how to enter Ediff from Magit buffers. For 3894 information on how to use Ediff itself, see *note (ediff)Top::. 3895 3896 ‘e’ (‘magit-ediff-dwim’) 3897 Compare, stage, or resolve using Ediff. 3898 3899 This command tries to guess what file, and what commit or range the 3900 user wants to compare, stage, or resolve using Ediff. It might 3901 only be able to guess either the file, or range/commit, in which 3902 case the user is asked about the other. It might not always guess 3903 right, in which case the appropriate ‘magit-ediff-*’ command has to 3904 be used explicitly. If it cannot read the user’s mind at all, then 3905 it asks the user for a command to run. 3906 3907 ‘E’ (‘magit-ediff’) 3908 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 3909 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 3910 3911 ‘E r’ (‘magit-ediff-compare’) 3912 Compare two revisions of a file using Ediff. 3913 3914 If the region is active, use the revisions on the first and last 3915 line of the region. With a prefix argument, instead of diffing the 3916 revisions, choose a revision to view changes along, starting at the 3917 common ancestor of both revisions (i.e., use a "..." range). 3918 3919 ‘E m’ (‘magit-ediff-resolve-rest’) 3920 This command allows you to resolve outstanding conflicts in the 3921 file at point using Ediff. If there is no file at point or if it 3922 doesn’t have any unmerged changes, then this command prompts for a 3923 file. 3924 3925 Provided that the value of ‘merge.conflictstyle’ is ‘diff3’, you 3926 can view the file’s merge-base revision using ‘/’ in the Ediff 3927 control buffer. 3928 3929 The A, B and Ancestor buffers are constructed from the conflict 3930 markers in the worktree file. Because you and/or Git may have 3931 already resolved some conflicts, that means that these buffers may 3932 not contain the actual versions from the respective blobs. 3933 3934 ‘E M’ (‘magit-ediff-resolve-all’) 3935 This command allows you to resolve all conflicts in the file at 3936 point using Ediff. If there is no file at point or if it doesn’t 3937 have any unmerged changes, then this command prompts for a file. 3938 3939 Provided that the value of ‘merge.conflictstyle’ is ‘diff3’, you 3940 can view the file’s merge-base revision using ‘/’ in the Ediff 3941 control buffer. 3942 3943 First the file in the worktree is moved aside, appending the suffix 3944 ‘.ORIG’, so that you could later go back to that version. Then it 3945 is reconstructed from the two sides of the conflict and the 3946 merge-base, if available. 3947 3948 It would be nice if the worktree file were just used as-is, but 3949 Ediff does not support that. This means that all conflicts, that 3950 Git has already resolved, are restored. On the other hand Ediff 3951 also tries to resolve conflicts, and in many cases Ediff and Git 3952 should produce similar results. 3953 3954 However if you have already resolved some conflicts manually, then 3955 those changes are discarded (though you can recover them from the 3956 backup file). In such cases ‘magit-ediff-resolve-rest’ might be 3957 more suitable. 3958 3959 The advantage that this command has over ‘magit-ediff-resolve-rest’ 3960 is that the A, B and Ancestor buffers correspond to blobs from the 3961 respective commits, allowing you to inspect a side in context and 3962 to use Magit commands in these buffers to do so. Blame and log 3963 commands are particularly useful here. 3964 3965 ‘E t’ (‘magit-git-mergetool’) 3966 This command does not actually use Ediff. While it serves the same 3967 purpose as ‘magit-ediff-resolve-rest’, it uses ‘git mergetool 3968 --gui’ to resolve conflicts. 3969 3970 With a prefix argument this acts as a transient prefix command, 3971 allowing the user to select the mergetool and change some settings. 3972 3973 ‘E s’ (‘magit-ediff-stage’) 3974 Stage and unstage changes to a file using Ediff, defaulting to the 3975 file at point. 3976 3977 ‘E u’ (‘magit-ediff-show-unstaged’) 3978 Show unstaged changes to a file using Ediff. 3979 3980 ‘E i’ (‘magit-ediff-show-staged’) 3981 Show staged changes to a file using Ediff. 3982 3983 ‘E w’ (‘magit-ediff-show-working-tree’) 3984 Show changes in a file between ‘HEAD’ and working tree using Ediff. 3985 3986 ‘E c’ (‘magit-ediff-show-commit’) 3987 Show changes to a file introduced by a commit using Ediff. 3988 3989 ‘E z’ (‘magit-ediff-show-stash’) 3990 Show changes to a file introduced by a stash using Ediff. 3991 3992 -- User Option: magit-ediff-dwim-resolve-function 3993 This option controls which function ‘magit-ediff-dwim’ uses to 3994 resolve conflicts. One of ‘magit-ediff-resolve-rest’, 3995 ‘magit-ediff-resolve-all’ or ‘magit-git-mergetool’; which are all 3996 discussed above. 3997 3998 -- User Option: magit-ediff-dwim-show-on-hunks 3999 This option controls what command ‘magit-ediff-dwim’ calls when 4000 point is on uncommitted hunks. When nil, always run 4001 ‘magit-ediff-stage’. Otherwise, use ‘magit-ediff-show-staged’ and 4002 ‘magit-ediff-show-unstaged’ to show staged and unstaged changes, 4003 respectively. 4004 4005 -- User Option: magit-ediff-show-stash-with-index 4006 This option controls whether ‘magit-ediff-show-stash’ includes a 4007 buffer containing the file’s state in the index at the time the 4008 stash was created. This makes it possible to tell which changes in 4009 the stash were staged. 4010 4011 -- User Option: magit-ediff-quit-hook 4012 This hook is run after quitting an Ediff session that was created 4013 using a Magit command. The hook functions are run inside the Ediff 4014 control buffer, and should not change the current buffer. 4015 4016 This is similar to ‘ediff-quit-hook’ but takes the needs of Magit 4017 into account. The regular ‘ediff-quit-hook’ is ignored by Ediff 4018 sessions that were created using a Magit command. 4019 4020 4021 File: magit.info, Node: References Buffer, Next: Bisecting, Prev: Ediffing, Up: Inspecting 4022 4023 5.6 References Buffer 4024 ===================== 4025 4026 ‘y’ (‘magit-show-refs’) 4027 This command lists branches and tags in a dedicated buffer. 4028 4029 However if this command is invoked again from this buffer or if it 4030 is invoked with a prefix argument, then it acts as a transient 4031 prefix command, which binds the following suffix commands and some 4032 infix arguments. 4033 4034 All of the following suffix commands list exactly the same branches 4035 and tags. The only difference the optional feature that can be enabled 4036 by changing the value of ‘magit-refs-show-commit-count’ (see below). 4037 These commands specify a different branch or commit against which all 4038 the other references are compared. 4039 4040 ‘y y’ (‘magit-show-refs-head’) 4041 This command lists branches and tags in a dedicated buffer. Each 4042 reference is being compared with ‘HEAD’. 4043 4044 ‘y c’ (‘magit-show-refs-current’) 4045 This command lists branches and tags in a dedicated buffer. Each 4046 reference is being compared with the current branch or ‘HEAD’ if it 4047 is detached. 4048 4049 ‘y o’ (‘magit-show-refs-other’) 4050 This command lists branches and tags in a dedicated buffer. Each 4051 reference is being compared with a branch read from the user. 4052 4053 ‘y r’ (‘magit-refs-set-show-commit-count’) 4054 This command changes for which refs the commit count is shown. 4055 4056 -- User Option: magit-refs-show-commit-count 4057 Whether to show commit counts in Magit-Refs mode buffers. 4058 4059 • ‘all’ Show counts for branches and tags. 4060 • ‘branch’ Show counts for branches only. 4061 • ‘nil’ Never show counts. 4062 4063 The default is ‘nil’ because anything else can be very expensive. 4064 4065 -- User Option: magit-refs-pad-commit-counts 4066 Whether to pad all commit counts on all sides in Magit-Refs mode 4067 buffers. 4068 4069 If this is nil, then some commit counts are displayed right next to 4070 one of the branches that appear next to the count, without any 4071 space in between. This might look bad if the branch name faces 4072 look too similar to ‘magit-dimmed’. 4073 4074 If this is non-nil, then spaces are placed on both sides of all 4075 commit counts. 4076 4077 -- User Option: magit-refs-show-remote-prefix 4078 Whether to show the remote prefix in lists of remote branches. 4079 4080 Showing the prefix is redundant because the name of the remote is 4081 already shown in the heading preceding the list of its branches. 4082 4083 -- User Option: magit-refs-primary-column-width 4084 Width of the primary column in ‘magit-refs-mode’ buffers. The 4085 primary column is the column that contains the name of the branch 4086 that the current row is about. 4087 4088 If this is an integer, then the column is that many columns wide. 4089 Otherwise it has to be a cons-cell of two integers. The first 4090 specifies the minimal width, the second the maximal width. In that 4091 case the actual width is determined using the length of the names 4092 of the shown local branches. (Remote branches and tags are not 4093 taken into account when calculating to optimal width.) 4094 4095 -- User Option: magit-refs-focus-column-width 4096 Width of the focus column in ‘magit-refs-mode’ buffers. 4097 4098 The focus column is the first column, which marks one branch 4099 (usually the current branch) as the focused branch using ‘*’ or 4100 ‘@’. For each other reference, this column optionally shows how 4101 many commits it is ahead of the focused branch and ‘<’, or if it 4102 isn’t ahead then the commits it is behind and ‘>’, or if it isn’t 4103 behind either, then a ‘=’. 4104 4105 This column may also display only ‘*’ or ‘@’ for the focused 4106 branch, in which case this option is ignored. Use ‘L v’ to change 4107 the verbosity of this column. 4108 4109 -- User Option: magit-refs-margin 4110 This option specifies whether the margin is initially shown in 4111 Magit-Refs mode buffers and how it is formatted. 4112 4113 The value has the form ‘(INIT STYLE WIDTH AUTHOR AUTHOR-WIDTH)’. 4114 4115 • If INIT is non-nil, then the margin is shown initially. 4116 • STYLE controls how to format the author or committer date. It 4117 can be one of ‘age’ (to show the age of the commit), 4118 ‘age-abbreviated’ (to abbreviate the time unit to a 4119 character), or a string (suitable for ‘format-time-string’) to 4120 show the actual date. Option 4121 ‘magit-log-margin-show-committer-date’ controls which date is 4122 being displayed. 4123 • WIDTH controls the width of the margin. This exists for 4124 forward compatibility and currently the value should not be 4125 changed. 4126 • AUTHOR controls whether the name of the author is also shown 4127 by default. 4128 • AUTHOR-WIDTH has to be an integer. When the name of the 4129 author is shown, then this specifies how much space is used to 4130 do so. 4131 4132 -- User Option: magit-refs-margin-for-tags 4133 This option specifies whether to show information about tags in the 4134 margin. This is disabled by default because it is slow if there 4135 are many tags. 4136 4137 The following variables control how individual refs are displayed. 4138 If you change one of these variables (especially the "%c" part), then 4139 you should also change the others to keep things aligned. The following 4140 %-sequences are supported: 4141 4142 • ‘%a’ Number of commits this ref has over the one we compare to. 4143 • ‘%b’ Number of commits the ref we compare to has over this one. 4144 • ‘%c’ Number of commits this ref has over the one we compare to. 4145 For the ref which all other refs are compared this is instead "@", 4146 if it is the current branch, or "#" otherwise. 4147 • ‘%C’ For the ref which all other refs are compared this is "@", if 4148 it is the current branch, or "#" otherwise. For all other refs " 4149 ". 4150 • ‘%h’ Hash of this ref’s tip. 4151 • ‘%m’ Commit summary of the tip of this ref. 4152 • ‘%n’ Name of this ref. 4153 • ‘%u’ Upstream of this local branch. 4154 • ‘%U’ Upstream of this local branch and additional local vs. 4155 upstream information. 4156 4157 -- User Option: magit-refs-filter-alist 4158 The purpose of this option is to forgo displaying certain refs 4159 based on their name. If you want to not display any refs of a 4160 certain type, then you should remove the appropriate function from 4161 ‘magit-refs-sections-hook’ instead. 4162 4163 This alist controls which tags and branches are omitted from being 4164 displayed in ‘magit-refs-mode’ buffers. If it is ‘nil’, then all 4165 refs are displayed (subject to ‘magit-refs-sections-hook’). 4166 4167 All keys are tried in order until one matches. Then its value is 4168 used and subsequent elements are ignored. If the value is non-nil, 4169 then the reference is displayed, otherwise it is not. If no 4170 element matches, then the reference is displayed. 4171 4172 A key can either be a regular expression that the refname has to 4173 match, or a function that takes the refname as only argument and 4174 returns a boolean. A remote branch such as "origin/master" is 4175 displayed as just "master", however for this comparison the former 4176 is used. 4177 4178 ‘<RET>’ (‘magit-visit-ref’) 4179 This command visits the reference or revision at point in another 4180 buffer. If there is no revision at point or with a prefix argument 4181 then it prompts for a revision. 4182 4183 This command behaves just like ‘magit-show-commit’ as described 4184 above, except if point is on a reference in a ‘magit-refs-mode’ 4185 buffer, in which case the behavior may be different, but only if 4186 you have customized the option ‘magit-visit-ref-behavior’. 4187 4188 -- User Option: magit-visit-ref-behavior 4189 This option controls how ‘magit-visit-ref’ behaves in 4190 ‘magit-refs-mode’ buffers. 4191 4192 By default ‘magit-visit-ref’ behaves like ‘magit-show-commit’, in 4193 all buffers, including ‘magit-refs-mode’ buffers. When the type of 4194 the section at point is ‘commit’ then "RET" is bound to 4195 ‘magit-show-commit’, and when the type is either ‘branch’ or ‘tag’ 4196 then it is bound to ‘magit-visit-ref’. 4197 4198 "RET" is one of Magit’s most essential keys and at least by default 4199 it should behave consistently across all of Magit, especially 4200 because users quickly learn that it does something very harmless; 4201 it shows more information about the thing at point in another 4202 buffer. 4203 4204 However "RET" used to behave differently in ‘magit-refs-mode’ 4205 buffers, doing surprising things, some of which cannot really be 4206 described as "visit this thing". If you’ve grown accustomed this 4207 behavior, you can restore it by adding one or more of the below 4208 symbols to the value of this option. But keep in mind that by 4209 doing so you don’t only introduce inconsistencies, you also lose 4210 some functionality and might have to resort to ‘M-x 4211 magit-show-commit’ to get it back. 4212 4213 ‘magit-visit-ref’ looks for these symbols in the order in which 4214 they are described here. If the presence of a symbol applies to 4215 the current situation, then the symbols that follow do not affect 4216 the outcome. 4217 4218 • ‘focus-on-ref’ 4219 4220 With a prefix argument update the buffer to show commit counts 4221 and lists of cherry commits relative to the reference at point 4222 instead of relative to the current buffer or ‘HEAD’. 4223 4224 Instead of adding this symbol, consider pressing "C-u y o 4225 RET". 4226 4227 • ‘create-branch’ 4228 4229 If point is on a remote branch, then create a new local branch 4230 with the same name, use the remote branch as its upstream, and 4231 then check out the local branch. 4232 4233 Instead of adding this symbol, consider pressing "b c RET 4234 RET", like you would do in other buffers. 4235 4236 • ‘checkout-any’ 4237 4238 Check out the reference at point. If that reference is a tag 4239 or a remote branch, then this results in a detached ‘HEAD’. 4240 4241 Instead of adding this symbol, consider pressing "b b RET", 4242 like you would do in other buffers. 4243 4244 • ‘checkout-branch’ 4245 4246 Check out the local branch at point. 4247 4248 Instead of adding this symbol, consider pressing "b b RET", 4249 like you would do in other buffers. 4250 4251 * Menu: 4252 4253 * References Sections:: 4254 4255 4256 File: magit.info, Node: References Sections, Up: References Buffer 4257 4258 5.6.1 References Sections 4259 ------------------------- 4260 4261 The contents of references buffers is controlled using the hook 4262 ‘magit-refs-sections-hook’. See *note Section Hooks:: to learn about 4263 such hooks and how to customize them. All of the below functions are 4264 members of the default value. Note that it makes much less sense to 4265 customize this hook than it does for the respective hook used for the 4266 status buffer. 4267 4268 -- User Option: magit-refs-sections-hook 4269 Hook run to insert sections into a references buffer. 4270 4271 -- Function: magit-insert-local-branches 4272 Insert sections showing all local branches. 4273 4274 -- Function: magit-insert-remote-branches 4275 Insert sections showing all remote-tracking branches. 4276 4277 -- Function: magit-insert-tags 4278 Insert sections showing all tags. 4279 4280 4281 File: magit.info, Node: Bisecting, Next: Visiting Files and Blobs, Prev: References Buffer, Up: Inspecting 4282 4283 5.7 Bisecting 4284 ============= 4285 4286 Also see *note (gitman)git-bisect::. 4287 4288 ‘B’ (‘magit-bisect’) 4289 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 4290 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 4291 4292 When bisecting is not in progress, then the transient features the 4293 following suffix commands. 4294 4295 ‘B B’ (‘magit-bisect-start’) 4296 Start a bisect session. 4297 4298 Bisecting a bug means to find the commit that introduced it. This 4299 command starts such a bisect session by asking for a known good 4300 commit and a known bad commit. If you’re bisecting a change that 4301 isn’t a regression, you can select alternate terms that are 4302 conceptually more fitting than "bad" and "good", but the infix 4303 arguments to do so are disabled by default. 4304 4305 ‘B s’ (‘magit-bisect-run’) 4306 Bisect automatically by running commands after each step. 4307 4308 When bisecting in progress, then the transient instead features the 4309 following suffix commands. 4310 4311 ‘B b’ (‘magit-bisect-bad’) 4312 Mark the current commit as bad. Use this after you have asserted 4313 that the commit does contain the bug in question. 4314 4315 ‘B g’ (‘magit-bisect-good’) 4316 Mark the current commit as good. Use this after you have asserted 4317 that the commit does not contain the bug in question. 4318 4319 ‘B m’ (‘magit-bisect-mark’) 4320 Mark the current commit with one of the bisect terms. This command 4321 provides an alternative to ‘magit-bisect-bad’ and 4322 ‘magit-bisect-good’ and is useful when using terms other than "bad" 4323 and "good". This suffix is disabled by default. 4324 4325 ‘B k’ (‘magit-bisect-skip’) 4326 Skip the current commit. Use this if for some reason the current 4327 commit is not a good one to test. This command lets Git choose a 4328 different one. 4329 4330 ‘B r’ (‘magit-bisect-reset’) 4331 After bisecting, cleanup bisection state and return to original 4332 ‘HEAD’. 4333 4334 By default the status buffer shows information about the ongoing 4335 bisect session. 4336 4337 -- User Option: magit-bisect-show-graph 4338 This option controls whether a graph is displayed for the log of 4339 commits that still have to be bisected. 4340 4341 4342 File: magit.info, Node: Visiting Files and Blobs, Next: Blaming, Prev: Bisecting, Up: Inspecting 4343 4344 5.8 Visiting Files and Blobs 4345 ============================ 4346 4347 Magit provides several commands that visit a file or blob (the version 4348 of a file that is stored in a certain commit). Actually it provides 4349 several *groups* of such commands and the several *variants* within each 4350 group. 4351 4352 Also see *note Commands for Buffers Visiting Files::. 4353 4354 * Menu: 4355 4356 * General-Purpose Visit Commands:: 4357 * Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff:: 4358 4359 4360 File: magit.info, Node: General-Purpose Visit Commands, Next: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff, Up: Visiting Files and Blobs 4361 4362 5.8.1 General-Purpose Visit Commands 4363 ------------------------------------ 4364 4365 These commands can be used anywhere to open any blob. Currently no keys 4366 are bound to these commands by default, but that is likely to change. 4367 4368 -- Command: magit-find-file 4369 This command reads a filename and revision from the user and visits 4370 the respective blob in a buffer. The buffer is displayed in the 4371 selected window. 4372 4373 -- Command: magit-find-file-other-window 4374 This command reads a filename and revision from the user and visits 4375 the respective blob in a buffer. The buffer is displayed in 4376 another window. 4377 4378 -- Command: magit-find-file-other-frame 4379 This command reads a filename and revision from the user and visits 4380 the respective blob in a buffer. The buffer is displayed in 4381 another frame. 4382 4383 4384 File: magit.info, Node: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff, Prev: General-Purpose Visit Commands, Up: Visiting Files and Blobs 4385 4386 5.8.2 Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff 4387 ------------------------------------------ 4388 4389 These commands can only be used when point is inside a diff. 4390 4391 ‘<RET>’ (‘magit-diff-visit-file’) 4392 This command visits the appropriate version of the file that the 4393 diff at point is about. 4394 4395 This commands visits the worktree version of the appropriate file. 4396 The location of point inside the diff determines which file is 4397 being visited. The visited version depends on what changes the 4398 diff is about. 4399 4400 1. If the diff shows uncommitted changes (i.e., staged or 4401 unstaged changes), then visit the file in the working tree 4402 (i.e., the same "real" file that ‘find-file’ would visit. In 4403 all other cases visit a "blob" (i.e., the version of a file as 4404 stored in some commit). 4405 4406 2. If point is on a removed line, then visit the blob for the 4407 first parent of the commit that removed that line, i.e., the 4408 last commit where that line still exists. 4409 4410 3. If point is on an added or context line, then visit the blob 4411 that adds that line, or if the diff shows from more than a 4412 single commit, then visit the blob from the last of these 4413 commits. 4414 4415 In the file-visiting buffer this command goes to the line that 4416 corresponds to the line that point is on in the diff. 4417 4418 The buffer is displayed in the selected window. With a prefix 4419 argument the buffer is displayed in another window instead. 4420 4421 -- User Option: magit-diff-visit-previous-blob 4422 This option controls whether ‘magit-diff-visit-file’ may visit the 4423 previous blob. When this is ‘t’ (the default) and point is on a 4424 removed line in a diff for a committed change, then 4425 ‘magit-diff-visit-file’ visits the blob from the last revision 4426 which still had that line. 4427 4428 Currently this is only supported for committed changes, for staged 4429 and unstaged changes ‘magit-diff-visit-file’ always visits the file 4430 in the working tree. 4431 4432 ‘C-<return>’ (‘magit-diff-visit-file-worktree’) 4433 This command visits the worktree version of the appropriate file. 4434 The location of point inside the diff determines which file is 4435 being visited. Unlike ‘magit-diff-visit-file’ it always visits the 4436 "real" file in the working tree, i.e the "current version" of the 4437 file. 4438 4439 In the file-visiting buffer this command goes to the line that 4440 corresponds to the line that point is on in the diff. Lines that 4441 were added or removed in the working tree, the index and other 4442 commits in between are automatically accounted for. 4443 4444 The buffer is displayed in the selected window. With a prefix 4445 argument the buffer is displayed in another window instead. 4446 4447 Variants of the above two commands exist that instead visit the file 4448 in another window or in another frame. If you prefer such behavior, 4449 then you may want to change the above key bindings, but note that the 4450 above commands also use another window when invoked with a prefix 4451 argument. 4452 4453 -- Command: magit-diff-visit-file-other-window 4454 -- Command: magit-diff-visit-file-other-frame 4455 -- Command: magit-diff-visit-worktree-file-other-window 4456 -- Command: magit-diff-visit-worktree-file-other-frame 4457 4458 4459 File: magit.info, Node: Blaming, Prev: Visiting Files and Blobs, Up: Inspecting 4460 4461 5.9 Blaming 4462 =========== 4463 4464 Also see *note (gitman)git-blame::. 4465 4466 To start blaming, invoke the ‘magit-file-dispatch’ transient prefix 4467 command. When using the default key bindings, that can be done by 4468 pressing ‘C-c M-g’. When using the recommended bindings, this command 4469 is instead bound to ‘C-c f’. Also see *note Global Bindings::. 4470 4471 The blaming suffix commands can be invoked directly from the file 4472 dispatch transient. However if you want to set an infix argument, then 4473 you have to enter the blaming sub-prefix first. 4474 4475 ‘C-c f B’ (‘magit-blame’) 4476 ‘C-c f b’ (‘magit-blame-addition’) 4477 ‘C-c f B b’ 4478 ‘C-c f r’ (‘magit-blame-removal’) 4479 ‘C-c f B r’ 4480 ‘C-c f f’ (‘magit-blame-reverse’) 4481 ‘C-c f B f’ 4482 ‘C-c f e’ (‘magit-blame-echo’) 4483 ‘C-c f B e’ 4484 ‘C-c f q’ (‘magit-blame-quit’) 4485 ‘C-c f B q’ 4486 Each of these commands is documented individually right below, 4487 alongside their default key bindings. The bindings shown above are 4488 the recommended bindings, which you can enable by following the 4489 instructions in *note Global Bindings::. 4490 4491 ‘C-c M-g B’ (‘magit-blame’) 4492 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 4493 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 4494 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 4495 4496 Note that not all of the following suffixes are available at all 4497 times. For example if ‘magit-blame-mode’ is not enabled, then the 4498 command whose purpose is to turn off that mode would not be of any use 4499 and therefore isn’t available. 4500 4501 ‘C-c M-g b’ (‘magit-blame-addition’) 4502 ‘C-c M-g B b’ 4503 This command augments each line or chunk of lines in the current 4504 file-visiting or blob-visiting buffer with information about what 4505 commits last touched these lines. 4506 4507 If the buffer visits a revision of that file, then history up to 4508 that revision is considered. Otherwise, the file’s full history is 4509 considered, including uncommitted changes. 4510 4511 If Magit-Blame mode is already turned on in the current buffer then 4512 blaming is done recursively, by visiting REVISION:FILE (using 4513 ‘magit-find-file’), where REVISION is a parent of the revision that 4514 added the current line or chunk of lines. 4515 4516 ‘C-c M-g r’ (‘magit-blame-removal’) 4517 ‘C-c M-g B r’ 4518 This command augments each line or chunk of lines in the current 4519 blob-visiting buffer with information about the revision that 4520 removes it. It cannot be used in file-visiting buffers. 4521 4522 Like ‘magit-blame-addition’, this command can be used recursively. 4523 4524 ‘C-c M-g f’ (‘magit-blame-reverse’) 4525 ‘C-c M-g B f’ 4526 This command augments each line or chunk of lines in the current 4527 file-visiting or blob-visiting buffer with information about the 4528 last revision in which a line still existed. 4529 4530 Like ‘magit-blame-addition’, this command can be used recursively. 4531 4532 ‘C-c M-g e’ (‘magit-blame-echo’) 4533 ‘C-c M-g B e’ 4534 This command is like ‘magit-blame-addition’ except that it doesn’t 4535 turn on ‘read-only-mode’ and that it initially uses the 4536 visualization style specified by option ‘magit-blame-echo-style’. 4537 4538 The following key bindings are available when Magit-Blame mode is 4539 enabled and Read-Only mode is not enabled. These commands are also 4540 available in other buffers; here only the behavior is described that is 4541 relevant in file-visiting buffers that are being blamed. 4542 4543 ‘C-c M-g q’ (‘magit-blame-quit’) 4544 ‘C-c M-g B q’ 4545 This command turns off Magit-Blame mode. If the buffer was created 4546 during a recursive blame, then it also kills the buffer. 4547 4548 ‘<RET>’ (‘magit-show-commit’) 4549 This command shows the commit that last touched the line at point. 4550 4551 ‘<SPC>’ (‘magit-diff-show-or-scroll-up’) 4552 This command updates the commit buffer. 4553 4554 This either shows the commit that last touched the line at point in 4555 the appropriate buffer, or if that buffer is already being 4556 displayed in the current frame and if that buffer contains 4557 information about that commit, then the buffer is scrolled up 4558 instead. 4559 4560 ‘<DEL>’ (‘magit-diff-show-or-scroll-down’) 4561 This command updates the commit buffer. 4562 4563 This either shows the commit that last touched the line at point in 4564 the appropriate buffer, or if that buffer is already being 4565 displayed in the current frame and if that buffer contains 4566 information about that commit, then the buffer is scrolled down 4567 instead. 4568 4569 The following key bindings are available when both Magit-Blame mode 4570 and Read-Only mode are enabled. 4571 4572 ‘b’ (‘magit-blame’) 4573 See above. 4574 4575 ‘n’ (‘magit-blame-next-chunk’) 4576 This command moves to the next chunk. 4577 4578 ‘N’ (‘magit-blame-next-chunk-same-commit’) 4579 This command moves to the next chunk from the same commit. 4580 4581 ‘p’ (‘magit-blame-previous-chunk’) 4582 This command moves to the previous chunk. 4583 4584 ‘P’ (‘magit-blame-previous-chunk-same-commit’) 4585 This command moves to the previous chunk from the same commit. 4586 4587 ‘q’ (‘magit-blame-quit’) 4588 This command turns off Magit-Blame mode. If the buffer was created 4589 during a recursive blame, then it also kills the buffer. 4590 4591 ‘M-w’ (‘magit-blame-copy-hash’) 4592 This command saves the hash of the current chunk’s commit to the 4593 kill ring. 4594 4595 When the region is active, the command saves the region’s content 4596 instead of the hash, like ‘kill-ring-save’ would. 4597 4598 ‘c’ (‘magit-blame-cycle-style’) 4599 This command changes how blame information is visualized in the 4600 current buffer by cycling through the styles specified using the 4601 option ‘magit-blame-styles’. 4602 4603 Blaming is also controlled using the following options. 4604 4605 -- User Option: magit-blame-styles 4606 This option defines a list of styles used to visualize blame 4607 information. For now see its doc-string to learn more. 4608 4609 -- User Option: magit-blame-echo-style 4610 This option specifies the blame visualization style used by the 4611 command ‘magit-blame-echo’. This must be a symbol that is used as 4612 the identifier for one of the styles defined in 4613 ‘magit-blame-styles’. 4614 4615 -- User Option: magit-blame-time-format 4616 This option specifies the format string used to display times when 4617 showing blame information. 4618 4619 -- User Option: magit-blame-read-only 4620 This option controls whether blaming a buffer also makes 4621 temporarily read-only. 4622 4623 -- User Option: magit-blame-disable-modes 4624 This option lists incompatible minor-modes that should be disabled 4625 temporarily when a buffer contains blame information. They are 4626 enabled again when the buffer no longer shows blame information. 4627 4628 -- User Option: magit-blame-goto-chunk-hook 4629 This hook is run when moving between chunks. 4630 4631 4632 File: magit.info, Node: Manipulating, Next: Transferring, Prev: Inspecting, Up: Top 4633 4634 6 Manipulating 4635 ************** 4636 4637 * Menu: 4638 4639 * Creating Repository:: 4640 * Cloning Repository:: 4641 * Staging and Unstaging:: 4642 * Applying:: 4643 * Committing:: 4644 * Branching:: 4645 * Merging:: 4646 * Resolving Conflicts:: 4647 * Rebasing:: 4648 * Cherry Picking:: 4649 * Resetting:: 4650 * Stashing:: 4651 4652 4653 File: magit.info, Node: Creating Repository, Next: Cloning Repository, Up: Manipulating 4654 4655 6.1 Creating Repository 4656 ======================= 4657 4658 ‘I’ (‘magit-init’) 4659 This command initializes a repository and then shows the status 4660 buffer for the new repository. 4661 4662 If the directory is below an existing repository, then the user has 4663 to confirm that a new one should be created inside. If the 4664 directory is the root of the existing repository, then the user has 4665 to confirm that it should be reinitialized. 4666 4667 4668 File: magit.info, Node: Cloning Repository, Next: Staging and Unstaging, Prev: Creating Repository, Up: Manipulating 4669 4670 6.2 Cloning Repository 4671 ====================== 4672 4673 To clone a remote or local repository use ‘C’, which is bound to the 4674 command ‘magit-clone’. This command either act as a transient prefix 4675 command, which binds several infix arguments and suffix commands, or it 4676 can invoke ‘git clone’ directly, depending on whether a prefix argument 4677 is used and on the value of ‘magit-clone-always-transient’. 4678 4679 -- User Option: magit-clone-always-transient 4680 This option controls whether the command ‘magit-clone’ always acts 4681 as a transient prefix command, regardless of whether a prefix 4682 argument is used or not. If ‘t’, then that command always acts as 4683 a transient prefix. If ‘nil’, then a prefix argument has to be 4684 used for it to act as a transient. 4685 4686 ‘C’ (‘magit-clone’) 4687 This command either acts as a transient prefix command as described 4688 above or does the same thing as ‘transient-clone-regular’ as 4689 described below. 4690 4691 If it acts as a transient prefix, then it binds the following 4692 suffix commands and several infix arguments. 4693 4694 ‘C C’ (‘magit-clone-regular’) 4695 This command creates a regular clone of an existing repository. 4696 The repository and the target directory are read from the user. 4697 4698 ‘C s’ (‘magit-clone-shallow’) 4699 This command creates a shallow clone of an existing repository. 4700 The repository and the target directory are read from the user. By 4701 default the depth of the cloned history is a single commit, but 4702 with a prefix argument the depth is read from the user. 4703 4704 ‘C >’ (‘magit-clone-sparse’) 4705 This command creates a clone of an existing repository and 4706 initializes a sparse checkout, avoiding a checkout of the full 4707 working tree. To add more directories, use the 4708 ‘magit-sparse-checkout’ transient (see *note Sparse checkouts::). 4709 4710 ‘C b’ (‘magit-clone-bare’) 4711 This command creates a bare clone of an existing repository. The 4712 repository and the target directory are read from the user. 4713 4714 ‘C m’ (‘magit-clone-mirror’) 4715 This command creates a mirror of an existing repository. The 4716 repository and the target directory are read from the user. 4717 4718 The following suffixes are disabled by default. See *note 4719 (transient)Enabling and Disabling Suffixes:: for how to enable them. 4720 4721 ‘C d’ (‘magit-clone-shallow-since’) 4722 This command creates a shallow clone of an existing repository. 4723 Only commits that were committed after a date are cloned, which is 4724 read from the user. The repository and the target directory are 4725 also read from the user. 4726 4727 ‘C e’ (‘magit-clone-shallow-exclude’) 4728 This command creates a shallow clone of an existing repository. 4729 This reads a branch or tag from the user. Commits that are 4730 reachable from that are not cloned. The repository and the target 4731 directory are also read from the user. 4732 4733 -- User Option: magit-clone-set-remote-head 4734 This option controls whether cloning causes the reference 4735 ‘refs/remotes/<remote>/HEAD’ to be created in the clone. The 4736 default is to delete the reference after running ‘git clone’, which 4737 insists on creating it. This is because the reference has not been 4738 found to be particularly useful as it is not automatically updated 4739 when the ‘HEAD’ of the remote changes. Setting this option to ‘t’ 4740 preserves Git’s default behavior of creating the reference. 4741 4742 -- User Option: magit-clone-set-remote.pushDefault 4743 This option controls whether the value of the Git variable 4744 ‘remote.pushDefault’ is set after cloning. 4745 4746 • If ‘t’, then it is always set without asking. 4747 • If ‘ask’, then the users are asked every time they clone a 4748 repository. 4749 • If ‘nil’, then it is never set. 4750 4751 -- User Option: magit-clone-default-directory 4752 This option control the default directory name used when reading 4753 the destination for a cloning operation. 4754 4755 • If ‘nil’ (the default), then the value of ‘default-directory’ 4756 is used. 4757 • If a directory, then that is used. 4758 • If a function, then that is called with the remote url as the 4759 only argument and the returned value is used. 4760 4761 -- User Option: magit-clone-name-alist 4762 This option maps regular expressions, which match repository names, 4763 to repository urls, making it possible for users to enter short 4764 names instead of urls when cloning repositories. 4765 4766 Each element has the form ‘(REGEXP HOSTNAME USER)’. When the user 4767 enters a name when a cloning command asks for a name or url, then 4768 that is looked up in this list. The first element whose REGEXP 4769 matches is used. 4770 4771 The format specified by option ‘magit-clone-url-format’ is used to 4772 turn the name into an url, using HOSTNAME and the repository name. 4773 If the provided name contains a slash, then that is used. 4774 Otherwise if the name omits the owner of the repository, then the 4775 default user specified in the matched entry is used. 4776 4777 If USER contains a dot, then it is treated as a Git variable and 4778 the value of that is used as the username. Otherwise it is used as 4779 the username itself. 4780 4781 -- User Option: magit-clone-url-format 4782 The format specified by this option is used when turning repository 4783 names into urls. ‘%h’ is the hostname and ‘%n’ is the repository 4784 name, including the name of the owner. The value can be a string 4785 (representing a single static format) or an alist with elements 4786 ‘(HOSTNAME . FORMAT)’ mapping hostnames to formats. When an alist 4787 is used, the ‘t’ key represents the default format. 4788 4789 Example of a single format string: 4790 4791 (setq magit-clone-url-format 4792 "git@%h:%n.git") 4793 4794 Example of by-hostname format strings: 4795 4796 (setq magit-clone-url-format 4797 '(("git.example.com" . "git@%h:~%n") 4798 (nil . "git@%h:%n.git"))) 4799 4800 -- User Option: magit-post-clone-hook 4801 Hook run after the Git process has successfully finished cloning 4802 the repository. When the hook is called, ‘default-directory’ is 4803 let-bound to the directory where the repository has been cloned. 4804 4805 4806 File: magit.info, Node: Staging and Unstaging, Next: Applying, Prev: Cloning Repository, Up: Manipulating 4807 4808 6.3 Staging and Unstaging 4809 ========================= 4810 4811 Like Git, Magit can of course stage and unstage complete files. Unlike 4812 Git, it also allows users to gracefully un-/stage individual hunks and 4813 even just part of a hunk. To stage individual hunks and parts of hunks 4814 using Git directly, one has to use the very modal and rather clumsy 4815 interface of a ‘git add --interactive’ session. 4816 4817 With Magit, on the other hand, one can un-/stage individual hunks by 4818 just moving point into the respective section inside a diff displayed in 4819 the status buffer or a separate diff buffer and typing ‘s’ or ‘u’. To 4820 operate on just parts of a hunk, mark the changes that should be 4821 un-/staged using the region and then press the same key that would be 4822 used to un-/stage. To stage multiple files or hunks at once use a 4823 region that starts inside the heading of such a section and ends inside 4824 the heading of a sibling section of the same type. 4825 4826 Besides staging and unstaging, Magit also provides several other 4827 "apply variants" that can also operate on a file, multiple files at 4828 once, a hunk, multiple hunks at once, and on parts of a hunk. These 4829 apply variants are described in the next section. 4830 4831 You can also use Ediff to stage and unstage. See *note Ediffing::. 4832 4833 ‘s’ (‘magit-stage’) 4834 Add the change at point to the staging area. 4835 4836 With a prefix argument and an untracked file (or files) at point, 4837 stage the file but not its content. This makes it possible to 4838 stage only a subset of the new file’s changes. 4839 4840 ‘S’ (‘magit-stage-modified’) 4841 Stage all changes to files modified in the worktree. Stage all new 4842 content of tracked files and remove tracked files that no longer 4843 exist in the working tree from the index also. With a prefix 4844 argument also stage previously untracked (but not ignored) files. 4845 4846 ‘u’ (‘magit-unstage’) 4847 Remove the change at point from the staging area. 4848 4849 Only staged changes can be unstaged. But by default this command 4850 performs an action that is somewhat similar to unstaging, when it 4851 is called on a committed change: it reverses the change in the 4852 index but not in the working tree. 4853 4854 ‘U’ (‘magit-unstage-all’) 4855 Remove all changes from the staging area. 4856 4857 -- User Option: magit-unstage-committed 4858 This option controls whether ‘magit-unstage’ "unstages" committed 4859 changes by reversing them in the index but not the working tree. 4860 The alternative is to raise an error. 4861 4862 ‘M-x magit-reverse-in-index’ 4863 This command reverses the committed change at point in the index 4864 but not the working tree. By default no key is bound directly to 4865 this command, but it is indirectly called when ‘u’ 4866 (‘magit-unstage’) is pressed on a committed change. 4867 4868 This allows extracting a change from ‘HEAD’, while leaving it in 4869 the working tree, so that it can later be committed using a 4870 separate commit. A typical workflow would be: 4871 4872 1. Optionally make sure that there are no uncommitted changes. 4873 2. Visit the ‘HEAD’ commit and navigate to the change that should 4874 not have been included in that commit. 4875 3. Type ‘u’ (‘magit-unstage’) to reverse it in the index. This 4876 assumes that ‘magit-unstage-committed’ is non-nil. 4877 4. Type ‘c e’ to extend ‘HEAD’ with the staged changes, including 4878 those that were already staged before. 4879 5. Optionally stage the remaining changes using ‘s’ or ‘S’ and 4880 then type ‘c c’ to create a new commit. 4881 4882 ‘M-x magit-reset-index’ 4883 Reset the index to some commit. The commit is read from the user 4884 and defaults to the commit at point. If there is no commit at 4885 point, then it defaults to ‘HEAD’. 4886 4887 * Menu: 4888 4889 * Staging from File-Visiting Buffers:: 4890 4891 4892 File: magit.info, Node: Staging from File-Visiting Buffers, Up: Staging and Unstaging 4893 4894 6.3.1 Staging from File-Visiting Buffers 4895 ---------------------------------------- 4896 4897 Fine-grained un-/staging has to be done from the status or a diff 4898 buffer, but it’s also possible to un-/stage all changes made to the file 4899 visited in the current buffer right from inside that buffer. 4900 4901 ‘M-x magit-stage-file’ 4902 When invoked inside a file-visiting buffer, then stage all changes 4903 to that file. In a Magit buffer, stage the file at point if any. 4904 Otherwise prompt for a file to be staged. With a prefix argument 4905 always prompt the user for a file, even in a file-visiting buffer 4906 or when there is a file section at point. 4907 4908 ‘M-x magit-unstage-file’ 4909 When invoked inside a file-visiting buffer, then unstage all 4910 changes to that file. In a Magit buffer, unstage the file at point 4911 if any. Otherwise prompt for a file to be unstaged. With a prefix 4912 argument always prompt the user for a file, even in a file-visiting 4913 buffer or when there is a file section at point. 4914 4915 4916 File: magit.info, Node: Applying, Next: Committing, Prev: Staging and Unstaging, Up: Manipulating 4917 4918 6.4 Applying 4919 ============ 4920 4921 Magit provides several "apply variants": stage, unstage, discard, 4922 reverse, and "regular apply". At least when operating on a hunk they 4923 are all implemented using ‘git apply’, which is why they are called 4924 "apply variants". 4925 4926 • Stage. Apply a change from the working tree to the index. The 4927 change also remains in the working tree. 4928 4929 • Unstage. Remove a change from the index. The change remains in 4930 the working tree. 4931 4932 • Discard. On a staged change, remove it from the working tree and 4933 the index. On an unstaged change, remove it from the working tree 4934 only. 4935 4936 • Reverse. Reverse a change in the working tree. Both committed and 4937 staged changes can be reversed. Unstaged changes cannot be 4938 reversed. Discard them instead. 4939 4940 • Apply. Apply a change to the working tree. Both committed and 4941 staged changes can be applied. Unstaged changes cannot be applied 4942 - as they already have been applied. 4943 4944 The previous section described the staging and unstaging commands. 4945 What follows are the commands which implement the remaining apply 4946 variants. 4947 4948 ‘a’ (‘magit-apply’) 4949 Apply the change at point to the working tree. 4950 4951 With a prefix argument fallback to a 3-way merge. Doing so causes 4952 the change to be applied to the index as well. 4953 4954 ‘k’ (‘magit-discard’) 4955 Remove the change at point from the working tree. 4956 4957 On a hunk or file with unresolved conflicts prompt which side to 4958 keep (while discarding the other). If point is within the text of 4959 a side, then keep that side without prompting. 4960 4961 ‘v’ (‘magit-reverse’) 4962 Reverse the change at point in the working tree. 4963 4964 With a prefix argument fallback to a 3-way merge. Doing so causes 4965 the change to be applied to the index as well. 4966 4967 With a prefix argument all apply variants attempt a 3-way merge when 4968 appropriate (i.e., when ‘git apply’ is used internally). 4969 4970 4971 File: magit.info, Node: Committing, Next: Branching, Prev: Applying, Up: Manipulating 4972 4973 6.5 Committing 4974 ============== 4975 4976 When the user initiates a commit, Magit calls ‘git commit’ without any 4977 arguments, so Git has to get it from the user. It creates the file 4978 ‘.git/COMMIT_EDITMSG’ and then opens that file in an editor. Magit 4979 arranges for that editor to be the Emacsclient. Once the user finishes 4980 the editing session, the Emacsclient exits and Git creates the commit 4981 using the file’s content as message. 4982 4983 * Menu: 4984 4985 * Initiating a Commit:: 4986 * Editing Commit Messages:: 4987 4988 4989 File: magit.info, Node: Initiating a Commit, Next: Editing Commit Messages, Up: Committing 4990 4991 6.5.1 Initiating a Commit 4992 ------------------------- 4993 4994 Also see *note (gitman)git-commit::. 4995 4996 ‘c’ (‘magit-commit’) 4997 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 4998 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 4999 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 5000 5001 ‘c c’ (‘magit-commit-create’) 5002 Create a new commit on ‘HEAD’. With a prefix argument amend to the 5003 commit at ‘HEAD’ instead. 5004 5005 ‘c a’ (‘magit-commit-amend’) 5006 Amend the last commit. 5007 5008 ‘c e’ (‘magit-commit-extend’) 5009 Amend the last commit, without editing the message. With a prefix 5010 argument keep the committer date, otherwise change it. The option 5011 ‘magit-commit-extend-override-date’ can be used to inverse the 5012 meaning of the prefix argument. 5013 5014 Non-interactively respect the optional OVERRIDE-DATE argument and 5015 ignore the option. 5016 5017 ‘c w’ (‘magit-commit-reword’) 5018 Reword the last commit, ignoring staged changes. With a prefix 5019 argument keep the committer date, otherwise change it. The option 5020 ‘magit-commit-reword-override-date’ can be used to inverse the 5021 meaning of the prefix argument. 5022 5023 Non-interactively respect the optional OVERRIDE-DATE argument and 5024 ignore the option. 5025 5026 ‘c f’ (‘magit-commit-fixup’) 5027 Create a fixup commit. 5028 5029 With a prefix argument the target commit has to be confirmed. 5030 Otherwise the commit at point may be used without confirmation 5031 depending on the value of option ‘magit-commit-squash-confirm’. 5032 5033 ‘c F’ (‘magit-commit-instant-fixup’) 5034 Create a fixup commit and instantly rebase. 5035 5036 ‘c s’ (‘magit-commit-squash’) 5037 Create a squash commit, without editing the squash message. 5038 5039 With a prefix argument the target commit has to be confirmed. 5040 Otherwise the commit at point may be used without confirmation 5041 depending on the value of option ‘magit-commit-squash-confirm’. 5042 5043 ‘c S’ (‘magit-commit-instant-squash’) 5044 Create a squash commit and instantly rebase. 5045 5046 ‘c A’ (‘magit-commit-augment’) 5047 Create a squash commit, editing the squash message. 5048 5049 With a prefix argument the target commit has to be confirmed. 5050 Otherwise the commit at point may be used without confirmation 5051 depending on the value of option ‘magit-commit-squash-confirm’. 5052 5053 -- User Option: magit-commit-ask-to-stage 5054 Whether to ask to stage all unstaged changes when committing and 5055 nothing is staged. 5056 5057 -- User Option: magit-commit-show-diff 5058 Whether the relevant diff is automatically shown when committing. 5059 5060 -- User Option: magit-commit-extend-override-date 5061 Whether using ‘magit-commit-extend’ changes the committer date. 5062 5063 -- User Option: magit-commit-reword-override-date 5064 Whether using ‘magit-commit-reword’ changes the committer date. 5065 5066 -- User Option: magit-commit-squash-confirm 5067 Whether the commit targeted by squash and fixup has to be 5068 confirmed. When non-nil then the commit at point (if any) is used 5069 as default choice. Otherwise it has to be confirmed. This option 5070 only affects ‘magit-commit-squash’ and ‘magit-commit-fixup’. The 5071 "instant" variants always require confirmation because making an 5072 error while using those is harder to recover from. 5073 5074 -- User Option: magit-post-commit-hook 5075 Hook run after creating a commit without the user editing a 5076 message. 5077 5078 This hook is run by ‘magit-refresh’ if ‘this-command’ is a member 5079 of ‘magit-post-commit-hook-commands’. This only includes commands 5080 named ‘magit-commit-*’ that do *not* require that the user edits 5081 the commit message in a buffer. 5082 5083 Also see ‘git-commit-post-finish-hook’. 5084 5085 -- User Option: magit-commit-diff-inhibit-same-window 5086 Whether to inhibit use of same window when showing diff while 5087 committing. 5088 5089 When writing a commit, then a diff of the changes to be committed 5090 is automatically shown. The idea is that the diff is shown in a 5091 different window of the same frame and for most users that just 5092 works. In other words most users can completely ignore this option 5093 because its value doesn’t make a difference for them. 5094 5095 However for users who configured Emacs to never create a new window 5096 even when the package explicitly tries to do so, then displaying 5097 two new buffers necessarily means that the first is immediately 5098 replaced by the second. In our case the message buffer is 5099 immediately replaced by the diff buffer, which is of course highly 5100 undesirable. 5101 5102 A workaround is to suppress this user configuration in this 5103 particular case. Users have to explicitly opt-in by toggling this 5104 option. We cannot enable the workaround unconditionally because 5105 that again causes issues for other users: if the frame is too tiny 5106 or the relevant settings too aggressive, then the diff buffer would 5107 end up being displayed in a new frame. 5108 5109 Also see <https://github.com/magit/magit/issues/4132>. 5110 5111 5112 File: magit.info, Node: Editing Commit Messages, Prev: Initiating a Commit, Up: Committing 5113 5114 6.5.2 Editing Commit Messages 5115 ----------------------------- 5116 5117 After initiating a commit as described in the previous section, two new 5118 buffers appear. One shows the changes that are about to be committed, 5119 while the other is used to write the message. 5120 5121 Commit messages are edited in an edit session - in the background 5122 ‘git’ is waiting for the editor, in our case ‘emacsclient’, to save the 5123 commit message in a file (in most cases ‘.git/COMMIT_EDITMSG’) and then 5124 return. If the editor returns with a non-zero exit status then ‘git’ 5125 does not create the commit. So the most important commands are those 5126 for finishing and aborting the commit. 5127 5128 ‘C-c C-c’ (‘with-editor-finish’) 5129 Finish the current editing session by returning with exit code 0. 5130 Git then creates the commit using the message it finds in the file. 5131 5132 ‘C-c C-k’ (‘with-editor-cancel’) 5133 Cancel the current editing session by returning with exit code 1. 5134 Git then cancels the commit, but leaves the file untouched. 5135 5136 In addition to being used by ‘git commit’, messages may also be 5137 stored in a ring that persists until Emacs is closed. By default the 5138 message is stored at the beginning and the end of an edit session 5139 (regardless of whether the session is finished successfully or was 5140 canceled). It is sometimes useful to bring back messages from that 5141 ring. 5142 5143 ‘C-c M-s’ (‘git-commit-save-message’) 5144 Save the current buffer content to the commit message ring. 5145 5146 ‘M-p’ (‘git-commit-prev-message’) 5147 Cycle backward through the commit message ring, after saving the 5148 current message to the ring. With a numeric prefix ARG, go back 5149 ARG comments. 5150 5151 ‘M-n’ (‘git-commit-next-message’) 5152 Cycle forward through the commit message ring, after saving the 5153 current message to the ring. With a numeric prefix ARG, go back 5154 ARG comments. 5155 5156 By default the diff for the changes that are about to be committed 5157 are automatically shown when invoking the commit. To prevent that, 5158 remove ‘magit-commit-diff’ from ‘server-switch-hook’. 5159 5160 When amending to an existing commit it may be useful to show either 5161 the changes that are about to be added to that commit or to show those 5162 changes alongside those that have already been committed. 5163 5164 ‘C-c C-d’ (‘magit-diff-while-committing’) 5165 While committing, show the changes that are about to be committed. 5166 While amending, invoking the command again toggles between showing 5167 just the new changes or all the changes that will be committed. 5168 5169 * Menu: 5170 5171 * Using the Revision Stack:: 5172 * Commit Pseudo Headers:: 5173 * Commit Mode and Hooks:: 5174 * Commit Message Conventions:: 5175 5176 5177 File: magit.info, Node: Using the Revision Stack, Next: Commit Pseudo Headers, Up: Editing Commit Messages 5178 5179 Using the Revision Stack 5180 ........................ 5181 5182 ‘C-c C-w’ (‘magit-pop-revision-stack’) 5183 This command inserts a representation of a revision into the 5184 current buffer. It can be used inside buffers used to write commit 5185 messages but also in other buffers such as buffers used to edit 5186 emails or ChangeLog files. 5187 5188 By default this command pops the revision which was last added to 5189 the ‘magit-revision-stack’ and inserts it into the current buffer 5190 according to ‘magit-pop-revision-stack-format’. Revisions can be 5191 put on the stack using ‘magit-copy-section-value’ and 5192 ‘magit-copy-buffer-revision’. 5193 5194 If the stack is empty or with a prefix argument it instead reads a 5195 revision in the minibuffer. By using the minibuffer history this 5196 allows selecting an item which was popped earlier or to insert an 5197 arbitrary reference or revision without first pushing it onto the 5198 stack. 5199 5200 When reading the revision from the minibuffer, then it might not be 5201 possible to guess the correct repository. When this command is 5202 called inside a repository (e.g., while composing a commit 5203 message), then that repository is used. Otherwise (e.g., while 5204 composing an email) then the repository recorded for the top 5205 element of the stack is used (even though we insert another 5206 revision). If not called inside a repository and with an empty 5207 stack, or with two prefix arguments, then read the repository in 5208 the minibuffer too. 5209 5210 -- User Option: magit-pop-revision-stack-format 5211 This option controls how the command ‘magit-pop-revision-stack’ 5212 inserts a revision into the current buffer. 5213 5214 The entries on the stack have the format ‘(HASH TOPLEVEL)’ and this 5215 option has the format ‘(POINT-FORMAT EOB-FORMAT INDEX-REGEXP)’, all 5216 of which may be nil or a string (though either one of EOB-FORMAT or 5217 POINT-FORMAT should be a string, and if INDEX-REGEXP is non-nil, 5218 then the two formats should be too). 5219 5220 First INDEX-REGEXP is used to find the previously inserted entry, 5221 by searching backward from point. The first submatch must match 5222 the index number. That number is incremented by one, and becomes 5223 the index number of the entry to be inserted. If you don’t want to 5224 number the inserted revisions, then use nil for INDEX-REGEXP. 5225 5226 If INDEX-REGEXP is non-nil then both POINT-FORMAT and EOB-FORMAT 5227 should contain \"%N\", which is replaced with the number that was 5228 determined in the previous step. 5229 5230 Both formats, if non-nil and after removing %N, are then expanded 5231 using ‘git show --format=FORMAT ...’ inside TOPLEVEL. 5232 5233 The expansion of POINT-FORMAT is inserted at point, and the 5234 expansion of EOB-FORMAT is inserted at the end of the buffer (if 5235 the buffer ends with a comment, then it is inserted right before 5236 that). 5237 5238 5239 File: magit.info, Node: Commit Pseudo Headers, Next: Commit Mode and Hooks, Prev: Using the Revision Stack, Up: Editing Commit Messages 5240 5241 Commit Pseudo Headers 5242 ..................... 5243 5244 Some projects use pseudo headers in commit messages. Magit colorizes 5245 such headers and provides some commands to insert such headers. 5246 5247 -- User Option: git-commit-known-pseudo-headers 5248 A list of Git pseudo headers to be highlighted. 5249 5250 ‘C-c C-i’ (‘git-commit-insert-pseudo-header’) 5251 Insert a commit message pseudo header. 5252 5253 ‘C-c C-a’ (‘git-commit-ack’) 5254 Insert a header acknowledging that you have looked at the commit. 5255 5256 ‘C-c C-r’ (‘git-commit-review’) 5257 Insert a header acknowledging that you have reviewed the commit. 5258 5259 ‘C-c C-s’ (‘git-commit-signoff’) 5260 Insert a header to sign off the commit. 5261 5262 ‘C-c C-t’ (‘git-commit-test’) 5263 Insert a header acknowledging that you have tested the commit. 5264 5265 ‘C-c C-o’ (‘git-commit-cc’) 5266 Insert a header mentioning someone who might be interested. 5267 5268 ‘C-c C-p’ (‘git-commit-reported’) 5269 Insert a header mentioning the person who reported the issue being 5270 fixed by the commit. 5271 5272 ‘C-c M-i’ (‘git-commit-suggested’) 5273 Insert a header mentioning the person who suggested the change. 5274 5275 5276 File: magit.info, Node: Commit Mode and Hooks, Next: Commit Message Conventions, Prev: Commit Pseudo Headers, Up: Editing Commit Messages 5277 5278 Commit Mode and Hooks 5279 ..................... 5280 5281 ‘git-commit-mode’ is a minor mode that is only used to establish certain 5282 key bindings. This makes it possible to use an arbitrary major mode in 5283 buffers used to edit commit messages. It is even possible to use 5284 different major modes in different repositories, which is useful when 5285 different projects impose different commit message conventions. 5286 5287 -- User Option: git-commit-major-mode 5288 The value of this option is the major mode used to edit Git commit 5289 messages. 5290 5291 Because ‘git-commit-mode’ is a minor mode, we don’t use its mode hook 5292 to setup the buffer, except for the key bindings. All other setup 5293 happens in the function ‘git-commit-setup’, which among other things 5294 runs the hook ‘git-commit-setup-hook’. 5295 5296 -- User Option: git-commit-setup-hook 5297 Hook run at the end of ‘git-commit-setup’. 5298 5299 The following functions are suitable for this hook: 5300 5301 -- Function: git-commit-save-message 5302 Save the current buffer content to the commit message ring. 5303 5304 -- Function: git-commit-setup-changelog-support 5305 After this function is called, ChangeLog entries are treated as 5306 paragraphs. 5307 5308 -- Function: git-commit-turn-on-auto-fill 5309 Turn on ‘auto-fill-mode’. 5310 5311 -- Function: git-commit-turn-on-flyspell 5312 Turn on Flyspell mode. Also prevent comments from being checked 5313 and finally check current non-comment text. 5314 5315 -- Function: git-commit-propertize-diff 5316 Propertize the diff shown inside the commit message buffer. Git 5317 inserts such diffs into the commit message template when the 5318 ‘--verbose’ argument is used. ‘magit-commit’ by default does not 5319 offer that argument because the diff that is shown in a separate 5320 buffer is more useful. But some users disagree, which is why this 5321 function exists. 5322 5323 -- Function: bug-reference-mode 5324 Hyperlink bug references in the buffer. 5325 5326 -- Function: with-editor-usage-message 5327 Show usage information in the echo area. 5328 5329 -- User Option: git-commit-post-finish-hook 5330 Hook run after the user finished writing a commit message. 5331 5332 This hook is only run after pressing ‘C-c C-c’ in a buffer used to 5333 edit a commit message. If a commit is created without the user 5334 typing a message into a buffer, then this hook is not run. 5335 5336 This hook is not run until the new commit has been created. If 5337 doing so takes Git longer than one second, then this hook isn’t run 5338 at all. For certain commands such as ‘magit-rebase-continue’ this 5339 hook is never run because doing so would lead to a race condition. 5340 5341 This hook is only run if ‘magit’ is available. 5342 5343 Also see ‘magit-post-commit-hook’. 5344 5345 5346 File: magit.info, Node: Commit Message Conventions, Prev: Commit Mode and Hooks, Up: Editing Commit Messages 5347 5348 Commit Message Conventions 5349 .......................... 5350 5351 Git-Commit highlights certain violations of commonly accepted commit 5352 message conventions. Certain violations even cause Git-Commit to ask 5353 you to confirm that you really want to do that. This nagging can of 5354 course be turned off, but the result of doing that usually is that 5355 instead of some code it’s now the human who is reviewing your commits 5356 who has to waste some time telling you to fix your commits. 5357 5358 -- User Option: git-commit-summary-max-length 5359 The intended maximal length of the summary line of commit messages. 5360 Characters beyond this column are colorized to indicate that this 5361 preference has been violated. 5362 5363 -- User Option: git-commit-finish-query-functions 5364 List of functions called to query before performing commit. 5365 5366 The commit message buffer is current while the functions are 5367 called. If any of them returns nil, then the commit is not 5368 performed and the buffer is not killed. The user should then fix 5369 the issue and try again. 5370 5371 The functions are called with one argument. If it is non-nil then 5372 that indicates that the user used a prefix argument to force 5373 finishing the session despite issues. Functions should usually 5374 honor this wish and return non-nil. 5375 5376 By default the only member is ‘git-commit-check-style-conventions’. 5377 5378 -- Function: git-commit-check-style-conventions 5379 This function checks for violations of certain basic style 5380 conventions. For each violation it asks users if they want to 5381 proceed anyway. 5382 5383 -- User Option: git-commit-style-convention-checks 5384 This option controls what conventions the function by the same name 5385 tries to enforce. The value is a list of self-explanatory symbols 5386 identifying certain conventions; ‘non-empty-second-line’ and 5387 ‘overlong-summary-line’. 5388 5389 5390 File: magit.info, Node: Branching, Next: Merging, Prev: Committing, Up: Manipulating 5391 5392 6.6 Branching 5393 ============= 5394 5395 * Menu: 5396 5397 * The Two Remotes:: 5398 * Branch Commands:: 5399 * Branch Git Variables:: 5400 * Auxiliary Branch Commands:: 5401 5402 5403 File: magit.info, Node: The Two Remotes, Next: Branch Commands, Up: Branching 5404 5405 6.6.1 The Two Remotes 5406 --------------------- 5407 5408 The upstream branch of some local branch is the branch into which the 5409 commits on that local branch should eventually be merged, usually 5410 something like ‘origin/master’. For the ‘master’ branch itself the 5411 upstream branch and the branch it is being pushed to, are usually the 5412 same remote branch. But for a feature branch the upstream branch and 5413 the branch it is being pushed to should differ. 5414 5415 The commits on feature branches too should _eventually_ end up in a 5416 remote branch such as ‘origin/master’ or ‘origin/maint’. Such a branch 5417 should therefore be used as the upstream. But feature branches 5418 shouldn’t be pushed directly to such branches. Instead a feature branch 5419 ‘my-feature’ is usually pushed to ‘my-fork/my-feature’ or if you are a 5420 contributor ‘origin/my-feature’. After the new feature has been 5421 reviewed, the maintainer merges the feature into ‘master’. And finally 5422 ‘master’ (not ‘my-feature’ itself) is pushed to ‘origin/master’. 5423 5424 But new features seldom are perfect on the first try, and so feature 5425 branches usually have to be reviewed, improved, and re-pushed several 5426 times. Pushing should therefore be easy to do, and for that reason many 5427 Git users have concluded that it is best to use the remote branch to 5428 which the local feature branch is being pushed as its upstream. 5429 5430 But luckily Git has long ago gained support for a push-remote which 5431 can be configured separately from the upstream branch, using the 5432 variables ‘branch.<name>.pushRemote’ and ‘remote.pushDefault’. So we no 5433 longer have to choose which of the two remotes should be used as "the 5434 remote". 5435 5436 Each of the fetching, pulling, and pushing transient commands 5437 features three suffix commands that act on the current branch and some 5438 other branch. Of these, ‘p’ is bound to a command which acts on the 5439 push-remote, ‘u’ is bound to a command which acts on the upstream, and 5440 ‘e’ is bound to a command which acts on any other branch. The status 5441 buffer shows unpushed and unpulled commits for both the push-remote and 5442 the upstream. 5443 5444 It’s fairly simple to configure these two remotes. The values of all 5445 the variables that are related to fetching, pulling, and pushing (as 5446 well as some other branch-related variables) can be inspected and 5447 changed using the command ‘magit-branch-configure’, which is available 5448 from many transient prefix commands that deal with branches. It is also 5449 possible to set the push-remote or upstream while pushing (see *note 5450 Pushing::). 5451 5452 5453 File: magit.info, Node: Branch Commands, Next: Branch Git Variables, Prev: The Two Remotes, Up: Branching 5454 5455 6.6.2 Branch Commands 5456 --------------------- 5457 5458 The transient prefix command ‘magit-branch’ is used to create and 5459 checkout branches, and to make changes to existing branches. It is not 5460 used to fetch, pull, merge, rebase, or push branches, i.e., this command 5461 deals with branches themselves, not with the commits reachable from 5462 them. Those features are available from separate transient command. 5463 5464 ‘b’ (‘magit-branch’) 5465 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 5466 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 5467 5468 By default it also binds and displays the values of some 5469 branch-related Git variables and allows changing their values. 5470 5471 -- User Option: magit-branch-direct-configure 5472 This option controls whether the transient command ‘magit-branch’ 5473 can be used to directly change the values of Git variables. This 5474 defaults to ‘t’ (to avoid changing key bindings). When set to 5475 ‘nil’, then no variables are displayed by that transient command, 5476 and its suffix command ‘magit-branch-configure’ has to be used 5477 instead to view and change branch related variables. 5478 5479 ‘b C’ (‘magit-branch-configure’) 5480 ‘f C’ 5481 ‘F C’ 5482 ‘P C’ 5483 This transient prefix command binds commands that set the value of 5484 branch-related variables and displays them in a temporary buffer 5485 until the transient is exited. 5486 5487 With a prefix argument, this command always prompts for a branch. 5488 5489 Without a prefix argument this depends on whether it was invoked as 5490 a suffix of ‘magit-branch’ and on the 5491 ‘magit-branch-direct-configure’ option. If ‘magit-branch’ already 5492 displays the variables for the current branch, then it isn’t useful 5493 to invoke another transient that displays them for the same branch. 5494 In that case this command prompts for a branch. 5495 5496 The variables are described in *note Branch Git Variables::. 5497 5498 ‘b b’ (‘magit-checkout’) 5499 Checkout a revision read in the minibuffer and defaulting to the 5500 branch or arbitrary revision at point. If the revision is a local 5501 branch then that becomes the current branch. If it is something 5502 else then ‘HEAD’ becomes detached. Checkout fails if the working 5503 tree or the staging area contain changes. 5504 5505 ‘b n’ (‘magit-branch-create’) 5506 Create a new branch. The user is asked for a branch or arbitrary 5507 revision to use as the starting point of the new branch. When a 5508 branch name is provided, then that becomes the upstream branch of 5509 the new branch. The name of the new branch is also read in the 5510 minibuffer. 5511 5512 Also see option ‘magit-branch-prefer-remote-upstream’. 5513 5514 ‘b c’ (‘magit-branch-and-checkout’) 5515 This command creates a new branch like ‘magit-branch-create’, but 5516 then also checks it out. 5517 5518 Also see option ‘magit-branch-prefer-remote-upstream’. 5519 5520 ‘b l’ (‘magit-branch-checkout’) 5521 This command checks out an existing or new local branch. It reads 5522 a branch name from the user offering all local branches and a 5523 subset of remote branches as candidates. Remote branches for which 5524 a local branch by the same name exists are omitted from the list of 5525 candidates. The user can also enter a completely new branch name. 5526 5527 • If the user selects an existing local branch, then that is 5528 checked out. 5529 5530 • If the user selects a remote branch, then it creates and 5531 checks out a new local branch with the same name, and 5532 configures the selected remote branch as the push target. 5533 5534 • If the user enters a new branch name, then it creates and 5535 checks that out, after also reading the starting-point from 5536 the user. 5537 5538 In the latter two cases the upstream is also set. Whether it is 5539 set to the chosen starting point or something else depends on the 5540 value of ‘magit-branch-adjust-remote-upstream-alist’. 5541 5542 ‘b s’ (‘magit-branch-spinoff’) 5543 This command creates and checks out a new branch starting at and 5544 tracking the current branch. That branch in turn is reset to the 5545 last commit it shares with its upstream. If the current branch has 5546 no upstream or no unpushed commits, then the new branch is created 5547 anyway and the previously current branch is not touched. 5548 5549 This is useful to create a feature branch after work has already 5550 begun on the old branch (likely but not necessarily "master"). 5551 5552 If the current branch is a member of the value of option 5553 ‘magit-branch-prefer-remote-upstream’ (which see), then the current 5554 branch will be used as the starting point as usual, but the 5555 upstream of the starting-point may be used as the upstream of the 5556 new branch, instead of the starting-point itself. 5557 5558 If optional FROM is non-nil, then the source branch is reset to 5559 ‘FROM~’, instead of to the last commit it shares with its upstream. 5560 Interactively, FROM is only ever non-nil, if the region selects 5561 some commits, and among those commits, FROM is the commit that is 5562 the fewest commits ahead of the source branch. 5563 5564 The commit at the other end of the selection actually does not 5565 matter, all commits between FROM and ‘HEAD’ are moved to the new 5566 branch. If FROM is not reachable from ‘HEAD’ or is reachable from 5567 the source branch’s upstream, then an error is raised. 5568 5569 ‘b S’ (‘magit-branch-spinout’) 5570 This command behaves like ‘magit-branch-spinoff’, except that it 5571 does not change the current branch. If there are any uncommitted 5572 changes, then it behaves exactly like ‘magit-branch-spinoff’. 5573 5574 ‘b x’ (‘magit-branch-reset’) 5575 This command resets a branch, defaulting to the branch at point, to 5576 the tip of another branch or any other commit. 5577 5578 When the branch being reset is the current branch, then a hard 5579 reset is performed. If there are any uncommitted changes, then the 5580 user has to confirm the reset because those changes would be lost. 5581 5582 This is useful when you have started work on a feature branch but 5583 realize it’s all crap and want to start over. 5584 5585 When resetting to another branch and a prefix argument is used, 5586 then the target branch is set as the upstream of the branch that is 5587 being reset. 5588 5589 ‘b k’ (‘magit-branch-delete’) 5590 Delete one or multiple branches. If the region marks multiple 5591 branches, then offer to delete those. Otherwise, prompt for a 5592 single branch to be deleted, defaulting to the branch at point. 5593 5594 Require confirmation when deleting branches is dangerous in some 5595 way. Option ‘magit-no-confirm’ can be customized to not require 5596 confirmation in certain cases. See its docstring to learn why 5597 confirmation is required by default in certain cases or if a prompt 5598 is confusing. 5599 5600 ‘b m’ (‘magit-branch-rename’) 5601 Rename a branch. The branch and the new name are read in the 5602 minibuffer. With prefix argument the branch is renamed even if 5603 that name conflicts with an existing branch. 5604 5605 -- User Option: magit-branch-read-upstream-first 5606 When creating a branch, whether to read the upstream branch before 5607 the name of the branch that is to be created. The default is ‘t’, 5608 and I recommend you leave it at that. 5609 5610 -- User Option: magit-branch-prefer-remote-upstream 5611 This option specifies whether remote upstreams are favored over 5612 local upstreams when creating new branches. 5613 5614 When a new branch is created, then the branch, commit, or stash at 5615 point is suggested as the starting point of the new branch, or if 5616 there is no such revision at point the current branch. In either 5617 case the user may choose another starting point. 5618 5619 If the chosen starting point is a branch, then it may also be set 5620 as the upstream of the new branch, depending on the value of the 5621 Git variable ‘branch.autoSetupMerge’. By default this is done for 5622 remote branches, but not for local branches. 5623 5624 You might prefer to always use some remote branch as upstream. If 5625 the chosen starting point is (1) a local branch, (2) whose name 5626 matches a member of the value of this option, (3) the upstream of 5627 that local branch is a remote branch with the same name, and (4) 5628 that remote branch can be fast-forwarded to the local branch, then 5629 the chosen branch is used as starting point, but its own upstream 5630 is used as the upstream of the new branch. 5631 5632 Members of this option’s value are treated as branch names that 5633 have to match exactly unless they contain a character that makes 5634 them invalid as a branch name. Recommended characters to use to 5635 trigger interpretation as a regexp are "*" and "^". Some other 5636 characters which you might expect to be invalid, actually are not, 5637 e.g., ".+$" are all perfectly valid. More precisely, if ‘git 5638 check-ref-format --branch STRING’ exits with a non-zero status, 5639 then treat STRING as a regexp. 5640 5641 Assuming the chosen branch matches these conditions you would end 5642 up with with e.g.: 5643 5644 feature --upstream--> origin/master 5645 5646 instead of 5647 5648 feature --upstream--> master --upstream--> origin/master 5649 5650 Which you prefer is a matter of personal preference. If you do 5651 prefer the former, then you should add branches such as ‘master’, 5652 ‘next’, and ‘maint’ to the value of this options. 5653 5654 -- User Option: magit-branch-adjust-remote-upstream-alist 5655 The value of this option is an alist of branches to be used as the 5656 upstream when branching a remote branch. 5657 5658 When creating a local branch from an ephemeral branch located on a 5659 remote, e.g., a feature or hotfix branch, then that remote branch 5660 should usually not be used as the upstream branch, since the 5661 push-remote already allows accessing it and having both the 5662 upstream and the push-remote reference the same related branch 5663 would be wasteful. Instead a branch like "maint" or "master" 5664 should be used as the upstream. 5665 5666 This option allows specifying the branch that should be used as the 5667 upstream when branching certain remote branches. The value is an 5668 alist of the form ‘((UPSTREAM . RULE)...)’. The first matching 5669 element is used, the following elements are ignored. 5670 5671 UPSTREAM is the branch to be used as the upstream for branches 5672 specified by RULE. It can be a local or a remote branch. 5673 5674 RULE can either be a regular expression, matching branches whose 5675 upstream should be the one specified by UPSTREAM. Or it can be a 5676 list of the only branches that should *not* use UPSTREAM; all other 5677 branches will. Matching is done after stripping the remote part of 5678 the name of the branch that is being branched from. 5679 5680 If you use a finite set of non-ephemeral branches across all your 5681 repositories, then you might use something like: 5682 5683 (("origin/master" . ("master" "next" "maint"))) 5684 5685 Or if the names of all your ephemeral branches contain a slash, at 5686 least in some repositories, then a good value could be: 5687 5688 (("origin/master" . "/")) 5689 5690 Of course you can also fine-tune: 5691 5692 (("origin/maint" . "\\`hotfix/") 5693 ("origin/master" . "\\`feature/")) 5694 5695 UPSTREAM can be a local branch: 5696 5697 (("master" . ("master" "next" "maint"))) 5698 5699 Because the main branch is no longer almost always named "master" you 5700 should also account for other common names: 5701 5702 (("main" . ("main" "master" "next" "maint")) 5703 ("master" . ("main" "master" "next" "maint"))) 5704 5705 -- Command: magit-branch-orphan 5706 This command creates and checks out a new orphan branch with 5707 contents from a given revision. 5708 5709 -- Command: magit-branch-or-checkout 5710 This command is a hybrid between ‘magit-checkout’ and 5711 ‘magit-branch-and-checkout’ and is intended as a replacement for 5712 the former in ‘magit-branch’. 5713 5714 It first asks the user for an existing branch or revision. If the 5715 user input actually can be resolved as a branch or revision, then 5716 it checks that out, just like ‘magit-checkout’ would. 5717 5718 Otherwise it creates and checks out a new branch using the input as 5719 its name. Before doing so it reads the starting-point for the new 5720 branch. This is similar to what ‘magit-branch-and-checkout’ does. 5721 5722 To use this command instead of ‘magit-checkout’ add this to your 5723 init file: 5724 5725 (transient-replace-suffix 'magit-branch 'magit-checkout 5726 '("b" "dwim" magit-branch-or-checkout)) 5727 5728 5729 File: magit.info, Node: Branch Git Variables, Next: Auxiliary Branch Commands, Prev: Branch Commands, Up: Branching 5730 5731 6.6.3 Branch Git Variables 5732 -------------------------- 5733 5734 These variables can be set from the transient prefix command 5735 ‘magit-branch-configure’. By default they can also be set from 5736 ‘magit-branch’. See *note Branch Commands::. 5737 5738 -- Variable: branch.NAME.merge 5739 Together with ‘branch.NAME.remote’ this variable defines the 5740 upstream branch of the local branch named NAME. The value of this 5741 variable is the full reference of the upstream _branch_. 5742 5743 -- Variable: branch.NAME.remote 5744 Together with ‘branch.NAME.merge’ this variable defines the 5745 upstream branch of the local branch named NAME. The value of this 5746 variable is the name of the upstream _remote_. 5747 5748 -- Variable: branch.NAME.rebase 5749 This variable controls whether pulling into the branch named NAME 5750 is done by rebasing or by merging the fetched branch. 5751 5752 • When ‘true’ then pulling is done by rebasing. 5753 • When ‘false’ then pulling is done by merging. 5754 • When undefined then the value of ‘pull.rebase’ is used. The 5755 default of that variable is ‘false’. 5756 5757 -- Variable: branch.NAME.pushRemote 5758 This variable specifies the remote that the branch named NAME is 5759 usually pushed to. The value has to be the name of an existing 5760 remote. 5761 5762 It is not possible to specify the name of _branch_ to push the 5763 local branch to. The name of the remote branch is always the same 5764 as the name of the local branch. 5765 5766 If this variable is undefined but ‘remote.pushDefault’ is defined, 5767 then the value of the latter is used. By default 5768 ‘remote.pushDefault’ is undefined. 5769 5770 -- Variable: branch.NAME.description 5771 This variable can be used to describe the branch named NAME. That 5772 description is used, e.g., when turning the branch into a series of 5773 patches. 5774 5775 The following variables specify defaults which are used if the above 5776 branch-specific variables are not set. 5777 5778 -- Variable: pull.rebase 5779 This variable specifies whether pulling is done by rebasing or by 5780 merging. It can be overwritten using ‘branch.NAME.rebase’. 5781 5782 • When ‘true’ then pulling is done by rebasing. 5783 • When ‘false’ (the default) then pulling is done by merging. 5784 5785 Since it is never a good idea to merge the upstream branch into a 5786 feature or hotfix branch and most branches are such branches, you 5787 should consider setting this to ‘true’, and ‘branch.master.rebase’ 5788 to ‘false’. 5789 5790 -- Variable: remote.pushDefault 5791 This variable specifies what remote the local branches are usually 5792 pushed to. This can be overwritten per branch using 5793 ‘branch.NAME.pushRemote’. 5794 5795 The following variables are used during the creation of a branch and 5796 control whether the various branch-specific variables are automatically 5797 set at this time. 5798 5799 -- Variable: branch.autoSetupMerge 5800 This variable specifies under what circumstances creating a branch 5801 NAME should result in the variables ‘branch.NAME.merge’ and 5802 ‘branch.NAME.remote’ being set according to the starting point used 5803 to create the branch. If the starting point isn’t a branch, then 5804 these variables are never set. 5805 5806 • When ‘always’ then the variables are set regardless of whether 5807 the starting point is a local or a remote branch. 5808 • When ‘true’ (the default) then the variables are set when the 5809 starting point is a remote branch, but not when it is a local 5810 branch. 5811 • When ‘false’ then the variables are never set. 5812 5813 -- Variable: branch.autoSetupRebase 5814 This variable specifies whether creating a branch NAME should 5815 result in the variable ‘branch.NAME.rebase’ being set to ‘true’. 5816 5817 • When ‘always’ then the variable is set regardless of whether 5818 the starting point is a local or a remote branch. 5819 • When ‘local’ then the variable are set when the starting point 5820 is a local branch, but not when it is a remote branch. 5821 • When ‘remote’ then the variable are set when the starting 5822 point is a remote branch, but not when it is a local branch. 5823 • When ‘never’ (the default) then the variable is never set. 5824 5825 Note that the respective commands always change the repository-local 5826 values. If you want to change the global value, which is used when the 5827 local value is undefined, then you have to do so on the command line, 5828 e.g.: 5829 5830 git config --global remote.autoSetupMerge always 5831 5832 For more information about these variables you should also see *note 5833 (gitman)git-config::. Also see *note (gitman)git-branch::. , *note 5834 (gitman)git-checkout::. and *note Pushing::. 5835 5836 -- User Option: magit-prefer-remote-upstream 5837 This option controls whether commands that read a branch from the 5838 user and then set it as the upstream branch, offer a local or a 5839 remote branch as default completion candidate, when they have the 5840 choice. 5841 5842 This affects all commands that use ‘magit-read-upstream-branch’ or 5843 ‘magit-read-starting-point’, which includes all commands that 5844 change the upstream and many which create new branches. 5845 5846 5847 File: magit.info, Node: Auxiliary Branch Commands, Prev: Branch Git Variables, Up: Branching 5848 5849 6.6.4 Auxiliary Branch Commands 5850 ------------------------------- 5851 5852 These commands are not available from the transient ‘magit-branch’ by 5853 default. 5854 5855 -- Command: magit-branch-shelve 5856 This command shelves a branch. This is done by deleting the 5857 branch, and creating a new reference "refs/shelved/BRANCH-NAME" 5858 pointing at the same commit as the branch pointed at. If the 5859 deleted branch had a reflog, then that is preserved as the reflog 5860 of the new reference. 5861 5862 This is useful if you want to move a branch out of sight, but are 5863 not ready to completely discard it yet. 5864 5865 -- Command: magit-branch-unshelve 5866 This command unshelves a branch that was previously shelved using 5867 ‘magit-branch-shelve’. This is done by deleting the reference 5868 "refs/shelved/BRANCH-NAME" and creating a branch "BRANCH-NAME" 5869 pointing at the same commit as the deleted reference pointed at. 5870 If the deleted reference had a reflog, then that is restored as the 5871 reflog of the branch. 5872 5873 5874 File: magit.info, Node: Merging, Next: Resolving Conflicts, Prev: Branching, Up: Manipulating 5875 5876 6.7 Merging 5877 =========== 5878 5879 Also see *note (gitman)git-merge::. For information on how to resolve 5880 merge conflicts see the next section. 5881 5882 ‘m’ (‘magit-merge’) 5883 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 5884 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 5885 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 5886 5887 When no merge is in progress, then the transient features the 5888 following suffix commands. 5889 5890 ‘m m’ (‘magit-merge-plain’) 5891 This command merges another branch or an arbitrary revision into 5892 the current branch. The branch or revision to be merged is read in 5893 the minibuffer and defaults to the branch at point. 5894 5895 Unless there are conflicts or a prefix argument is used, then the 5896 resulting merge commit uses a generic commit message, and the user 5897 does not get a chance to inspect or change it before the commit is 5898 created. With a prefix argument this does not actually create the 5899 merge commit, which makes it possible to inspect how conflicts were 5900 resolved and to adjust the commit message. 5901 5902 ‘m e’ (‘magit-merge-editmsg’) 5903 This command merges another branch or an arbitrary revision into 5904 the current branch and opens a commit message buffer, so that the 5905 user can make adjustments. The commit is not actually created 5906 until the user finishes with ‘C-c C-c’. 5907 5908 ‘m n’ (‘magit-merge-nocommit’) 5909 This command merges another branch or an arbitrary revision into 5910 the current branch, but does not actually create the merge commit. 5911 The user can then further adjust the merge, even when automatic 5912 conflict resolution succeeded and/or adjust the commit message. 5913 5914 ‘m a’ (‘magit-merge-absorb’) 5915 This command merges another local branch into the current branch 5916 and then removes the former. 5917 5918 Before the source branch is merged, it is first force pushed to its 5919 push-remote, provided the respective remote branch already exists. 5920 This ensures that the respective pull-request (if any) won’t get 5921 stuck on some obsolete version of the commits that are being 5922 merged. Finally, if ‘magit-branch-pull-request’ was used to create 5923 the merged branch, then the respective remote branch is also 5924 removed. 5925 5926 ‘m i’ (‘magit-merge-into’) 5927 This command merges the current branch into another local branch 5928 and then removes the former. The latter becomes the new current 5929 branch. 5930 5931 Before the source branch is merged, it is first force pushed to its 5932 push-remote, provided the respective remote branch already exists. 5933 This ensures that the respective pull-request (if any) won’t get 5934 stuck on some obsolete version of the commits that are being 5935 merged. Finally, if ‘magit-branch-pull-request’ was used to create 5936 the merged branch, then the respective remote branch is also 5937 removed. 5938 5939 ‘m s’ (‘magit-merge-squash’) 5940 This command squashes the changes introduced by another branch or 5941 an arbitrary revision into the current branch. This only applies 5942 the changes made by the squashed commits. No information is 5943 preserved that would allow creating an actual merge commit. 5944 Instead of this command you should probably use a command from the 5945 apply transient. 5946 5947 ‘m p’ (‘magit-merge-preview’) 5948 This command shows a preview of merging another branch or an 5949 arbitrary revision into the current branch. 5950 5951 Note that commands, that normally change how a diff is displayed, 5952 do not work in buffers created by this command, because the 5953 underlying Git command does not support diff arguments. 5954 5955 When a merge is in progress, then the transient instead features the 5956 following suffix commands. 5957 5958 ‘m m’ (‘magit-merge’) 5959 After the user resolved conflicts, this command proceeds with the 5960 merge. If some conflicts weren’t resolved, then this command 5961 fails. 5962 5963 ‘m a’ (‘magit-merge-abort’) 5964 This command aborts the current merge operation. 5965 5966 5967 File: magit.info, Node: Resolving Conflicts, Next: Rebasing, Prev: Merging, Up: Manipulating 5968 5969 6.8 Resolving Conflicts 5970 ======================= 5971 5972 When merging branches (or otherwise combining or changing history) 5973 conflicts can occur. If you edited two completely different parts of 5974 the same file in two branches and then merge one of these branches into 5975 the other, then Git can resolve that on its own, but if you edit the 5976 same area of a file, then a human is required to decide how the two 5977 versions, or "sides of the conflict", are to be combined into one. 5978 5979 Here we can only provide a brief introduction to the subject and 5980 point you toward some tools that can help. If you are new to this, then 5981 please also consult Git’s own documentation as well as other resources. 5982 5983 If a file has conflicts and Git cannot resolve them by itself, then 5984 it puts both versions into the affected file along with special markers 5985 whose purpose is to denote the boundaries of the unresolved part of the 5986 file and between the different versions. These boundary lines begin 5987 with the strings consisting of seven times the same character, one of 5988 ‘<’, ‘|’, ‘=’ and ‘>’, and are followed by information about the source 5989 of the respective versions, e.g.: 5990 5991 <<<<<<< HEAD 5992 Take the blue pill. 5993 ======= 5994 Take the red pill. 5995 >>>>>>> feature 5996 5997 In this case you have chosen to take the red pill on one branch and 5998 on another you picked the blue pill. Now that you are merging these two 5999 diverging branches, Git cannot possibly know which pill you want to 6000 take. 6001 6002 To resolve that conflict you have to create a version of the affected 6003 area of the file by keeping only one of the sides, possibly by editing 6004 it in order to bring in the changes from the other side, remove the 6005 other versions as well as the markers, and then stage the result. A 6006 possible resolution might be: 6007 6008 Take both pills. 6009 6010 Often it is useful to see not only the two sides of the conflict but 6011 also the "original" version from before the same area of the file was 6012 modified twice on different branches. Instruct Git to insert that 6013 version as well by running this command once: 6014 6015 git config --global merge.conflictStyle diff3 6016 6017 The above conflict might then have looked like this: 6018 6019 <<<<<<< HEAD 6020 Take the blue pill. 6021 ||||||| merged common ancestors 6022 Take either the blue or the red pill, but not both. 6023 ======= 6024 Take the red pill. 6025 >>>>>>> feature 6026 6027 If that were the case, then the above conflict resolution would not 6028 have been correct, which demonstrates why seeing the original version 6029 alongside the conflicting versions can be useful. 6030 6031 You can perform the conflict resolution completely by hand, but Emacs 6032 also provides some packages that help in the process: Smerge, Ediff 6033 (*note (ediff)Top::), and Emerge (*note (emacs)Emerge::). Magit does 6034 not provide its own tools for conflict resolution, but it does make 6035 using Smerge and Ediff more convenient. (Ediff supersedes Emerge, so 6036 you probably don’t want to use the latter anyway.) 6037 6038 In the Magit status buffer, files with unresolved conflicts are 6039 listed in the "Unstaged changes" and/or "Staged changes" sections. They 6040 are prefixed with the word "unmerged", which in this context essentially 6041 is a synonym for "unresolved". 6042 6043 Pressing ‘RET’ while point is on such a file section shows a buffer 6044 visiting that file, turns on ‘smerge-mode’ in that buffer, and places 6045 point inside the first area with conflicts. You should then resolve 6046 that conflict using regular edit commands and/or Smerge commands. 6047 6048 Unfortunately Smerge does not have a manual, but you can get a list 6049 of commands and binding ‘C-c ^ C-h’ and press ‘RET’ while point is on a 6050 command name to read its documentation. 6051 6052 Normally you would edit one version and then tell Smerge to keep only 6053 that version. Use ‘C-c ^ m’ (‘smerge-keep-mine’) to keep the ‘HEAD’ 6054 version or ‘C-c ^ o’ (‘smerge-keep-other’) to keep the version that 6055 follows "|||||||". Then use ‘C-c ^ n’ to move to the next conflicting 6056 area in the same file. Once you are done resolving conflicts, return to 6057 the Magit status buffer. The file should now be shown as "modified", no 6058 longer as "unmerged", because Smerge automatically stages the file when 6059 you save the buffer after resolving the last conflict. 6060 6061 Magit now wraps the mentioned Smerge commands, allowing you to use 6062 these key bindings without having to go to the file-visiting buffer. 6063 Additionally ‘k’ (‘magit-discard’) on a hunk with unresolved conflicts 6064 asks which side to keep or, if point is on a side, then it keeps it 6065 without prompting. Similarly ‘k’ on a unresolved file ask which side to 6066 keep. 6067 6068 Alternatively you could use Ediff, which uses separate buffers for 6069 the different versions of the file. To resolve conflicts in a file 6070 using Ediff press ‘e’ while point is on such a file in the status 6071 buffer. 6072 6073 Ediff can be used for other purposes as well. For more information 6074 on how to enter Ediff from Magit, see *note Ediffing::. Explaining how 6075 to use Ediff is beyond the scope of this manual, instead see *note 6076 (ediff)Top::. 6077 6078 If you are unsure whether you should Smerge or Ediff, then use the 6079 former. It is much easier to understand and use, and except for truly 6080 complex conflicts, the latter is usually overkill. 6081 6082 6083 File: magit.info, Node: Rebasing, Next: Cherry Picking, Prev: Resolving Conflicts, Up: Manipulating 6084 6085 6.9 Rebasing 6086 ============ 6087 6088 Also see *note (gitman)git-rebase::. For information on how to resolve 6089 conflicts that occur during rebases see the preceding section. 6090 6091 ‘r’ (‘magit-rebase’) 6092 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 6093 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 6094 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 6095 6096 When no rebase is in progress, then the transient features the 6097 following suffix commands. 6098 6099 Using one of these commands _starts_ a rebase sequence. Git might 6100 then stop somewhere along the way, either because you told it to do so, 6101 or because applying a commit failed due to a conflict. When that 6102 happens, then the status buffer shows information about the rebase 6103 sequence which is in progress in a section similar to a log section. 6104 See *note Information About In-Progress Rebase::. 6105 6106 For information about the upstream and the push-remote, see *note The 6107 Two Remotes::. 6108 6109 ‘r p’ (‘magit-rebase-onto-pushremote’) 6110 This command rebases the current branch onto its push-remote. 6111 6112 With a prefix argument or when the push-remote is either not 6113 configured or unusable, then let the user first configure the 6114 push-remote. 6115 6116 ‘r u’ (‘magit-rebase-onto-upstream’) 6117 This command rebases the current branch onto its upstream branch. 6118 6119 With a prefix argument or when the upstream is either not 6120 configured or unusable, then let the user first configure the 6121 upstream. 6122 6123 ‘r e’ (‘magit-rebase-branch’) 6124 This command rebases the current branch onto a branch read in the 6125 minibuffer. All commits that are reachable from head but not from 6126 the selected branch TARGET are being rebased. 6127 6128 ‘r s’ (‘magit-rebase-subset’) 6129 This command starts a non-interactive rebase sequence to transfer 6130 commits from START to ‘HEAD’ onto NEWBASE. START has to be 6131 selected from a list of recent commits. 6132 6133 By default Magit uses the ‘--autostash’ argument, which causes 6134 uncommitted changes to be stored in a stash before the rebase begins. 6135 These changes are restored after the rebase completes and if possible 6136 the stash is removed. If the stash does not apply cleanly, then the 6137 stash is not removed. In case something goes wrong when resolving the 6138 conflicts, this allows you to start over. 6139 6140 Even though one of the actions is dedicated to interactive rebases, 6141 the transient also features the infix argument ‘--interactive’. This 6142 can be used to turn one of the other, non-interactive rebase variants 6143 into an interactive rebase. 6144 6145 For example if you want to clean up a feature branch and at the same 6146 time rebase it onto ‘master’, then you could use ‘r-iu’. But we 6147 recommend that you instead do that in two steps. First use ‘ri’ to 6148 cleanup the feature branch, and then in a second step ‘ru’ to rebase it 6149 onto ‘master’. That way if things turn out to be more complicated than 6150 you thought and/or you make a mistake and have to start over, then you 6151 only have to redo half the work. 6152 6153 Explicitly enabling ‘--interactive’ won’t have an effect on the 6154 following commands as they always use that argument anyway, even if it 6155 is not enabled in the transient. 6156 6157 ‘r i’ (‘magit-rebase-interactive’) 6158 This command starts an interactive rebase sequence. 6159 6160 ‘r f’ (‘magit-rebase-autosquash’) 6161 This command combines squash and fixup commits with their intended 6162 targets. 6163 6164 ‘r m’ (‘magit-rebase-edit-commit’) 6165 This command starts an interactive rebase sequence that lets the 6166 user edit a single older commit. 6167 6168 ‘r w’ (‘magit-rebase-reword-commit’) 6169 This command starts an interactive rebase sequence that lets the 6170 user reword a single older commit. 6171 6172 ‘r k’ (‘magit-rebase-remove-commit’) 6173 This command removes a single older commit using rebase. 6174 6175 When a rebase is in progress, then the transient instead features the 6176 following suffix commands. 6177 6178 ‘r r’ (‘magit-rebase-continue’) 6179 This command restart the current rebasing operation. 6180 6181 In some cases this pops up a commit message buffer for you do edit. 6182 With a prefix argument the old message is reused as-is. 6183 6184 ‘r s’ (‘magit-rebase-skip’) 6185 This command skips the current commit and restarts the current 6186 rebase operation. 6187 6188 ‘r e’ (‘magit-rebase-edit’) 6189 This command lets the user edit the todo list of the current rebase 6190 operation. 6191 6192 ‘r a’ (‘magit-rebase-abort’) 6193 This command aborts the current rebase operation, restoring the 6194 original branch. 6195 6196 * Menu: 6197 6198 * Editing Rebase Sequences:: 6199 * Information About In-Progress Rebase:: 6200 6201 6202 File: magit.info, Node: Editing Rebase Sequences, Next: Information About In-Progress Rebase, Up: Rebasing 6203 6204 6.9.1 Editing Rebase Sequences 6205 ------------------------------ 6206 6207 ‘C-c C-c’ (‘with-editor-finish’) 6208 Finish the current editing session by returning with exit code 0. 6209 Git then uses the rebase instructions it finds in the file. 6210 6211 ‘C-c C-k’ (‘with-editor-cancel’) 6212 Cancel the current editing session by returning with exit code 1. 6213 Git then forgoes starting the rebase sequence. 6214 6215 ‘<RET>’ (‘git-rebase-show-commit’) 6216 Show the commit on the current line in another buffer and select 6217 that buffer. 6218 6219 ‘<SPC>’ (‘git-rebase-show-or-scroll-up’) 6220 Show the commit on the current line in another buffer without 6221 selecting that buffer. If the revision buffer is already visible 6222 in another window of the current frame, then instead scroll that 6223 window up. 6224 6225 ‘<DEL>’ (‘git-rebase-show-or-scroll-down’) 6226 Show the commit on the current line in another buffer without 6227 selecting that buffer. If the revision buffer is already visible 6228 in another window of the current frame, then instead scroll that 6229 window down. 6230 6231 ‘p’ (‘git-rebase-backward-line’) 6232 Move to previous line. 6233 6234 ‘n’ (‘forward-line’) 6235 Move to next line. 6236 6237 ‘M-p’ (‘git-rebase-move-line-up’) 6238 Move the current commit (or command) up. 6239 6240 ‘M-n’ (‘git-rebase-move-line-down’) 6241 Move the current commit (or command) down. 6242 6243 ‘r’ (‘git-rebase-reword’) 6244 Edit message of commit on current line. 6245 6246 ‘e’ (‘git-rebase-edit’) 6247 Stop at the commit on the current line. 6248 6249 ‘s’ (‘git-rebase-squash’) 6250 Meld commit on current line into previous commit, and edit message. 6251 6252 ‘f’ (‘git-rebase-fixup’) 6253 Meld commit on current line into previous commit, discarding the 6254 current commit’s message. 6255 6256 ‘k’ (‘git-rebase-kill-line’) 6257 Kill the current action line. 6258 6259 ‘c’ (‘git-rebase-pick’) 6260 Use commit on current line. 6261 6262 ‘x’ (‘git-rebase-exec’) 6263 Insert a shell command to be run after the proceeding commit. 6264 6265 If there already is such a command on the current line, then edit 6266 that instead. With a prefix argument insert a new command even 6267 when there already is one on the current line. With empty input 6268 remove the command on the current line, if any. 6269 6270 ‘b’ (‘git-rebase-break’) 6271 Insert a break action before the current line, instructing Git to 6272 return control to the user. 6273 6274 ‘y’ (‘git-rebase-insert’) 6275 Read an arbitrary commit and insert it below current line. 6276 6277 ‘C-x u’ (‘git-rebase-undo’) 6278 Undo some previous changes. Like ‘undo’ but works in read-only 6279 buffers. 6280 6281 -- User Option: git-rebase-auto-advance 6282 Whether to move to next line after changing a line. 6283 6284 -- User Option: git-rebase-show-instructions 6285 Whether to show usage instructions inside the rebase buffer. 6286 6287 -- User Option: git-rebase-confirm-cancel 6288 Whether confirmation is required to cancel. 6289 6290 When a rebase is performed with the ‘--rebase-merges’ option, the 6291 sequence will include a few other types of actions and the following 6292 commands become relevant. 6293 6294 ‘l’ (‘git-rebase-label’) 6295 This commands inserts a label action or edits the one at point. 6296 6297 ‘t’ (‘git-rebase-reset’) 6298 This command inserts a reset action or edits the one at point. The 6299 prompt will offer the labels that are currently present in the 6300 buffer. 6301 6302 ‘MM’ (‘git-rebase-merge’) 6303 The command inserts a merge action or edits the one at point. The 6304 prompt will offer the labels that are currently present in the 6305 buffer. Specifying a message to reuse via ‘-c’ or ‘-C’ is not 6306 supported; an editor will always be invoked for the merge. 6307 6308 ‘Mt’ (‘git-rebase-merge-toggle-editmsg’) 6309 This command toggles between the ‘-C’ and ‘-c’ options of the merge 6310 action at point. These options both specify a commit whose message 6311 should be reused. The lower-case variant instructs Git to invoke 6312 the editor when creating the merge, allowing the user to edit the 6313 message. 6314 6315 6316 File: magit.info, Node: Information About In-Progress Rebase, Prev: Editing Rebase Sequences, Up: Rebasing 6317 6318 6.9.2 Information About In-Progress Rebase 6319 ------------------------------------------ 6320 6321 While a rebase sequence is in progress, the status buffer features a 6322 section that lists the commits that have already been applied as well as 6323 the commits that still have to be applied. 6324 6325 The commits are split in two halves. When rebase stops at a commit, 6326 either because the user has to deal with a conflict or because s/he 6327 explicitly requested that rebase stops at that commit, then point is 6328 placed on the commit that separates the two groups, i.e., on ‘HEAD’. 6329 The commits above it have not been applied yet, while the ‘HEAD’ and the 6330 commits below it have already been applied. In between these two groups 6331 of applied and yet-to-be applied commits, there sometimes is a commit 6332 which has been dropped. 6333 6334 Each commit is prefixed with a word and these words are additionally 6335 shown in different colors to indicate the status of the commits. 6336 6337 The following colors are used: 6338 6339 • Commits that use the same foreground color as the ‘default’ face 6340 have not been applied yet. 6341 6342 • Yellow commits have some special relationship to the commit rebase 6343 stopped at. This is used for the words "join", "goal", "same" and 6344 "work" (see below). 6345 6346 • Gray commits have already been applied. 6347 6348 • The blue commit is the ‘HEAD’ commit. 6349 6350 • The green commit is the commit the rebase sequence stopped at. If 6351 this is the same commit as ‘HEAD’ (e.g., because you haven’t done 6352 anything yet after rebase stopped at the commit, then this commit 6353 is shown in blue, not green). There can only be a green *and* a 6354 blue commit at the same time, if you create one or more new commits 6355 after rebase stops at a commit. 6356 6357 • Red commits have been dropped. They are shown for reference only, 6358 e.g., to make it easier to diff. 6359 6360 Of course these colors are subject to the color-theme in use. 6361 6362 The following words are used: 6363 6364 • Commits prefixed with ‘pick’, ‘reword’, ‘edit’, ‘squash’, and 6365 ‘fixup’ have not been applied yet. These words have the same 6366 meaning here as they do in the buffer used to edit the rebase 6367 sequence. See *note Editing Rebase Sequences::. When the 6368 ‘--rebase-merges’ option was specified, ‘reset’, ‘label’, and 6369 ‘merge’ lines may also be present. 6370 6371 • Commits prefixed with ‘done’ and ‘onto’ have already been applied. 6372 It is possible for such a commit to be the ‘HEAD’, in which case it 6373 is blue. Otherwise it is grey. 6374 6375 • The commit prefixed with ‘onto’ is the commit on top of which 6376 all the other commits are being re-applied. This commit 6377 itself did not have to be re-applied, it is the commit rebase 6378 did rewind to before starting to re-apply other commits. 6379 6380 • Commits prefixed with ‘done’ have already been re-applied. 6381 This includes commits that have been re-applied but also new 6382 commits that you have created during the rebase. 6383 6384 • All other commits, those not prefixed with any of the above words, 6385 are in some way related to the commit at which rebase stopped. 6386 6387 To determine whether a commit is related to the stopped-at commit 6388 their hashes, trees and patch-ids (1) are being compared. The 6389 commit message is not used for this purpose. 6390 6391 Generally speaking commits that are related to the stopped-at 6392 commit can have any of the used colors, though not all color/word 6393 combinations are possible. 6394 6395 Words used for stopped-at commits are: 6396 6397 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘void’, then that indicates 6398 that Magit knows for sure that all the changes in that commit 6399 have been applied using several new commits. This commit is 6400 no longer reachable from ‘HEAD’, and it also isn’t one of the 6401 commits that will be applied when resuming the session. 6402 6403 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘join’, then that indicates 6404 that the rebase sequence stopped at that commit due to a 6405 conflict - you now have to join (merge) the changes with what 6406 has already been applied. In a sense this is the commit 6407 rebase stopped at, but while its effect is already in the 6408 index and in the worktree (with conflict markers), the commit 6409 itself has not actually been applied yet (it isn’t the 6410 ‘HEAD’). So it is shown in yellow, like the other commits 6411 that still have to be applied. 6412 6413 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘stop’ or a _blue_ or _green_ 6414 ‘same’, then that indicates that rebase stopped at this 6415 commit, that it is still applied or has been applied again, 6416 and that at least its patch-id is unchanged. 6417 6418 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘stop’, then that 6419 indicates that rebase stopped at that commit because you 6420 requested that earlier, and its patch-id is unchanged. 6421 It might even still be the exact same commit. 6422 6423 • When a commit is prefixed with a _blue_ or _green_ 6424 ‘same’, then that indicates that while its tree or hash 6425 changed, its patch-id did not. If it is blue, then it is 6426 the ‘HEAD’ commit (as always for blue). When it is 6427 green, then it no longer is ‘HEAD’ because other commit 6428 have been created since (but before continuing the 6429 rebase). 6430 6431 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘goal’, a _yellow_ ‘same,’ or 6432 ‘work’, then that indicates that rebase applied that commit 6433 but that you then reset ‘HEAD’ to an earlier commit (likely to 6434 split it up into multiple commits), and that there are some 6435 uncommitted changes remaining which likely (but not 6436 necessarily) originate from that commit. 6437 6438 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘goal’, then that 6439 indicates that it is still possible to create a new 6440 commit with the exact same tree (the "goal") without 6441 manually editing any files, by committing the index, or 6442 by staging all changes and then committing that. This is 6443 the case when the original tree still exists in the index 6444 or worktree in untainted form. 6445 6446 • When a commit is prefixed with a yellow ‘same’, then that 6447 indicates that it is no longer possible to create a 6448 commit with the exact same tree, but that it is still 6449 possible to create a commit with the same patch-id. This 6450 would be the case if you created a new commit with other 6451 changes, but the changes from the original commit still 6452 exist in the index or working tree in untainted form. 6453 6454 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘work’, then that 6455 indicates that you reset ‘HEAD’ to an earlier commit, and 6456 that there are some staged and/or unstaged changes 6457 (likely, but not necessarily) originating from that 6458 commit. However it is no longer possible to create a new 6459 commit with the same tree or at least the same patch-id 6460 because you have already made other changes. 6461 6462 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘poof’ or ‘gone’, then that 6463 indicates that rebase applied that commit but that you then 6464 reset ‘HEAD’ to an earlier commit (likely to split it up into 6465 multiple commits), and that there are no uncommitted changes. 6466 6467 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘poof’, then that 6468 indicates that it is no longer reachable from ‘HEAD’, but 6469 that it has been replaced with one or more commits, which 6470 together have the exact same effect. 6471 6472 • When a commit is prefixed with ‘gone’, then that 6473 indicates that it is no longer reachable from ‘HEAD’ and 6474 that we also cannot determine whether its changes are 6475 still in effect in one or more new commits. They might 6476 be, but if so, then there must also be other changes 6477 which makes it impossible to know for sure. 6478 6479 Do not worry if you do not fully understand the above. That’s okay, 6480 you will acquire a good enough understanding through practice. 6481 6482 For other sequence operations such as cherry-picking, a similar 6483 section is displayed, but they lack some of the features described 6484 above, due to limitations in the git commands used to implement them. 6485 Most importantly these sequences only support "picking" a commit but not 6486 other actions such as "rewording", and they do not keep track of the 6487 commits which have already been applied. 6488 6489 ---------- Footnotes ---------- 6490 6491 (1) The patch-id is a hash of the _changes_ introduced by a commit. 6492 It differs from the hash of the commit itself, which is a hash of the 6493 result of applying that change (i.e., the resulting trees and blobs) as 6494 well as author and committer information, the commit message, and the 6495 hashes of the parents of the commit. The patch-id hash on the other 6496 hand is created only from the added and removed lines, even line numbers 6497 and whitespace changes are ignored when calculating this hash. The 6498 patch-ids of two commits can be used to answer the question "Do these 6499 commits make the same change?". 6500 6501 6502 File: magit.info, Node: Cherry Picking, Next: Resetting, Prev: Rebasing, Up: Manipulating 6503 6504 6.10 Cherry Picking 6505 =================== 6506 6507 Also see *note (gitman)git-cherry-pick::. 6508 6509 ‘A’ (‘magit-cherry-pick’) 6510 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 6511 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 6512 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 6513 6514 When no cherry-pick or revert is in progress, then the transient 6515 features the following suffix commands. 6516 6517 ‘A A’ (‘magit-cherry-copy’) 6518 This command copies COMMITS from another branch onto the current 6519 branch. If the region selects multiple commits, then those are 6520 copied, without prompting. Otherwise the user is prompted for a 6521 commit or range, defaulting to the commit at point. 6522 6523 ‘A a’ (‘magit-cherry-apply’) 6524 This command applies the changes in COMMITS from another branch 6525 onto the current branch. If the region selects multiple commits, 6526 then those are used, without prompting. Otherwise the user is 6527 prompted for a commit or range, defaulting to the commit at point. 6528 6529 This command also has a top-level binding, which can be invoked 6530 without using the transient by typing ‘a’ at the top-level. 6531 6532 The following commands not only apply some commits to some branch, 6533 but also remove them from some other branch. The removal is performed 6534 using either ‘git-update-ref’ or if necessary ‘git-rebase’. Both 6535 applying commits as well as removing them using ‘git-rebase’ can lead to 6536 conflicts. If that happens, then these commands abort and you not only 6537 have to resolve the conflicts but also finish the process the same way 6538 you would have to if these commands didn’t exist at all. 6539 6540 ‘A h’ (‘magit-cherry-harvest’) 6541 This command moves the selected COMMITS that must be located on 6542 another BRANCH onto the current branch instead, removing them from 6543 the former. When this command succeeds, then the same branch is 6544 current as before. 6545 6546 Applying the commits on the current branch or removing them from 6547 the other branch can lead to conflicts. When that happens, then 6548 this command stops and you have to resolve the conflicts and then 6549 finish the process manually. 6550 6551 ‘A d’ (‘magit-cherry-donate’) 6552 This command moves the selected COMMITS from the current branch 6553 onto another existing BRANCH, removing them from the former. When 6554 this command succeeds, then the same branch is current as before. 6555 ‘HEAD’ is allowed to be detached initially. 6556 6557 Applying the commits on the other branch or removing them from the 6558 current branch can lead to conflicts. When that happens, then this 6559 command stops and you have to resolve the conflicts and then finish 6560 the process manually. 6561 6562 ‘A n’ (‘magit-cherry-spinout’) 6563 This command moves the selected COMMITS from the current branch 6564 onto a new branch BRANCH, removing them from the former. When this 6565 command succeeds, then the same branch is current as before. 6566 6567 Applying the commits on the other branch or removing them from the 6568 current branch can lead to conflicts. When that happens, then this 6569 command stops and you have to resolve the conflicts and then finish 6570 the process manually. 6571 6572 ‘A s’ (‘magit-cherry-spinoff’) 6573 This command moves the selected COMMITS from the current branch 6574 onto a new branch BRANCH, removing them from the former. When this 6575 command succeeds, then the new branch is checked out. 6576 6577 Applying the commits on the other branch or removing them from the 6578 current branch can lead to conflicts. When that happens, then this 6579 command stops and you have to resolve the conflicts and then finish 6580 the process manually. 6581 6582 When a cherry-pick or revert is in progress, then the transient 6583 instead features the following suffix commands. 6584 6585 ‘A A’ (‘magit-sequence-continue’) 6586 Resume the current cherry-pick or revert sequence. 6587 6588 ‘A s’ (‘magit-sequence-skip’) 6589 Skip the stopped at commit during a cherry-pick or revert sequence. 6590 6591 ‘A a’ (‘magit-sequence-abort’) 6592 Abort the current cherry-pick or revert sequence. This discards 6593 all changes made since the sequence started. 6594 6595 * Menu: 6596 6597 * Reverting:: 6598 6599 6600 File: magit.info, Node: Reverting, Up: Cherry Picking 6601 6602 6.10.1 Reverting 6603 ---------------- 6604 6605 ‘V’ (‘magit-revert’) 6606 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 6607 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 6608 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 6609 6610 When no cherry-pick or revert is in progress, then the transient 6611 features the following suffix commands. 6612 6613 ‘V V’ (‘magit-revert-and-commit’) 6614 Revert a commit by creating a new commit. Prompt for a commit, 6615 defaulting to the commit at point. If the region selects multiple 6616 commits, then revert all of them, without prompting. 6617 6618 ‘V v’ (‘magit-revert-no-commit’) 6619 Revert a commit by applying it in reverse to the working tree. 6620 Prompt for a commit, defaulting to the commit at point. If the 6621 region selects multiple commits, then revert all of them, without 6622 prompting. 6623 6624 When a cherry-pick or revert is in progress, then the transient 6625 instead features the following suffix commands. 6626 6627 ‘V V’ (‘magit-sequence-continue’) 6628 Resume the current cherry-pick or revert sequence. 6629 6630 ‘V s’ (‘magit-sequence-skip’) 6631 Skip the stopped at commit during a cherry-pick or revert sequence. 6632 6633 ‘V a’ (‘magit-sequence-abort’) 6634 Abort the current cherry-pick or revert sequence. This discards 6635 all changes made since the sequence started. 6636 6637 6638 File: magit.info, Node: Resetting, Next: Stashing, Prev: Cherry Picking, Up: Manipulating 6639 6640 6.11 Resetting 6641 ============== 6642 6643 Also see *note (gitman)git-reset::. 6644 6645 ‘x’ (‘magit-reset-quickly’) 6646 Reset the ‘HEAD’ and index to some commit read from the user and 6647 defaulting to the commit at point, and possibly also reset the 6648 working tree. With a prefix argument reset the working tree 6649 otherwise don’t. 6650 6651 ‘X m’ (‘magit-reset-mixed’) 6652 Reset the ‘HEAD’ and index to some commit read from the user and 6653 defaulting to the commit at point. The working tree is kept as-is. 6654 6655 ‘X s’ (‘magit-reset-soft’) 6656 Reset the ‘HEAD’ to some commit read from the user and defaulting 6657 to the commit at point. The index and the working tree are kept 6658 as-is. 6659 6660 ‘X h’ (‘magit-reset-hard’) 6661 Reset the ‘HEAD’, index, and working tree to some commit read from 6662 the user and defaulting to the commit at point. 6663 6664 ‘X k’ (‘magit-reset-keep’) 6665 Reset the ‘HEAD’, index, and working tree to some commit read from 6666 the user and defaulting to the commit at point. Uncommitted 6667 changes are kept as-is. 6668 6669 ‘X i’ (‘magit-reset-index’) 6670 Reset the index to some commit read from the user and defaulting to 6671 the commit at point. Keep the ‘HEAD’ and working tree as-is, so if 6672 the commit refers to the ‘HEAD’, then this effectively unstages all 6673 changes. 6674 6675 ‘X w’ (‘magit-reset-worktree’) 6676 Reset the working tree to some commit read from the user and 6677 defaulting to the commit at point. Keep the ‘HEAD’ and index 6678 as-is. 6679 6680 ‘X f’ (‘magit-file-checkout’) 6681 Update file in the working tree and index to the contents from a 6682 revision. Both the revision and file are read from the user. 6683 6684 6685 File: magit.info, Node: Stashing, Prev: Resetting, Up: Manipulating 6686 6687 6.12 Stashing 6688 ============= 6689 6690 Also see *note (gitman)git-stash::. 6691 6692 ‘z’ (‘magit-stash’) 6693 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 6694 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 6695 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 6696 6697 ‘z z’ (‘magit-stash-both’) 6698 Create a stash of the index and working tree. Untracked files are 6699 included according to infix arguments. One prefix argument is 6700 equivalent to ‘--include-untracked’ while two prefix arguments are 6701 equivalent to ‘--all’. 6702 6703 ‘z i’ (‘magit-stash-index’) 6704 Create a stash of the index only. Unstaged and untracked changes 6705 are not stashed. 6706 6707 ‘z w’ (‘magit-stash-worktree’) 6708 Create a stash of unstaged changes in the working tree. Untracked 6709 files are included according to infix arguments. One prefix 6710 argument is equivalent to ‘--include-untracked’ while two prefix 6711 arguments are equivalent to ‘--all’. 6712 6713 ‘z x’ (‘magit-stash-keep-index’) 6714 Create a stash of the index and working tree, keeping index intact. 6715 Untracked files are included according to infix arguments. One 6716 prefix argument is equivalent to ‘--include-untracked’ while two 6717 prefix arguments are equivalent to ‘--all’. 6718 6719 ‘z Z’ (‘magit-snapshot-both’) 6720 Create a snapshot of the index and working tree. Untracked files 6721 are included according to infix arguments. One prefix argument is 6722 equivalent to ‘--include-untracked’ while two prefix arguments are 6723 equivalent to ‘--all’. 6724 6725 ‘z I’ (‘magit-snapshot-index’) 6726 Create a snapshot of the index only. Unstaged and untracked 6727 changes are not stashed. 6728 6729 ‘z W’ (‘magit-snapshot-worktree’) 6730 Create a snapshot of unstaged changes in the working tree. 6731 Untracked files are included according to infix arguments. One 6732 prefix argument is equivalent to ‘--include-untracked’ while two 6733 prefix arguments are equivalent to ‘--all’-. 6734 6735 ‘z a’ (‘magit-stash-apply’) 6736 Apply a stash to the working tree. 6737 6738 First try ‘git stash apply --index’, which tries to preserve the 6739 index stored in the stash, if any. This may fail because applying 6740 the stash could result in conflicts and those have to be stored in 6741 the index, making it impossible to also store the stash’s index 6742 there as well. 6743 6744 If the above failed, then try ‘git stash apply’. This fails (with 6745 or without ‘--index’) if there are any uncommitted changes to files 6746 that are also modified in the stash. 6747 6748 If both of the above failed, then apply using ‘git apply’. If 6749 there are no conflicting files, use ‘--3way’. If there are 6750 conflicting files, then using ‘--3way’ requires that those files 6751 are staged first, which may be undesirable, so prompt the user 6752 whether to use ‘--3way’ or ‘--reject’. 6753 6754 Customize ‘magit-no-confirm’ if you want to always use ‘--3way’, 6755 without being prompted. 6756 6757 ‘z p’ (‘magit-stash-pop’) 6758 Apply a stash to the working tree. On complete success (if the 6759 stash can be applied without any conflicts, and while preserving 6760 the stash’s index) then remove the stash from stash list. 6761 6762 First try ‘git stash pop --index’, which tries to preserve the 6763 index stored in the stash, if any. This may fail because applying 6764 the stash could result in conflicts and those have to be stored in 6765 the index, making it impossible to also store the stash’s index 6766 there as well. 6767 6768 If the above failed, then try ‘git stash apply’. This fails (with 6769 or without ‘--index’) if there are any uncommitted changes to files 6770 that are also modified in the stash. 6771 6772 If both of the above failed, then apply using ‘git apply’. If 6773 there are no conflicting files, use ‘--3way’. If there are 6774 conflicting files, then using ‘--3way’ requires that those files 6775 are staged first, which may be undesirable, so prompt the user 6776 whether to use ‘--3way’ or ‘--reject’. 6777 6778 Customize ‘magit-no-confirm’ if you want to always use ‘--3way’, 6779 without being prompted. 6780 6781 ‘z k’ (‘magit-stash-drop’) 6782 Remove a stash from the stash list. When the region is active, 6783 offer to drop all contained stashes. 6784 6785 ‘z v’ (‘magit-stash-show’) 6786 Show all diffs of a stash in a buffer. 6787 6788 ‘z b’ (‘magit-stash-branch’) 6789 Create and checkout a new branch from an existing stash. The new 6790 branch starts at the commit that was current when the stash was 6791 created. 6792 6793 ‘z B’ (‘magit-stash-branch-here’) 6794 Create and checkout a new branch from an existing stash. Use the 6795 current branch or ‘HEAD’ as the starting-point of the new branch. 6796 Then apply the stash, dropping it if it applies cleanly. 6797 6798 ‘z f’ (‘magit-stash-format-patch’) 6799 Create a patch from STASH. 6800 6801 ‘k’ (‘magit-stash-clear’) 6802 Remove all stashes saved in REF’s reflog by deleting REF. 6803 6804 ‘z l’ (‘magit-stash-list’) 6805 List all stashes in a buffer. 6806 6807 -- User Option: magit-stashes-margin 6808 This option specifies whether the margin is initially shown in 6809 stashes buffers and how it is formatted. 6810 6811 The value has the form ‘(INIT STYLE WIDTH AUTHOR AUTHOR-WIDTH)’. 6812 6813 • If INIT is non-nil, then the margin is shown initially. 6814 • STYLE controls how to format the author or committer date. It 6815 can be one of ‘age’ (to show the age of the commit), 6816 ‘age-abbreviated’ (to abbreviate the time unit to a 6817 character), or a string (suitable for ‘format-time-string’) to 6818 show the actual date. Option 6819 ‘magit-log-margin-show-committer-date’ controls which date is 6820 being displayed. 6821 • WIDTH controls the width of the margin. This exists for 6822 forward compatibility and currently the value should not be 6823 changed. 6824 • AUTHOR controls whether the name of the author is also shown 6825 by default. 6826 • AUTHOR-WIDTH has to be an integer. When the name of the 6827 author is shown, then this specifies how much space is used to 6828 do so. 6829 6830 6831 File: magit.info, Node: Transferring, Next: Miscellaneous, Prev: Manipulating, Up: Top 6832 6833 7 Transferring 6834 ************** 6835 6836 * Menu: 6837 6838 * Remotes:: 6839 * Fetching:: 6840 * Pulling:: 6841 * Pushing:: 6842 * Plain Patches:: 6843 * Maildir Patches:: 6844 6845 6846 File: magit.info, Node: Remotes, Next: Fetching, Up: Transferring 6847 6848 7.1 Remotes 6849 =========== 6850 6851 * Menu: 6852 6853 * Remote Commands:: 6854 * Remote Git Variables:: 6855 6856 6857 File: magit.info, Node: Remote Commands, Next: Remote Git Variables, Up: Remotes 6858 6859 7.1.1 Remote Commands 6860 --------------------- 6861 6862 The transient prefix command ‘magit-remote’ is used to add remotes and 6863 to make changes to existing remotes. This command only deals with 6864 remotes themselves, not with branches or the transfer of commits. Those 6865 features are available from separate transient commands. 6866 6867 Also see *note (gitman)git-remote::. 6868 6869 ‘M’ (‘magit-remote’) 6870 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 6871 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 6872 6873 By default it also binds and displays the values of some 6874 remote-related Git variables and allows changing their values. 6875 6876 -- User Option: magit-remote-direct-configure 6877 This option controls whether remote-related Git variables are 6878 accessible directly from the transient ‘magit-remote’. 6879 6880 If ‘t’ (the default) and a local branch is checked out, then 6881 ‘magit-remote’ features the variables for the upstream remote of 6882 that branch, or if ‘HEAD’ is detached, for ‘origin’, provided that 6883 exists. 6884 6885 If ‘nil’, then ‘magit-remote-configure’ has to be used to do so. 6886 6887 ‘M C’ (‘magit-remote-configure’) 6888 This transient prefix command binds commands that set the value of 6889 remote-related variables and displays them in a temporary buffer 6890 until the transient is exited. 6891 6892 With a prefix argument, this command always prompts for a remote. 6893 6894 Without a prefix argument this depends on whether it was invoked as 6895 a suffix of ‘magit-remote’ and on the 6896 ‘magit-remote-direct-configure’ option. If ‘magit-remote’ already 6897 displays the variables for the upstream, then it does not make 6898 sense to invoke another transient that displays them for the same 6899 remote. In that case this command prompts for a remote. 6900 6901 The variables are described in *note Remote Git Variables::. 6902 6903 ‘M a’ (‘magit-remote-add’) 6904 This command add a remote and fetches it. The remote name and url 6905 are read in the minibuffer. 6906 6907 ‘M r’ (‘magit-remote-rename’) 6908 This command renames a remote. Both the old and the new names are 6909 read in the minibuffer. 6910 6911 ‘M u’ (‘magit-remote-set-url’) 6912 This command changes the url of a remote. Both the remote and the 6913 new url are read in the minibuffer. 6914 6915 ‘M k’ (‘magit-remote-remove’) 6916 This command deletes a remote, read in the minibuffer. 6917 6918 ‘M p’ (‘magit-remote-prune’) 6919 This command removes stale remote-tracking branches for a remote 6920 read in the minibuffer. 6921 6922 ‘M P’ (‘magit-remote-prune-refspecs’) 6923 This command removes stale refspecs for a remote read in the 6924 minibuffer. 6925 6926 A refspec is stale if there no longer exists at least one branch on 6927 the remote that would be fetched due to that refspec. A stale 6928 refspec is problematic because its existence causes Git to refuse 6929 to fetch according to the remaining non-stale refspecs. 6930 6931 If only stale refspecs remain, then this command offers to either 6932 delete the remote or to replace the stale refspecs with the default 6933 refspec ("+refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/REMOTE/*"). 6934 6935 This command also removes the remote-tracking branches that were 6936 created due to the now stale refspecs. Other stale branches are 6937 not removed. 6938 6939 -- User Option: magit-remote-add-set-remote.pushDefault 6940 This option controls whether the user is asked whether they want to 6941 set ‘remote.pushDefault’ after adding a remote. 6942 6943 If ‘ask’, then users is always ask. If ‘ask-if-unset’, then the 6944 user is only if the variable isn’t set already. If ‘nil’, then the 6945 user isn’t asked and the variable isn’t set. If the value is a 6946 string, then the variable is set without the user being asked, 6947 provided that the name of the added remote is equal to that string 6948 and the variable isn’t already set. 6949 6950 6951 File: magit.info, Node: Remote Git Variables, Prev: Remote Commands, Up: Remotes 6952 6953 7.1.2 Remote Git Variables 6954 -------------------------- 6955 6956 These variables can be set from the transient prefix command 6957 ‘magit-remote-configure’. By default they can also be set from 6958 ‘magit-remote’. See *note Remote Commands::. 6959 6960 -- Variable: remote.NAME.url 6961 This variable specifies the url of the remote named NAME. It can 6962 have multiple values. 6963 6964 -- Variable: remote.NAME.fetch 6965 The refspec used when fetching from the remote named NAME. It can 6966 have multiple values. 6967 6968 -- Variable: remote.NAME.pushurl 6969 This variable specifies the url used for pushing to the remote 6970 named NAME. If it is not specified, then ‘remote.NAME.url’ is used 6971 instead. It can have multiple values. 6972 6973 -- Variable: remote.NAME.push 6974 The refspec used when pushing to the remote named NAME. It can 6975 have multiple values. 6976 6977 -- Variable: remote.NAME.tagOpts 6978 This variable specifies what tags are fetched by default. If the 6979 value is ‘--no-tags’ then no tags are fetched. If the value is 6980 ‘--tags’, then all tags are fetched. If this variable has no 6981 value, then only tags are fetched that are reachable from fetched 6982 branches. 6983 6984 6985 File: magit.info, Node: Fetching, Next: Pulling, Prev: Remotes, Up: Transferring 6986 6987 7.2 Fetching 6988 ============ 6989 6990 Also see *note (gitman)git-fetch::. For information about the upstream 6991 and the push-remote, see *note The Two Remotes::. 6992 6993 ‘f’ (‘magit-fetch’) 6994 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 6995 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 6996 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 6997 6998 ‘f p’ (‘magit-fetch-from-pushremote’) 6999 This command fetches from the current push-remote. 7000 7001 With a prefix argument or when the push-remote is either not 7002 configured or unusable, then let the user first configure the 7003 push-remote. 7004 7005 ‘f u’ (‘magit-fetch-from-upstream’) 7006 This command fetch from the upstream of the current branch. 7007 7008 If the upstream is configured for the current branch and names an 7009 existing remote, then use that. Otherwise try to use another 7010 remote: If only a single remote is configured, then use that. 7011 Otherwise if a remote named "origin" exists, then use that. 7012 7013 If no remote can be determined, then this command is not available 7014 from the ‘magit-fetch’ transient prefix and invoking it directly 7015 results in an error. 7016 7017 ‘f e’ (‘magit-fetch-other’) 7018 This command fetch from a repository read from the minibuffer. 7019 7020 ‘f o’ (‘magit-fetch-branch’) 7021 This command fetches a branch from a remote, both of which are read 7022 from the minibuffer. 7023 7024 ‘f r’ (‘magit-fetch-refspec’) 7025 This command fetches from a remote using an explicit refspec, both 7026 of which are read from the minibuffer. 7027 7028 ‘f a’ (‘magit-fetch-all’) 7029 This command fetches from all remotes. 7030 7031 ‘f m’ (‘magit-fetch-modules’) 7032 This command fetches all submodules. With a prefix argument, it 7033 acts as a transient prefix command, allowing the caller to set 7034 options. 7035 7036 -- User Option: magit-pull-or-fetch 7037 By default fetch and pull commands are available from separate 7038 transient prefix command. Setting this to ‘t’ adds some (but not 7039 all) of the above suffix commands to the ‘magit-pull’ transient. 7040 7041 If you do that, then you might also want to change the key binding 7042 for these prefix commands, e.g.: 7043 7044 (setq magit-pull-or-fetch t) 7045 (define-key magit-mode-map "f" 'magit-pull) ; was magit-fetch 7046 (define-key magit-mode-map "F" nil) ; was magit-pull 7047 7048 7049 File: magit.info, Node: Pulling, Next: Pushing, Prev: Fetching, Up: Transferring 7050 7051 7.3 Pulling 7052 =========== 7053 7054 Also see *note (gitman)git-pull::. For information about the upstream 7055 and the push-remote, see *note The Two Remotes::. 7056 7057 ‘F’ (‘magit-pull’) 7058 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7059 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7060 7061 ‘F p’ (‘magit-pull-from-pushremote’) 7062 This command pulls from the push-remote of the current branch. 7063 7064 With a prefix argument or when the push-remote is either not 7065 configured or unusable, then let the user first configure the 7066 push-remote. 7067 7068 ‘F u’ (‘magit-pull-from-upstream’) 7069 This command pulls from the upstream of the current branch. 7070 7071 With a prefix argument or when the upstream is either not 7072 configured or unusable, then let the user first configure the 7073 upstream. 7074 7075 ‘F e’ (‘magit-pull-branch’) 7076 This command pulls from a branch read in the minibuffer. 7077 7078 7079 File: magit.info, Node: Pushing, Next: Plain Patches, Prev: Pulling, Up: Transferring 7080 7081 7.4 Pushing 7082 =========== 7083 7084 Also see *note (gitman)git-push::. For information about the upstream 7085 and the push-remote, see *note The Two Remotes::. 7086 7087 ‘P’ (‘magit-push’) 7088 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7089 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 7090 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7091 7092 ‘P p’ (‘magit-push-current-to-pushremote’) 7093 This command pushes the current branch to its push-remote. 7094 7095 With a prefix argument or when the push-remote is either not 7096 configured or unusable, then let the user first configure the 7097 push-remote. 7098 7099 ‘P u’ (‘magit-push-current-to-upstream’) 7100 This command pushes the current branch to its upstream branch. 7101 7102 With a prefix argument or when the upstream is either not 7103 configured or unusable, then let the user first configure the 7104 upstream. 7105 7106 ‘P e’ (‘magit-push-current’) 7107 This command pushes the current branch to a branch read in the 7108 minibuffer. 7109 7110 ‘P o’ (‘magit-push-other’) 7111 This command pushes an arbitrary branch or commit somewhere. Both 7112 the source and the target are read in the minibuffer. 7113 7114 ‘P r’ (‘magit-push-refspecs’) 7115 This command pushes one or multiple refspecs to a remote, both of 7116 which are read in the minibuffer. 7117 7118 To use multiple refspecs, separate them with commas. Completion is 7119 only available for the part before the colon, or when no colon is 7120 used. 7121 7122 ‘P m’ (‘magit-push-matching’) 7123 This command pushes all matching branches to another repository. 7124 7125 If only one remote exists, then push to that. Otherwise prompt for 7126 a remote, offering the remote configured for the current branch as 7127 default. 7128 7129 ‘P t’ (‘magit-push-tags’) 7130 This command pushes all tags to another repository. 7131 7132 If only one remote exists, then push to that. Otherwise prompt for 7133 a remote, offering the remote configured for the current branch as 7134 default. 7135 7136 ‘P T’ (‘magit-push-tag’) 7137 This command pushes a tag to another repository. 7138 7139 One of the infix arguments, ‘--force-with-lease’, deserves a word of 7140 caution. It is passed without a value, which means "permit a force push 7141 as long as the remote-tracking branches match their counterparts on the 7142 remote end". If you’ve set up a tool to do automatic fetches (Magit 7143 itself does not provide such functionality), using ‘--force-with-lease’ 7144 can be dangerous because you don’t actually control or know the state of 7145 the remote-tracking refs. In that case, you should consider setting 7146 ‘push.useForceIfIncludes’ to ‘true’ (available since Git 2.30). 7147 7148 Two more push commands exist, which by default are not available from 7149 the push transient. See their doc-strings for instructions on how to 7150 add them to the transient. 7151 7152 -- Command: magit-push-implicitly args 7153 This command pushes somewhere without using an explicit refspec. 7154 7155 This command simply runs ‘git push -v [ARGS]’. ARGS are the infix 7156 arguments. No explicit refspec arguments are used. Instead the 7157 behavior depends on at least these Git variables: ‘push.default’, 7158 ‘remote.pushDefault’, ‘branch.<branch>.pushRemote’, 7159 ‘branch.<branch>.remote’, ‘branch.<branch>.merge’, and 7160 ‘remote.<remote>.push’. 7161 7162 If you add this suffix to a transient prefix without explicitly 7163 specifying the description, then an attempt is made to predict what 7164 this command will do. For example: 7165 7166 (transient-insert-suffix 'magit-push \"p\" 7167 '(\"i\" magit-push-implicitly))" 7168 7169 -- Command: magit-push-to-remote remote args 7170 This command pushes to the remote REMOTE without using an explicit 7171 refspec. The remote is read in the minibuffer. 7172 7173 This command simply runs ‘git push -v [ARGS] REMOTE’. ARGS are the 7174 infix arguments. No refspec arguments are used. Instead the 7175 behavior depends on at least these Git variables: ‘push.default’, 7176 ‘remote.pushDefault’, ‘branch.<branch>.pushRemote’, 7177 ‘branch.<branch>.remote’, ‘branch.<branch>.merge’, and 7178 ‘remote.<remote>.push’. 7179 7180 7181 File: magit.info, Node: Plain Patches, Next: Maildir Patches, Prev: Pushing, Up: Transferring 7182 7183 7.5 Plain Patches 7184 ================= 7185 7186 ‘W’ (‘magit-patch’) 7187 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7188 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 7189 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7190 7191 ‘W c’ (‘magit-patch-create’) 7192 This command creates patches for a set commits. If the region 7193 marks several commits, then it creates patches for all of them. 7194 Otherwise it functions as a transient prefix command, which 7195 features several infix arguments and binds itself as a suffix 7196 command. When this command is invoked as a suffix of itself, then 7197 it creates a patch using the specified infix arguments. 7198 7199 ‘w a’ (‘magit-patch-apply’) 7200 This command applies a patch. This is a transient prefix command, 7201 which features several infix arguments and binds itself as a suffix 7202 command. When this command is invoked as a suffix of itself, then 7203 it applies a patch using the specified infix arguments. 7204 7205 ‘W s’ (‘magit-patch-save’) 7206 This command creates a patch from the current diff. 7207 7208 Inside ‘magit-diff-mode’ or ‘magit-revision-mode’ buffers, ‘C-x 7209 C-w’ is also bound to this command. 7210 7211 It is also possible to save a plain patch file by using ‘C-x C-w’ 7212 inside a ‘magit-diff-mode’ or ‘magit-revision-mode’ buffer. 7213 7214 7215 File: magit.info, Node: Maildir Patches, Prev: Plain Patches, Up: Transferring 7216 7217 7.6 Maildir Patches 7218 =================== 7219 7220 Also see *note (gitman)git-am::. and *note (gitman)git-apply::. 7221 7222 ‘w’ (‘magit-am’) 7223 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7224 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 7225 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7226 7227 ‘w w’ (‘magit-am-apply-patches’) 7228 This command applies one or more patches. If the region marks 7229 files, then those are applied as patches. Otherwise this command 7230 reads a file-name in the minibuffer, defaulting to the file at 7231 point. 7232 7233 ‘w m’ (‘magit-am-apply-maildir’) 7234 This command applies patches from a maildir. 7235 7236 ‘w a’ (‘magit-patch-apply’) 7237 This command applies a plain patch. For a longer description see 7238 *note Plain Patches::. This command is only available from the 7239 ‘magit-am’ transient for historic reasons. 7240 7241 When an "am" operation is in progress, then the transient instead 7242 features the following suffix commands. 7243 7244 ‘w w’ (‘magit-am-continue’) 7245 This command resumes the current patch applying sequence. 7246 7247 ‘w s’ (‘magit-am-skip’) 7248 This command skips the stopped at patch during a patch applying 7249 sequence. 7250 7251 ‘w a’ (‘magit-am-abort’) 7252 This command aborts the current patch applying sequence. This 7253 discards all changes made since the sequence started. 7254 7255 7256 File: magit.info, Node: Miscellaneous, Next: Customizing, Prev: Transferring, Up: Top 7257 7258 8 Miscellaneous 7259 *************** 7260 7261 * Menu: 7262 7263 * Tagging:: 7264 * Notes:: 7265 * Submodules:: 7266 * Subtree:: 7267 * Worktree:: 7268 * Sparse checkouts:: 7269 * Bundle:: 7270 * Common Commands:: 7271 * Wip Modes:: 7272 * Commands for Buffers Visiting Files:: 7273 * Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs:: 7274 7275 7276 File: magit.info, Node: Tagging, Next: Notes, Up: Miscellaneous 7277 7278 8.1 Tagging 7279 =========== 7280 7281 Also see *note (gitman)git-tag::. 7282 7283 ‘t’ (‘magit-tag’) 7284 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7285 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 7286 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7287 7288 ‘t t’ (‘magit-tag-create’) 7289 This command creates a new tag with the given NAME at REV. With a 7290 prefix argument it creates an annotated tag. 7291 7292 ‘t r’ (‘magit-tag-release’) 7293 This commands creates a release tag. It assumes that release tags 7294 match ‘magit-release-tag-regexp’. 7295 7296 First it prompts for the name of the new tag using the highest 7297 existing tag as initial input and leaving it to the user to 7298 increment the desired part of the version string. If you use 7299 unconventional release tags or version numbers (e.g., 7300 ‘v1.2.3-custom.1’), you can set the ‘magit-release-tag-regexp’ and 7301 ‘magit-tag-version-regexp-alist’ variables. 7302 7303 If ‘--annotate’ is enabled then it prompts for the message of the 7304 new tag. The proposed tag message is based on the message of the 7305 highest tag, provided that that contains the corresponding version 7306 string and substituting the new version string for that. Otherwise 7307 it proposes something like "Foo-Bar 1.2.3", given, for example, a 7308 TAG "v1.2.3" and a repository located at something like 7309 "/path/to/foo-bar". 7310 7311 ‘t k’ (‘magit-tag-delete’) 7312 This command deletes one or more tags. If the region marks 7313 multiple tags (and nothing else), then it offers to delete those. 7314 Otherwise, it prompts for a single tag to be deleted, defaulting to 7315 the tag at point. 7316 7317 ‘t p’ (‘magit-tag-prune’) 7318 This command offers to delete tags missing locally from REMOTE, and 7319 vice versa. 7320 7321 7322 File: magit.info, Node: Notes, Next: Submodules, Prev: Tagging, Up: Miscellaneous 7323 7324 8.2 Notes 7325 ========= 7326 7327 Also see *note (gitman)git-notes::. 7328 7329 ‘T’ (‘magit-notes’) 7330 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7331 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 7332 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7333 7334 ‘T T’ (‘magit-notes-edit’) 7335 Edit the note attached to a commit, defaulting to the commit at 7336 point. 7337 7338 By default use the value of Git variable ‘core.notesRef’ or 7339 "refs/notes/commits" if that is undefined. 7340 7341 ‘T r’ (‘magit-notes-remove’) 7342 Remove the note attached to a commit, defaulting to the commit at 7343 point. 7344 7345 By default use the value of Git variable ‘core.notesRef’ or 7346 "refs/notes/commits" if that is undefined. 7347 7348 ‘T p’ (‘magit-notes-prune’) 7349 Remove notes about unreachable commits. 7350 7351 It is possible to merge one note ref into another. That may result 7352 in conflicts which have to resolved in the temporary worktree 7353 ".git/NOTES_MERGE_WORKTREE". 7354 7355 ‘T m’ (‘magit-notes-merge’) 7356 Merge the notes of a ref read from the user into the current notes 7357 ref. The current notes ref is the value of Git variable 7358 ‘core.notesRef’ or "refs/notes/commits" if that is undefined. 7359 7360 When a notes merge is in progress then the transient features the 7361 following suffix commands, instead of those listed above. 7362 7363 ‘T c’ (‘magit-notes-merge-commit’) 7364 Commit the current notes ref merge, after manually resolving 7365 conflicts. 7366 7367 ‘T a’ (‘magit-notes-merge-abort’) 7368 Abort the current notes ref merge. 7369 7370 The following variables control what notes reference ‘magit-notes-*’, 7371 ‘git notes’ and ‘git show’ act on and display. Both the local and 7372 global values are displayed and can be modified. 7373 7374 -- Variable: core.notesRef 7375 This variable specifies the notes ref that is displayed by default 7376 and which commands act on by default. 7377 7378 -- Variable: notes.displayRef 7379 This variable specifies additional notes ref to be displayed in 7380 addition to the ref specified by ‘core.notesRef’. It can have 7381 multiple values and may end with ‘*’ to display all refs in the 7382 ‘refs/notes/’ namespace (or ‘**’ if some names contain slashes). 7383 7384 7385 File: magit.info, Node: Submodules, Next: Subtree, Prev: Notes, Up: Miscellaneous 7386 7387 8.3 Submodules 7388 ============== 7389 7390 Also see *note (gitman)git-submodule::. 7391 7392 * Menu: 7393 7394 * Listing Submodules:: 7395 * Submodule Transient:: 7396 7397 7398 File: magit.info, Node: Listing Submodules, Next: Submodule Transient, Up: Submodules 7399 7400 8.3.1 Listing Submodules 7401 ------------------------ 7402 7403 The command ‘magit-list-submodules’ displays a list of the current 7404 repository’s submodules in a separate buffer. It’s also possible to 7405 display information about submodules directly in the status buffer of 7406 the super-repository by adding ‘magit-insert-modules’ to the hook 7407 ‘magit-status-sections-hook’ as described in *note Status Module 7408 Sections::. 7409 7410 -- Command: magit-list-submodules 7411 This command displays a list of the current repository’s populated 7412 submodules in a separate buffer. 7413 7414 It can be invoked by pressing ‘RET’ on the section titled 7415 "Modules". 7416 7417 -- User Option: magit-submodule-list-columns 7418 This option controls what columns are displayed by the command 7419 ‘magit-list-submodules’ and how they are displayed. 7420 7421 Each element has the form ‘(HEADER WIDTH FORMAT PROPS)’. 7422 7423 HEADER is the string displayed in the header. WIDTH is the width 7424 of the column. FORMAT is a function that is called with one 7425 argument, the repository identification (usually its basename), and 7426 with ‘default-directory’ bound to the toplevel of its working tree. 7427 It has to return a string to be inserted or nil. PROPS is an alist 7428 that supports the keys ‘:right-align’, ‘:pad-right’ and ‘:sort’. 7429 7430 The ‘:sort’ function has a weird interface described in the 7431 docstring of ‘tabulated-list--get-sort’. Alternatively ‘<’ and 7432 ‘magit-repolist-version<’ can be used as those functions are 7433 automatically replaced with functions that satisfy the interface. 7434 Set ‘:sort’ to ‘nil’ to inhibit sorting; if unspecified, then the 7435 column is sortable using the default sorter. 7436 7437 You may wish to display a range of numeric columns using just one 7438 character per column and without any padding between columns, in 7439 which case you should use an appropriate HEADER, set WIDTH to 1, 7440 and set ‘:pad-right’ to 9. ‘+’ is substituted for numbers higher 7441 than 9. 7442 7443 7444 File: magit.info, Node: Submodule Transient, Prev: Listing Submodules, Up: Submodules 7445 7446 8.3.2 Submodule Transient 7447 ------------------------- 7448 7449 ‘o’ (‘magit-submodule’) 7450 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7451 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 7452 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7453 7454 Some of the below commands default to act on the modules that are 7455 selected using the region. For brevity their description talk about 7456 "the selected modules", but if no modules are selected, then they act on 7457 the current module instead, or if point isn’t on a module, then the read 7458 a single module to act on. With a prefix argument these commands ignore 7459 the selection and the current module and instead act on all suitable 7460 modules. 7461 7462 ‘o a’ (‘magit-submodule-add’) 7463 This commands adds the repository at URL as a module. Optional 7464 PATH is the path to the module relative to the root of the 7465 super-project. If it is nil then the path is determined based on 7466 URL. 7467 7468 ‘o r’ (‘magit-submodule-register’) 7469 This command registers the selected modules by copying their urls 7470 from ".gitmodules" to "$GIT_DIR/config". These values can then be 7471 edited before running ‘magit-submodule-populate’. If you don’t 7472 need to edit any urls, then use the latter directly. 7473 7474 ‘o p’ (‘magit-submodule-populate’) 7475 This command creates the working directory or directories of the 7476 selected modules, checking out the recorded commits. 7477 7478 ‘o u’ (‘magit-submodule-update’) 7479 This command updates the selected modules checking out the recorded 7480 commits. 7481 7482 ‘o s’ (‘magit-submodule-synchronize’) 7483 This command synchronizes the urls of the selected modules, copying 7484 the values from ".gitmodules" to the ".git/config" of the 7485 super-project as well those of the modules. 7486 7487 ‘o d’ (‘magit-submodule-unpopulate’) 7488 This command removes the working directory of the selected modules. 7489 7490 ‘o l’ (‘magit-list-submodules’) 7491 This command displays a list of the current repository’s modules. 7492 7493 ‘o f’ (‘magit-fetch-modules’) 7494 This command fetches all populated modules. With a prefix 7495 argument, it acts as a transient prefix command, allowing the 7496 caller to set options. 7497 7498 Also fetch the super-repository, because ‘git fetch’ does not 7499 support not doing that. 7500 7501 7502 File: magit.info, Node: Subtree, Next: Worktree, Prev: Submodules, Up: Miscellaneous 7503 7504 8.4 Subtree 7505 =========== 7506 7507 Also see *note (gitman)git-subtree::. 7508 7509 ‘O’ (‘magit-subtree’) 7510 This transient prefix command binds the two sub-transients; one for 7511 importing a subtree and one for exporting a subtree. 7512 7513 ‘O i’ (‘magit-subtree-import’) 7514 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7515 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 7516 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7517 7518 The suffixes of this command import subtrees. 7519 7520 If the ‘--prefix’ argument is set, then the suffix commands use 7521 that prefix without prompting the user. If it is unset, then they 7522 read the prefix in the minibuffer. 7523 7524 ‘O i a’ (‘magit-subtree-add’) 7525 This command adds COMMIT from REPOSITORY as a new subtree at 7526 PREFIX. 7527 7528 ‘O i c’ (‘magit-subtree-add-commit’) 7529 This command add COMMIT as a new subtree at PREFIX. 7530 7531 ‘O i m’ (‘magit-subtree-merge’) 7532 This command merges COMMIT into the PREFIX subtree. 7533 7534 ‘O i f’ (‘magit-subtree-pull’) 7535 This command pulls COMMIT from REPOSITORY into the PREFIX subtree. 7536 7537 ‘O e’ (‘magit-subtree-export’) 7538 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7539 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 7540 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7541 7542 The suffixes of this command export subtrees. 7543 7544 If the ‘--prefix’ argument is set, then the suffix commands use 7545 that prefix without prompting the user. If it is unset, then they 7546 read the prefix in the minibuffer. 7547 7548 ‘O e p’ (‘magit-subtree-push’) 7549 This command extract the history of the subtree PREFIX and pushes 7550 it to REF on REPOSITORY. 7551 7552 ‘O e s’ (‘magit-subtree-split’) 7553 This command extracts the history of the subtree PREFIX. 7554 7555 7556 File: magit.info, Node: Worktree, Next: Sparse checkouts, Prev: Subtree, Up: Miscellaneous 7557 7558 8.5 Worktree 7559 ============ 7560 7561 Also see *note (gitman)git-worktree::. 7562 7563 ‘Z’ (‘magit-worktree’) 7564 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7565 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7566 7567 ‘Z b’ (‘magit-worktree-checkout’) 7568 Checkout BRANCH in a new worktree at PATH. 7569 7570 ‘Z c’ (‘magit-worktree-branch’) 7571 Create a new BRANCH and check it out in a new worktree at PATH. 7572 7573 ‘Z m’ (‘magit-worktree-move’) 7574 Move an existing worktree to a new PATH. 7575 7576 ‘Z k’ (‘magit-worktree-delete’) 7577 Delete a worktree, defaulting to the worktree at point. The 7578 primary worktree cannot be deleted. 7579 7580 ‘Z g’ (‘magit-worktree-status’) 7581 Show the status for the worktree at point. 7582 7583 If there is no worktree at point, then read one in the minibuffer. 7584 If the worktree at point is the one whose status is already being 7585 displayed in the current buffer, then show it in Dired instead. 7586 7587 7588 File: magit.info, Node: Sparse checkouts, Next: Bundle, Prev: Worktree, Up: Miscellaneous 7589 7590 8.6 Sparse checkouts 7591 ==================== 7592 7593 Sparse checkouts provide a way to restrict the working tree to a subset 7594 of directories. See *note (gitman)git-sparse-checkout::. 7595 7596 *Warning*: Git introduced the ‘git sparse-checkout’ command in 7597 version 2.25 and still advertises it as experimental and subject to 7598 change. Magit’s interface should be considered the same. In 7599 particular, if Git introduces a backward incompatible change, Magit’s 7600 sparse checkout functionality may be updated in a way that requires a 7601 more recent Git version. 7602 7603 ‘>’ (‘magit-sparse-checkout’) 7604 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 7605 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7606 7607 ‘> e’ (‘magit-sparse-checkout-enable’) 7608 This command initializes a sparse checkout that includes only the 7609 files in the top-level directory. 7610 7611 Note that ‘magit-sparse-checkout-set’ and 7612 ‘magit-sparse-checkout-add’ automatically initialize a sparse 7613 checkout if necessary. However, you may want to call 7614 ‘magit-sparse-checkout-enable’ explicitly to re-initialize a sparse 7615 checkout after calling ‘magit-sparse-checkout-disable’, to pass 7616 additional arguments to ‘git sparse-checkout init’, or to execute 7617 the initialization asynchronously. 7618 7619 ‘> s’ (‘magit-sparse-checkout-set’) 7620 This command takes a list of directories and configures the sparse 7621 checkout to include only files in those subdirectories. Any 7622 previously included directories are excluded unless they are in the 7623 provided list of directories. 7624 7625 ‘> a’ (‘magit-sparse-checkout-add’) 7626 This command is like ‘magit-sparse-checkout-set’, but instead adds 7627 the specified list of directories to the set of directories that is 7628 already included in the sparse checkout. 7629 7630 ‘> r’ (‘magit-sparse-checkout-reapply’) 7631 This command applies the currently configured sparse checkout 7632 patterns to the working tree. This is useful to call if excluded 7633 files have been checked out after operations such as merging or 7634 rebasing. 7635 7636 ‘> d’ (‘magit-sparse-checkout-disable’) 7637 This command restores the full checkout. To return to the previous 7638 sparse checkout, call ‘magit-sparse-checkout-enable’. 7639 7640 A sparse checkout can also be initiated when cloning a repository by 7641 using the ‘magit-clone-sparse’ command in the ‘magit-clone’ transient 7642 (see *note Cloning Repository::). 7643 7644 If you want the status buffer to indicate when a sparse checkout is 7645 enabled, add the function ‘magit-sparse-checkout-insert-header’ to 7646 ‘magit-status-headers-hook’. 7647 7648 7649 File: magit.info, Node: Bundle, Next: Common Commands, Prev: Sparse checkouts, Up: Miscellaneous 7650 7651 8.7 Bundle 7652 ========== 7653 7654 Also see *note (gitman)git-bundle::. 7655 7656 -- Command: magit-bundle 7657 This transient prefix command binds several suffix commands for 7658 running ‘git bundle’ subcommands and displays them in a temporary 7659 buffer until a suffix is invoked. 7660 7661 7662 File: magit.info, Node: Common Commands, Next: Wip Modes, Prev: Bundle, Up: Miscellaneous 7663 7664 8.8 Common Commands 7665 =================== 7666 7667 -- Command: magit-switch-to-repository-buffer 7668 -- Command: magit-switch-to-repository-buffer-other-window 7669 -- Command: magit-switch-to-repository-buffer-other-frame 7670 -- Command: magit-display-repository-buffer 7671 These commands read any existing Magit buffer that belongs to the 7672 current repository from the user and then switch to the selected 7673 buffer (without refreshing it). 7674 7675 The last variant uses ‘magit-display-buffer’ to do so and thus 7676 respects ‘magit-display-buffer-function’. 7677 7678 These are some of the commands that can be used in all buffers whose 7679 major-modes derive from ‘magit-mode’. There are other common commands 7680 beside the ones below, but these didn’t fit well anywhere else. 7681 7682 ‘C-w’ (‘magit-copy-section-value’) 7683 This command saves the value of the current section to the 7684 ‘kill-ring’, and, provided that the current section is a commit, 7685 branch, or tag section, it also pushes the (referenced) revision to 7686 the ‘magit-revision-stack’. 7687 7688 When the current section is a branch or a tag, and a prefix 7689 argument is used, then it saves the revision at its tip to the 7690 ‘kill-ring’ instead of the reference name. 7691 7692 When the region is active, this command saves that to the 7693 ‘kill-ring’, like ‘kill-ring-save’ would, instead of behaving as 7694 described above. If a prefix argument is used and the region is 7695 within a hunk, then it strips the diff marker column and keeps only 7696 either the added or removed lines, depending on the sign of the 7697 prefix argument. 7698 7699 ‘M-w’ (‘magit-copy-buffer-revision’) 7700 This command saves the revision being displayed in the current 7701 buffer to the ‘kill-ring’ and also pushes it to the 7702 ‘magit-revision-stack’. It is mainly intended for use in 7703 ‘magit-revision-mode’ buffers, the only buffers where it is always 7704 unambiguous exactly which revision should be saved. 7705 7706 Most other Magit buffers usually show more than one revision, in 7707 some way or another, so this command has to select one of them, and 7708 that choice might not always be the one you think would have been 7709 the best pick. 7710 7711 Outside of Magit ‘M-w’ and ‘C-w’ are usually bound to 7712 ‘kill-ring-save’ and ‘kill-region’, and these commands would also be 7713 useful in Magit buffers. Therefore when the region is active, then both 7714 of these commands behave like ‘kill-ring-save’ instead of as described 7715 above. 7716 7717 7718 File: magit.info, Node: Wip Modes, Next: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files, Prev: Common Commands, Up: Miscellaneous 7719 7720 8.9 Wip Modes 7721 ============= 7722 7723 Git keeps *committed* changes around long enough for users to recover 7724 changes they have accidentally deleted. It does so by not garbage 7725 collecting any committed but no longer referenced objects for a certain 7726 period of time, by default 30 days. 7727 7728 But Git does *not* keep track of *uncommitted* changes in the working 7729 tree and not even the index (the staging area). Because Magit makes it 7730 so convenient to modify uncommitted changes, it also makes it easy to 7731 shoot yourself in the foot in the process. 7732 7733 For that reason Magit provides a global mode that saves *tracked* 7734 files to work-in-progress references after or before certain actions. 7735 (At present untracked files are never saved and for technical reasons 7736 nothing is saved before the first commit has been created). 7737 7738 Two separate work-in-progress references are used to track the state 7739 of the index and of the working tree: ‘refs/wip/index/<branchref>’ and 7740 ‘refs/wip/wtree/<branchref>’, where ‘<branchref>’ is the full ref of the 7741 current branch, e.g., ‘refs/heads/master’. When the ‘HEAD’ is detached 7742 then ‘HEAD’ is used in place of ‘<branchref>’. 7743 7744 Checking out another branch (or detaching ‘HEAD’) causes the use of 7745 different wip refs for subsequent changes. 7746 7747 -- User Option: magit-wip-mode 7748 When this mode is enabled, then uncommitted changes are committed 7749 to dedicated work-in-progress refs whenever appropriate (i.e., when 7750 dataloss would be a possibility otherwise). 7751 7752 Setting this variable directly does not take effect; either use the 7753 Custom interface to do so or call the respective mode function. 7754 7755 For historic reasons this mode is implemented on top of four other 7756 ‘magit-wip-*’ modes, which can also be used individually, if you 7757 want finer control over when the wip refs are updated; but that is 7758 discouraged. See *note Legacy Wip Modes::. 7759 7760 To view the log for a branch and its wip refs use the commands 7761 ‘magit-wip-log’ and ‘magit-wip-log-current’. You should use ‘--graph’ 7762 when using these commands. 7763 7764 -- Command: magit-wip-log 7765 This command shows the log for a branch and its wip refs. With a 7766 negative prefix argument only the worktree wip ref is shown. 7767 7768 The absolute numeric value of the prefix argument controls how many 7769 "branches" of each wip ref are shown. This is only relevant if the 7770 value of ‘magit-wip-merge-branch’ is ‘nil’. 7771 7772 -- Command: magit-wip-log-current 7773 This command shows the log for the current branch and its wip refs. 7774 With a negative prefix argument only the worktree wip ref is shown. 7775 7776 The absolute numeric value of the prefix argument controls how many 7777 "branches" of each wip ref are shown. This is only relevant if the 7778 value of ‘magit-wip-merge-branch’ is ‘nil’. 7779 7780 ‘X w’ (‘magit-reset-worktree’) 7781 This command resets the working tree to some commit read from the 7782 user and defaulting to the commit at point, while keeping the 7783 ‘HEAD’ and index as-is. 7784 7785 This can be used to restore files to the state committed to a wip 7786 ref. Note that this will discard any unstaged changes that might 7787 have existed before invoking this command (but of course only after 7788 committing that to the working tree wip ref). 7789 7790 Note that even if you enable ‘magit-wip-mode’ this won’t give you 7791 perfect protection. The most likely scenario for losing changes despite 7792 the use of ‘magit-wip-mode’ is making a change outside Emacs and then 7793 destroying it also outside Emacs. In some such a scenario, Magit, being 7794 an Emacs package, didn’t get the opportunity to keep you from shooting 7795 yourself in the foot. 7796 7797 When you are unsure whether Magit did commit a change to the wip 7798 refs, then you can explicitly request that all changes to all tracked 7799 files are being committed. 7800 7801 ‘M-x magit-wip-commit’ 7802 This command commits all changes to all tracked files to the index 7803 and working tree work-in-progress refs. Like the modes described 7804 above, it does not commit untracked files, but it does check all 7805 tracked files for changes. Use this command when you suspect that 7806 the modes might have overlooked a change made outside Emacs/Magit. 7807 7808 -- User Option: magit-wip-namespace 7809 The namespace used for work-in-progress refs. It has to end with a 7810 slash. The wip refs are named ‘<namespace>index/<branchref>’ and 7811 ‘<namespace>wtree/<branchref>’. When snapshots are created while 7812 the ‘HEAD’ is detached then ‘HEAD’ is used in place of 7813 ‘<branchref>’. 7814 7815 -- User Option: magit-wip-mode-lighter 7816 Mode-line lighter for ‘magit-wip--mode’. 7817 7818 * Menu: 7819 7820 * Wip Graph:: 7821 * Legacy Wip Modes:: 7822 7823 7824 File: magit.info, Node: Wip Graph, Next: Legacy Wip Modes, Up: Wip Modes 7825 7826 8.9.1 Wip Graph 7827 --------------- 7828 7829 -- User Option: magit-wip-merge-branch 7830 This option controls whether the current branch is merged into the 7831 wip refs after a new commit was created on the branch. 7832 7833 If non-nil and the current branch has new commits, then it is 7834 merged into the wip ref before creating a new wip commit. This 7835 makes it easier to inspect wip history and the wip commits are 7836 never garbage collected. 7837 7838 If nil and the current branch has new commits, then the wip ref is 7839 reset to the tip of the branch before creating a new wip commit. 7840 With this setting wip commits are eventually garbage collected. 7841 7842 When ‘magit-wip-merge-branch’ is ‘t’, then the history looks like 7843 this: 7844 7845 *--*--*--*--*--* refs/wip/index/refs/heads/master 7846 / / / 7847 A-----B-----C refs/heads/master 7848 7849 When ‘magit-wip-merge-branch’ is ‘nil’, then creating a commit on the 7850 real branch and then making a change causes the wip refs to be recreated 7851 to fork from the new commit. But the old commits on the wip refs are 7852 not lost. They are still available from the reflog. To make it easier 7853 to see when the fork point of a wip ref was changed, an additional 7854 commit with the message "restart autosaving" is created on it (‘xxO’ 7855 commits below are such boundary commits). 7856 7857 Starting with 7858 7859 BI0---BI1 refs/wip/index/refs/heads/master 7860 / 7861 A---B refs/heads/master 7862 \ 7863 BW0---BW1 refs/wip/wtree/refs/heads/master 7864 7865 and committing the staged changes and editing and saving a file would 7866 result in 7867 7868 BI0---BI1 refs/wip/index/refs/heads/master 7869 / 7870 A---B---C refs/heads/master 7871 \ \ 7872 \ CW0---CW1 refs/wip/wtree/refs/heads/master 7873 \ 7874 BW0---BW1 refs/wip/wtree/refs/heads/master@{2} 7875 7876 The fork-point of the index wip ref is not changed until some change 7877 is being staged. Likewise just checking out a branch or creating a 7878 commit does not change the fork-point of the working tree wip ref. The 7879 fork-points are not adjusted until there actually is a change that 7880 should be committed to the respective wip ref. 7881 7882 7883 File: magit.info, Node: Legacy Wip Modes, Prev: Wip Graph, Up: Wip Modes 7884 7885 8.9.2 Legacy Wip Modes 7886 ---------------------- 7887 7888 It is recommended that you use the mode ‘magit-wip-mode’ (which see) and 7889 ignore the existence of the following modes, which are preserved for 7890 historic reasons. 7891 7892 Setting the following variables directly does not take effect; either 7893 use the Custom interface to do so or call the respective mode functions. 7894 7895 -- User Option: magit-wip-after-save-mode 7896 When this mode is enabled, then saving a buffer that visits a file 7897 tracked in a Git repository causes its current state to be 7898 committed to the working tree wip ref for the current branch. 7899 7900 -- User Option: magit-wip-after-apply-mode 7901 When this mode is enabled, then applying (i.e., staging, unstaging, 7902 discarding, reversing, and regularly applying) a change to a file 7903 tracked in a Git repository causes its current state to be 7904 committed to the index and/or working tree wip refs for the current 7905 branch. 7906 7907 If you only ever edit files using Emacs and only ever interact with 7908 Git using Magit, then the above two modes should be enough to protect 7909 each and every change from accidental loss. In practice nobody does 7910 that. Two additional modes exists that do commit to the wip refs before 7911 making changes that could cause the loss of earlier changes. 7912 7913 -- User Option: magit-wip-before-change-mode 7914 When this mode is enabled, then certain commands commit the 7915 existing changes to the files they are about to make changes to. 7916 7917 -- User Option: magit-wip-initial-backup-mode 7918 When this mode is enabled, then the current version of a file is 7919 committed to the worktree wip ref before the buffer visiting that 7920 file is saved for the first time since the buffer was created. 7921 7922 This backs up the same version of the file that ‘backup-buffer’ 7923 would save. While ‘backup-buffer’ uses a backup file, this mode 7924 uses the same worktree wip ref as used by the other Magit Wip 7925 modes. Like ‘backup-buffer’, it only does this once; unless you 7926 kill the buffer and visit the file again only one backup will be 7927 created per Emacs session. 7928 7929 This mode ignores the variables that affect ‘backup-buffer’ and can 7930 be used along-side that function, which is recommended because it 7931 only backs up files that are tracked in a Git repository. 7932 7933 -- User Option: magit-wip-after-save-local-mode-lighter 7934 Mode-line lighter for ‘magit-wip-after-save-local-mode’. 7935 7936 -- User Option: magit-wip-after-apply-mode-lighter 7937 Mode-line lighter for ‘magit-wip-after-apply-mode’. 7938 7939 -- User Option: magit-wip-before-change-mode-lighter 7940 Mode-line lighter for ‘magit-wip-before-change-mode’. 7941 7942 -- User Option: magit-wip-initial-backup-mode-lighter 7943 Mode-line lighter for ‘magit-wip-initial-backup-mode’. 7944 7945 7946 File: magit.info, Node: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files, Next: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs, Prev: Wip Modes, Up: Miscellaneous 7947 7948 8.10 Commands for Buffers Visiting Files 7949 ======================================== 7950 7951 By default Magit defines a few global key bindings. These bindings are 7952 a compromise between providing no bindings at all and providing the 7953 better bindings I would have liked to use instead. Magit cannot provide 7954 the set of recommended bindings by default because those key sequences 7955 are strictly reserved for bindings added by the user. Also see *note 7956 Global Bindings:: and *note (elisp)Key Binding Conventions::. 7957 7958 To use the recommended bindings, add this to your init file and 7959 restart Emacs. 7960 7961 (setq magit-define-global-key-bindings 'recommended) 7962 7963 If you don’t want Magit to add any bindings to the global keymap at 7964 all, add this to your init file and restart Emacs. 7965 7966 (setq magit-define-global-key-bindings nil) 7967 7968 ‘C-c f’ (‘magit-file-dispatch’) 7969 ‘C-c f s’ (‘magit-stage-file’) 7970 ‘C-c f s’ (‘magit-stage-buffer-file’) 7971 ‘C-c f u’ (‘magit-unstage-file’) 7972 ‘C-c f u’ (‘magit-unstage-buffer-file’) 7973 ‘C-c f , x’ (‘magit-file-untrack’) 7974 ‘C-c f , r’ (‘magit-file-rename’) 7975 ‘C-c f , k’ (‘magit-file-delete’) 7976 ‘C-c f , c’ (‘magit-file-checkout’) 7977 ‘C-c f D’ (‘magit-diff’) 7978 ‘C-c f d’ (‘magit-diff-buffer-file’) 7979 ‘C-c f L’ (‘magit-log’) 7980 ‘C-c f l’ (‘magit-log-buffer-file’) 7981 ‘C-c f t’ (‘magit-log-trace-definition’) 7982 ‘C-c f M’ (‘magit-log-merged’) 7983 ‘C-c f B’ (‘magit-blame’) 7984 ‘C-c f b’ (‘magit-blame-additions’) 7985 ‘C-c f r’ (‘magit-blame-removal’) 7986 ‘C-c f f’ (‘magit-blame-reverse’) 7987 ‘C-c f m’ (‘magit-blame-echo’) 7988 ‘C-c f q’ (‘magit-blame-quit’) 7989 ‘C-c f p’ (‘magit-blob-previous’) 7990 ‘C-c f n’ (‘magit-blob-next’) 7991 ‘C-c f v’ (‘magit-find-file’) 7992 ‘C-c f V’ (‘magit-blob-visit-file’) 7993 ‘C-c f g’ (‘magit-status-here’) 7994 ‘C-c f G’ (‘magit-display-repository-buffer’) 7995 ‘C-c f c’ (‘magit-commit’) 7996 ‘C-c f e’ (‘magit-edit-line-commit’) 7997 Each of these commands is documented individually right below, 7998 alongside their default key bindings. The bindings shown above are 7999 the recommended bindings, which you can enable by following the 8000 instructions further up. 8001 8002 ‘C-c M-g’ (‘magit-file-dispatch’) 8003 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 8004 and displays them in a temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 8005 8006 ‘C-c M-g s’ (‘magit-stage-file’) 8007 ‘C-c M-g s’ (‘magit-stage-buffer-file’) 8008 Stage all changes to the file being visited in the current buffer. 8009 When not visiting a file, then the first command is used, which 8010 prompts for a file. 8011 8012 ‘C-c M-g u’ (‘magit-unstage-file’) 8013 ‘C-c M-g u’ (‘magit-unstage-buffer-file’) 8014 Unstage all changes to the file being visited in the current 8015 buffer. When not visiting a file, then the first command is used, 8016 which prompts for a file. 8017 8018 ‘C-c M-g , x’ (‘magit-file-untrack’) 8019 This command untracks a file read from the user, defaulting to the 8020 visited file. 8021 8022 ‘C-c M-g , r’ (‘magit-file-rename’) 8023 This command renames a file read from the user, defaulting to the 8024 visited file. 8025 8026 ‘C-c M-g , k’ (‘magit-file-delete’) 8027 This command deletes a file read from the user, defaulting to the 8028 visited file. 8029 8030 ‘C-c M-g , c’ (‘magit-file-checkout’) 8031 This command updates a file in the working tree and index to the 8032 contents from a revision. Both the revision and file are read from 8033 the user. 8034 8035 ‘C-c M-g D’ (‘magit-diff’) 8036 This transient prefix command binds several diff suffix commands 8037 and infix arguments and displays them in a temporary buffer until a 8038 suffix is invoked. See *note Diffing::. 8039 8040 This is the same command that ‘d’ is bound to in Magit buffers. If 8041 this command is invoked from a file-visiting buffer, then the 8042 initial value of the option (‘--’) that limits the diff to certain 8043 file(s) is set to the visited file. 8044 8045 ‘C-c M-g d’ (‘magit-diff-buffer-file’) 8046 This command shows the diff for the file of blob that the current 8047 buffer visits. 8048 8049 -- User Option: magit-diff-buffer-file-locked 8050 This option controls whether ‘magit-diff-buffer-file’ uses a 8051 dedicated buffer. See *note Modes and Buffers::. 8052 8053 ‘C-c M-g L’ (‘magit-log’) 8054 This transient prefix command binds several log suffix commands and 8055 infix arguments and displays them in a temporary buffer until a 8056 suffix is invoked. See *note Logging::. 8057 8058 This is the same command that ‘l’ is bound to in Magit buffers. If 8059 this command is invoked from a file-visiting buffer, then the 8060 initial value of the option (‘--’) that limits the log to certain 8061 file(s) is set to the visited file. 8062 8063 ‘C-c M-g l’ (‘magit-log-buffer-file’) 8064 This command shows the log for the file of blob that the current 8065 buffer visits. Renames are followed when a prefix argument is used 8066 or when ‘--follow’ is an active log argument. When the region is 8067 active, the log is restricted to the selected line range. 8068 8069 -- User Option: magit-log-buffer-file-locked 8070 This option controls whether ‘magit-log-buffer-file’ uses a 8071 dedicated buffer. See *note Modes and Buffers::. 8072 8073 ‘C-c M-g t’ (‘magit-log-trace-definition’) 8074 This command shows the log for the definition at point. 8075 8076 ‘C-c M-g M’ (‘magit-log-merged’) 8077 This command reads a commit and a branch in shows a log concerning 8078 the merge of the former into the latter. This shows multiple 8079 commits even in case of a fast-forward merge. 8080 8081 ‘C-c M-g B’ (‘magit-blame’) 8082 This transient prefix command binds all blaming suffix commands 8083 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 8084 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. 8085 8086 For more information about this and the following commands also see 8087 *note Blaming::. 8088 8089 In addition to the ‘magit-blame’ sub-transient, the dispatch 8090 transient also binds several blaming suffix commands directly. See 8091 *note Blaming:: for information about those commands and bindings. 8092 8093 ‘C-c M-g p’ (‘magit-blob-previous’) 8094 This command visits the previous blob which modified the current 8095 file. 8096 8097 ‘C-c M-g n’ (‘magit-blob-next’) 8098 This command visits the next blob which modified the current file. 8099 8100 ‘C-c M-g v’ (‘magit-find-file’) 8101 This command reads a revision and file and visits the respective 8102 blob. 8103 8104 ‘C-c M-g V’ (‘magit-blob-visit-file’) 8105 This command visits the file from the working tree, corresponding 8106 to the current blob. When visiting a blob or the version from the 8107 index, then it goes to the same location in the respective file in 8108 the working tree. 8109 8110 ‘C-c M-g g’ (‘magit-status-here’) 8111 This command displays the status of the current repository in a 8112 buffer, like ‘magit-status’ does. Additionally it tries to go to 8113 the position in that buffer, which corresponds to the position in 8114 the current file-visiting buffer (if any). 8115 8116 ‘C-c M-g G’ (‘magit-display-repository-buffer’) 8117 This command reads and displays a Magit buffer belonging to the 8118 current repository, without refreshing it. 8119 8120 ‘C-c M-g c’ (‘magit-commit’) 8121 This transient prefix command binds the following suffix commands 8122 along with the appropriate infix arguments and displays them in a 8123 temporary buffer until a suffix is invoked. See *note Initiating a 8124 Commit::. 8125 8126 ‘C-c M-g e’ (‘magit-edit-line-commit’) 8127 This command makes the commit editable that added the current line. 8128 8129 With a prefix argument it makes the commit editable that removes 8130 the line, if any. The commit is determined using ‘git blame’ and 8131 made editable using ‘git rebase --interactive’ if it is reachable 8132 from ‘HEAD’, or by checking out the commit (or a branch that points 8133 at it) otherwise. 8134 8135 8136 File: magit.info, Node: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs, Prev: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files, Up: Miscellaneous 8137 8138 8.11 Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs 8139 ========================================== 8140 8141 The ‘magit-blob-mode’ enables certain Magit features in blob-visiting 8142 buffers. Such buffers can be created using ‘magit-find-file’ and some 8143 of the commands mentioned below, which also take care of turning on this 8144 minor mode. Currently this mode only establishes a few key bindings, 8145 but this might be extended. 8146 8147 ‘p’ (‘magit-blob-previous’) 8148 Visit the previous blob which modified the current file. 8149 8150 ‘n’ (‘magit-blob-next’) 8151 Visit the next blob which modified the current file. 8152 8153 ‘q’ (‘magit-kill-this-buffer’) 8154 Kill the current buffer. 8155 8156 8157 File: magit.info, Node: Customizing, Next: Plumbing, Prev: Miscellaneous, Up: Top 8158 8159 9 Customizing 8160 ************* 8161 8162 Both Git and Emacs are highly customizable. Magit is both a Git 8163 porcelain as well as an Emacs package, so it makes sense to customize it 8164 using both Git variables as well as Emacs options. However this 8165 flexibility doesn’t come without problems, including but not limited to 8166 the following. 8167 8168 • Some Git variables automatically have an effect in Magit without 8169 requiring any explicit support. Sometimes that is desirable - in 8170 other cases, it breaks Magit. 8171 8172 When a certain Git setting breaks Magit but you want to keep using 8173 that setting on the command line, then that can be accomplished by 8174 overriding the value for Magit only by appending something like 8175 ‘("-c" "some.variable=compatible-value")’ to 8176 ‘magit-git-global-arguments’. 8177 8178 • Certain settings like ‘fetch.prune=true’ are respected by Magit 8179 commands (because they simply call the respective Git command) but 8180 their value is not reflected in the respective transient buffers. 8181 In this case the ‘--prune’ argument in ‘magit-fetch’ might be 8182 active or inactive, but that doesn’t keep the Git variable from 8183 being honored by the suffix commands anyway. So pruning might 8184 happen despite the ‘--prune’ arguments being displayed in a way 8185 that seems to indicate that no pruning will happen. 8186 8187 I intend to address these and similar issues in a future release. 8188 8189 * Menu: 8190 8191 * Per-Repository Configuration:: 8192 * Essential Settings:: 8193 8194 8195 File: magit.info, Node: Per-Repository Configuration, Next: Essential Settings, Up: Customizing 8196 8197 9.1 Per-Repository Configuration 8198 ================================ 8199 8200 Magit can be configured on a per-repository level using both Git 8201 variables as well as Emacs options. 8202 8203 To set a Git variable for one repository only, simply set it in 8204 ‘/path/to/repo/.git/config’ instead of ‘$HOME/.gitconfig’ or 8205 ‘/etc/gitconfig’. See *note (gitman)git-config::. 8206 8207 Similarly, Emacs options can be set for one repository only by 8208 editing ‘/path/to/repo/.dir-locals.el’. See *note (emacs)Directory 8209 Variables::. For example to disable automatic refreshes of 8210 file-visiting buffers in just one huge repository use this: 8211 8212 • ‘/path/to/huge/repo/.dir-locals.el’ 8213 8214 ((nil . ((magit-refresh-buffers . nil)))) 8215 8216 It might only be costly to insert certain information into Magit 8217 buffers for repositories that are exceptionally large, in which case you 8218 can disable the respective section inserters just for that repository: 8219 8220 • ‘/path/to/tag/invested/repo/.dir-locals.el’ 8221 8222 ((magit-status-mode 8223 . ((eval . (magit-disable-section-inserter 'magit-insert-tags-header))))) 8224 8225 -- Function: magit-disable-section-inserter fn 8226 This function disables the section inserter FN in the current 8227 repository. It is only intended for use in ‘.dir-locals.el’ and 8228 ‘.dir-locals-2.el’. 8229 8230 If you want to apply the same settings to several, but not all, 8231 repositories then keeping the repository-local config files in sync 8232 would quickly become annoying. To avoid that you can create config 8233 files for certain classes of repositories (e.g., "huge repositories") 8234 and then include those files in the per-repository config files. For 8235 example: 8236 8237 • ‘/path/to/huge/repo/.git/config’ 8238 8239 [include] 8240 path = /path/to/huge-gitconfig 8241 8242 • ‘/path/to/huge-gitconfig’ 8243 8244 [status] 8245 showUntrackedFiles = no 8246 8247 • ‘$HOME/.emacs.d/init.el’ 8248 8249 (dir-locals-set-class-variables 'huge-git-repository 8250 '((nil . ((magit-refresh-buffers . nil))))) 8251 8252 (dir-locals-set-directory-class 8253 "/path/to/huge/repo/" 'huge-git-repository) 8254 8255 8256 File: magit.info, Node: Essential Settings, Prev: Per-Repository Configuration, Up: Customizing 8257 8258 9.2 Essential Settings 8259 ====================== 8260 8261 The next three sections list and discuss several variables that many 8262 users might want to customize, for safety and/or performance reasons. 8263 8264 * Menu: 8265 8266 * Safety:: 8267 * Performance:: 8268 * Global Bindings:: 8269 8270 8271 File: magit.info, Node: Safety, Next: Performance, Up: Essential Settings 8272 8273 9.2.1 Safety 8274 ------------ 8275 8276 This section discusses various variables that you might want to change 8277 (or *not* change) for safety reasons. 8278 8279 Git keeps *committed* changes around long enough for users to recover 8280 changes they have accidentally been deleted. It does not do the same 8281 for *uncommitted* changes in the working tree and not even the index 8282 (the staging area). Because Magit makes it so easy to modify 8283 uncommitted changes, it also makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot 8284 in the process. For that reason Magit provides three global modes that 8285 save *tracked* files to work-in-progress references after or before 8286 certain actions. See *note Wip Modes::. 8287 8288 These modes are not enabled by default because of performance 8289 concerns. Instead a lot of potentially destructive commands require 8290 confirmation every time they are used. In many cases this can be 8291 disabled by adding a symbol to ‘magit-no-confirm’ (see *note Completion 8292 and Confirmation::). If you enable the various wip modes then you 8293 should add ‘safe-with-wip’ to this list. 8294 8295 Similarly it isn’t necessary to require confirmation before moving a 8296 file to the system trash - if you trashed a file by mistake then you can 8297 recover it from there. Option ‘magit-delete-by-moving-to-trash’ 8298 controls whether the system trash is used, which is the case by default. 8299 Nevertheless, ‘trash’ isn’t a member of ‘magit-no-confirm’ - you might 8300 want to change that. 8301 8302 By default buffers visiting files are automatically reverted when the 8303 visited file changes on disk. This isn’t as risky as it might seem, but 8304 to make an informed decision you should see *note Risk of Reverting 8305 Automatically::. 8306 8307 8308 File: magit.info, Node: Performance, Next: Global Bindings, Prev: Safety, Up: Essential Settings 8309 8310 9.2.2 Performance 8311 ----------------- 8312 8313 After Magit has run ‘git’ for side-effects, it also refreshes the 8314 current Magit buffer and the respective status buffer. This is 8315 necessary because otherwise outdated information might be displayed 8316 without the user noticing. Magit buffers are updated by recreating 8317 their content from scratch, which makes updating simpler and less 8318 error-prone, but also more costly. Keeping it simple and just 8319 re-creating everything from scratch is an old design decision and 8320 departing from that will require major refactoring. 8321 8322 Meanwhile you can tell Magit to only automatically refresh the 8323 current Magit buffer, but not the status buffer. If you do that, then 8324 the status buffer is only refreshed automatically if it is the current 8325 buffer. 8326 8327 (setq magit-refresh-status-buffer nil) 8328 8329 You should also check whether any third-party packages have added 8330 anything to ‘magit-refresh-buffer-hook’, ‘magit-pre-refresh-hook’, and 8331 ‘magit-post-refresh-hook’. If so, then check whether those additions 8332 impact performance significantly. 8333 8334 Magit can be told to refresh buffers verbosely using ‘M-x 8335 magit-toggle-verbose-refresh’. Enabling this helps figuring out which 8336 sections are bottlenecks. Each line printed to the ‘*Messages*’ buffer 8337 contains a section name, the number of seconds it took to show this 8338 section, and from 0 to 2 exclamation marks: the more exclamation marks 8339 the slower the section is. 8340 8341 Magit also reverts buffers for visited files located inside the 8342 current repository when the visited file changes on disk. That is 8343 implemented on top of ‘auto-revert-mode’ from the built-in library 8344 ‘autorevert’. To figure out whether that impacts performance, check 8345 whether performance is significantly worse, when many buffers exist 8346 and/or when some buffers visit files using TRAMP. If so, then this 8347 should help. 8348 8349 (setq auto-revert-buffer-list-filter 8350 'magit-auto-revert-repository-buffer-p) 8351 8352 For alternative approaches see *note Automatic Reverting of 8353 File-Visiting Buffers::. 8354 8355 If you have enabled any features that are disabled by default, then 8356 you should check whether they impact performance significantly. It’s 8357 likely that they were not enabled by default because it is known that 8358 they reduce performance at least in large repositories. 8359 8360 If performance is only slow inside certain unusually large 8361 repositories, then you might want to disable certain features on a 8362 per-repository or per-repository-class basis only. See *note 8363 Per-Repository Configuration::. For example it takes a long time to 8364 determine the next and current tag in repository with exceptional 8365 numbers of tags. It would therefore be a good idea to disable 8366 ‘magit-insert-tags-headers’, as explained at the mentioned node. 8367 8368 * Menu: 8369 8370 * Microsoft Windows Performance:: 8371 * MacOS Performance:: 8372 8373 Log Performance 8374 ............... 8375 8376 When showing logs, Magit limits the number of commits initially shown in 8377 the hope that this avoids unnecessary work. When ‘--graph’ is used, 8378 then this unfortunately does not have the desired effect for large 8379 histories. Junio, Git’s maintainer, said on the Git mailing list 8380 (<https://www.spinics.net/lists/git/msg232230.html>): "‘--graph’ wants 8381 to compute the whole history and the max-count only affects the output 8382 phase after ‘--graph’ does its computation". 8383 8384 In other words, it’s not that Git is slow at outputting the 8385 differences, or that Magit is slow at parsing the output - the problem 8386 is that Git first goes outside and has a smoke. 8387 8388 We actually work around this issue by limiting the number of commits 8389 not only by using ‘-<N>’ but by also using a range. But unfortunately 8390 that’s not always possible. 8391 8392 When more than a few thousand commits are shown, then the use of 8393 ‘--graph’ can slow things down. 8394 8395 Using ‘--color --graph’ is even slower. Magit uses code that is part 8396 of Emacs to turn control characters into faces. That code is pretty 8397 slow and this is quite noticeable when showing a log with many branches 8398 and merges. For that reason ‘--color’ is not enabled by default 8399 anymore. Consider leaving it at that. 8400 8401 Diff Performance 8402 ................ 8403 8404 If diffs are slow, then consider turning off some optional diff features 8405 by setting all or some of the following variables to ‘nil’: 8406 ‘magit-diff-highlight-indentation’, ‘magit-diff-highlight-trailing’, 8407 ‘magit-diff-paint-whitespace’, ‘magit-diff-highlight-hunk-body’, and 8408 ‘magit-diff-refine-hunk’. 8409 8410 When showing a commit instead of some arbitrary diff, then some 8411 additional information is displayed. Calculating this information can 8412 be quite expensive given certain circumstances. If looking at a commit 8413 using ‘magit-revision-mode’ takes considerably more time than looking at 8414 the same commit in ‘magit-diff-mode’, then consider setting 8415 ‘magit-revision-insert-related-refs’ to ‘nil’. 8416 8417 When you are often confronted with diffs that contain deleted files, 8418 then you might want to enable the ‘--irreversible-delete’ argument. If 8419 you do that then diffs still show that a file was deleted but without 8420 also showing the complete deleted content of the file. This argument is 8421 not available by default, see *note (transient)Enabling and Disabling 8422 Suffixes::. Once you have done that you should enable it and save that 8423 setting, see *note (transient)Saving Values::. You should do this in 8424 both the diff (‘d’) and the diff refresh (‘D’) transient popups. 8425 8426 Refs Buffer Performance 8427 ....................... 8428 8429 When refreshing the "references buffer" is slow, then that’s usually 8430 because several hundred refs are being displayed. The best way to 8431 address that is to display fewer refs, obviously. 8432 8433 If you are not, or only mildly, interested in seeing the list of 8434 tags, then start by not displaying them: 8435 8436 (remove-hook 'magit-refs-sections-hook 'magit-insert-tags) 8437 8438 Then you should also make sure that the listed remote branches 8439 actually all exist. You can do so by pruning branches which no longer 8440 exist using ‘f-pa’. 8441 8442 Committing Performance 8443 ...................... 8444 8445 When you initiate a commit, then Magit by default automatically shows a 8446 diff of the changes you are about to commit. For large commits this can 8447 take a long time, which is especially distracting when you are 8448 committing large amounts of generated data which you don’t actually 8449 intend to inspect before committing. This behavior can be turned off 8450 using: 8451 8452 (remove-hook 'server-switch-hook 'magit-commit-diff) 8453 (remove-hook 'with-editor-filter-visit-hook 'magit-commit-diff) 8454 8455 Then you can type ‘C-c C-d’ to show the diff when you actually want 8456 to see it, but only then. Alternatively you can leave the hook alone 8457 and just type ‘C-g’ in those cases when it takes too long to generate 8458 the diff. If you do that, then you will end up with a broken diff 8459 buffer, but doing it this way has the advantage that you usually get to 8460 see the diff, which is useful because it increases the odds that you 8461 spot potential issues. 8462 8463 8464 File: magit.info, Node: Microsoft Windows Performance, Next: MacOS Performance, Up: Performance 8465 8466 Microsoft Windows Performance 8467 ............................. 8468 8469 In order to update the status buffer, ‘git’ has to be run a few dozen 8470 times. That is problematic on Microsoft Windows, because that operating 8471 system is exceptionally slow at starting processes. Sadly this is an 8472 issue that can only be fixed by Microsoft itself, and they don’t appear 8473 to be particularly interested in doing so. 8474 8475 Beside the subprocess issue, there are also other Windows-specific 8476 performance issues. Some of these have workarounds. The maintainers of 8477 "Git for Windows" try to improve performance on Windows. Always use the 8478 latest release in order to benefit from the latest performance tweaks. 8479 Magit too tries to work around some Windows-specific issues. 8480 8481 According to some sources, setting the following Git variables can 8482 also help. 8483 8484 git config --global core.preloadindex true # default since v2.1 8485 git config --global core.fscache true # default since v2.8 8486 git config --global gc.auto 256 8487 8488 You should also check whether an anti-virus program is affecting 8489 performance. 8490 8491 8492 File: magit.info, Node: MacOS Performance, Prev: Microsoft Windows Performance, Up: Performance 8493 8494 MacOS Performance 8495 ................. 8496 8497 Before Emacs 26.1 child processes were created using ‘fork’ on macOS. 8498 That needlessly copied GUI resources, which is expensive. The result 8499 was that forking took about 30 times as long on Darwin than on Linux, 8500 and because Magit starts many ‘git’ processes that made quite a 8501 difference. 8502 8503 So make sure that you are using at least Emacs 26.1, in which case 8504 the faster ‘vfork’ will be used. (The creation of child processes still 8505 takes about twice as long on Darwin compared to Linux.) See (1) for 8506 more information. 8507 8508 Additionally, ‘git’ installed from a package manager like ‘brew’ or 8509 ‘nix’ seems to be slower than the native executable. Profile the ‘git’ 8510 executable you’re running against the one at ‘/usr/bin/git’, and if you 8511 notice a notable difference try using the latter as 8512 ‘magit-git-executable’. 8513 8514 ---------- Footnotes ---------- 8515 8516 (1) 8517 <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnu-emacs/2017-04/msg00201.html> 8518 8519 8520 File: magit.info, Node: Global Bindings, Prev: Performance, Up: Essential Settings 8521 8522 9.2.3 Global Bindings 8523 --------------------- 8524 8525 -- User Option: magit-define-global-key-bindings 8526 This option controls which set of Magit key bindings, if any, may 8527 be added to the global keymap, even before Magit is first used in 8528 the current Emacs session. 8529 8530 • If the value is ‘nil’, no bindings are added. 8531 8532 • If ‘default’, maybe add: 8533 8534 ‘C-x g’ ‘magit-status’ 8535 ‘C-x M-g’ ‘magit-dispatch’ 8536 ‘C-c M-g’ ‘magit-file-dispatch’ 8537 8538 • If ‘recommended’, maybe add: 8539 8540 ‘C-x g’ ‘magit-status’ 8541 ‘C-c g’ ‘magit-dispatch’ 8542 ‘C-c f’ ‘magit-file-dispatch’ 8543 8544 These bindings are strongly recommended, but we cannot use 8545 them by default, because the ‘C-c <LETTER>’ namespace is 8546 strictly reserved for bindings added by the user (see *note 8547 (elisp)Key Binding Conventions::). 8548 8549 The bindings in the chosen set may be added when ‘after-init-hook’ 8550 is run. Each binding is added if, and only if, at that time no 8551 other key is bound to the same command, and no other command is 8552 bound to the same key. In other words we try to avoid adding 8553 bindings that are unnecessary, as well as bindings that conflict 8554 with other bindings. 8555 8556 Adding these bindings is delayed until ‘after-init-hook’ is run to 8557 allow users to set the variable anywhere in their init file 8558 (without having to make sure to do so before ‘magit’ is loaded or 8559 autoloaded) and to increase the likelihood that all the potentially 8560 conflicting user bindings have already been added. 8561 8562 To set this variable use either ‘setq’ or the Custom interface. Do 8563 not use the function ‘customize-set-variable’ because doing that 8564 would cause Magit to be loaded immediately, when that form is 8565 evaluated (this differs from ‘custom-set-variables’, which doesn’t 8566 load the libraries that define the customized variables). 8567 8568 Setting this variable has no effect if ‘after-init-hook’ has 8569 already been run. 8570 8571 8572 File: magit.info, Node: Plumbing, Next: FAQ, Prev: Customizing, Up: Top 8573 8574 10 Plumbing 8575 *********** 8576 8577 The following sections describe how to use several of Magit’s core 8578 abstractions to extend Magit itself or implement a separate extension. 8579 8580 A few of the low-level features used by Magit have been factored out 8581 into separate libraries/packages, so that they can be used by other 8582 packages, without having to depend on Magit. See *note 8583 (with-editor)Top:: for information about ‘with-editor’. ‘transient’ 8584 doesn’t have a manual yet. 8585 8586 If you are trying to find an unused key that you can bind to a 8587 command provided by your own Magit extension, then checkout 8588 <https://github.com/magit/magit/wiki/Plugin-Dispatch-Key-Registry>. 8589 8590 * Menu: 8591 8592 * Calling Git:: 8593 * Section Plumbing:: 8594 * Refreshing Buffers:: 8595 * Conventions:: 8596 8597 8598 File: magit.info, Node: Calling Git, Next: Section Plumbing, Up: Plumbing 8599 8600 10.1 Calling Git 8601 ================ 8602 8603 Magit provides many specialized functions for calling Git. All of these 8604 functions are defined in either ‘magit-git.el’ or ‘magit-process.el’ and 8605 have one of the prefixes ‘magit-run-’, ‘magit-call-’, ‘magit-start-’, or 8606 ‘magit-git-’ (which is also used for other things). 8607 8608 All of these functions accept an indefinite number of arguments, 8609 which are strings that specify command line arguments for Git (or in 8610 some cases an arbitrary executable). These arguments are flattened 8611 before being passed on to the executable; so instead of strings they can 8612 also be lists of strings and arguments that are ‘nil’ are silently 8613 dropped. Some of these functions also require a single mandatory 8614 argument before these command line arguments. 8615 8616 Roughly speaking, these functions run Git either to get some value or 8617 for side-effects. The functions that return a value are useful to 8618 collect the information necessary to populate a Magit buffer, while the 8619 others are used to implement Magit commands. 8620 8621 The functions in the value-only group always run synchronously, and 8622 they never trigger a refresh. The function in the side-effect group can 8623 be further divided into subgroups depending on whether they run Git 8624 synchronously or asynchronously, and depending on whether they trigger a 8625 refresh when the executable has finished. 8626 8627 * Menu: 8628 8629 * Getting a Value from Git:: 8630 * Calling Git for Effect:: 8631 8632 8633 File: magit.info, Node: Getting a Value from Git, Next: Calling Git for Effect, Up: Calling Git 8634 8635 10.1.1 Getting a Value from Git 8636 ------------------------------- 8637 8638 These functions run Git in order to get a value, an exit status, or 8639 output. Of course you could also use them to run Git commands that have 8640 side-effects, but that should be avoided. 8641 8642 -- Function: magit-git-exit-code &rest args 8643 Executes git with ARGS and returns its exit code. 8644 8645 -- Function: magit-git-success &rest args 8646 Executes git with ARGS and returns ‘t’ if the exit code is ‘0’, 8647 ‘nil’ otherwise. 8648 8649 -- Function: magit-git-failure &rest args 8650 Executes git with ARGS and returns ‘t’ if the exit code is ‘1’, 8651 ‘nil’ otherwise. 8652 8653 -- Function: magit-git-true &rest args 8654 Executes git with ARGS and returns ‘t’ if the first line printed by 8655 git is the string "true", ‘nil’ otherwise. 8656 8657 -- Function: magit-git-false &rest args 8658 Executes git with ARGS and returns ‘t’ if the first line printed by 8659 git is the string "false", ‘nil’ otherwise. 8660 8661 -- Function: magit-git-insert &rest args 8662 Executes git with ARGS and inserts its output at point. 8663 8664 -- Function: magit-git-string &rest args 8665 Executes git with ARGS and returns the first line of its output. 8666 If there is no output or if it begins with a newline character, 8667 then this returns ‘nil’. 8668 8669 -- Function: magit-git-lines &rest args 8670 Executes git with ARGS and returns its output as a list of lines. 8671 Empty lines anywhere in the output are omitted. 8672 8673 -- Function: magit-git-items &rest args 8674 Executes git with ARGS and returns its null-separated output as a 8675 list. Empty items anywhere in the output are omitted. 8676 8677 If the value of option ‘magit-git-debug’ is non-nil and git exits 8678 with a non-zero exit status, then warn about that in the echo area 8679 and add a section containing git’s standard error in the current 8680 repository’s process buffer. 8681 8682 -- Function: magit-process-git destination &rest args 8683 Calls Git synchronously in a separate process, returning its exit 8684 code. DESTINATION specifies how to handle the output, like for 8685 ‘call-process’, except that file handlers are supported. Enables 8686 Cygwin’s "noglob" option during the call and ensures unix eol 8687 conversion. 8688 8689 -- Function: magit-process-file process &optional infile buffer display 8690 &rest args 8691 Processes files synchronously in a separate process. Identical to 8692 ‘process-file’ but temporarily enables Cygwin’s "noglob" option 8693 during the call and ensures unix eol conversion. 8694 8695 If an error occurs when using one of the above functions, then that 8696 is usually due to a bug, i.e., using an argument which is not actually 8697 supported. Such errors are usually not reported, but when they occur we 8698 need to be able to debug them. 8699 8700 -- User Option: magit-git-debug 8701 Whether to report errors that occur when using ‘magit-git-insert’, 8702 ‘magit-git-string’, ‘magit-git-lines’, or ‘magit-git-items’. This 8703 does not actually raise an error. Instead a message is shown in 8704 the echo area, and git’s standard error is insert into a new 8705 section in the current repository’s process buffer. 8706 8707 -- Function: magit-git-str &rest args 8708 This is a variant of ‘magit-git-string’ that ignores the option 8709 ‘magit-git-debug’. It is mainly intended to be used while handling 8710 errors in functions that do respect that option. Using such a 8711 function while handing an error could cause yet another error and 8712 therefore lead to an infinite recursion. You probably won’t ever 8713 need to use this function. 8714 8715 8716 File: magit.info, Node: Calling Git for Effect, Prev: Getting a Value from Git, Up: Calling Git 8717 8718 10.1.2 Calling Git for Effect 8719 ----------------------------- 8720 8721 These functions are used to run git to produce some effect. Most Magit 8722 commands that actually run git do so by using such a function. 8723 8724 Because we do not need to consume git’s output when using these 8725 functions, their output is instead logged into a per-repository buffer, 8726 which can be shown using ‘$’ from a Magit buffer or ‘M-x magit-process’ 8727 elsewhere. 8728 8729 These functions can have an effect in two distinct ways. Firstly, 8730 running git may change something, i.e., create or push a new commit. 8731 Secondly, that change may require that Magit buffers are refreshed to 8732 reflect the changed state of the repository. But refreshing isn’t 8733 always desirable, so only some of these functions do perform such a 8734 refresh after git has returned. 8735 8736 Sometimes it is useful to run git asynchronously. For example, when 8737 the user has just initiated a push, then there is no reason to make her 8738 wait until that has completed. In other cases it makes sense to wait 8739 for git to complete before letting the user do something else. For 8740 example after staging a change it is useful to wait until after the 8741 refresh because that also automatically moves to the next change. 8742 8743 -- Function: magit-call-git &rest args 8744 Calls git synchronously with ARGS. 8745 8746 -- Function: magit-call-process program &rest args 8747 Calls PROGRAM synchronously with ARGS. 8748 8749 -- Function: magit-run-git &rest args 8750 Calls git synchronously with ARGS and then refreshes. 8751 8752 -- Function: magit-run-git-with-input &rest args 8753 Calls git synchronously with ARGS and sends it the content of the 8754 current buffer on standard input. 8755 8756 If the current buffer’s ‘default-directory’ is on a remote 8757 filesystem, this function actually runs git asynchronously. But 8758 then it waits for the process to return, so the function itself is 8759 synchronous. 8760 8761 -- Function: magit-git &rest args 8762 Calls git synchronously with ARGS for side-effects only. This 8763 function does not refresh the buffer. 8764 8765 -- Function: magit-git-wash washer &rest args 8766 Execute Git with ARGS, inserting washed output at point. Actually 8767 first insert the raw output at point. If there is no output call 8768 ‘magit-cancel-section’. Otherwise temporarily narrow the buffer to 8769 the inserted text, move to its beginning, and then call function 8770 WASHER with ARGS as its sole argument. 8771 8772 And now for the asynchronous variants. 8773 8774 -- Function: magit-run-git-async &rest args 8775 Start Git, prepare for refresh, and return the process object. 8776 ARGS is flattened and then used as arguments to Git. 8777 8778 Display the command line arguments in the echo area. 8779 8780 After Git returns some buffers are refreshed: the buffer that was 8781 current when this function was called (if it is a Magit buffer and 8782 still alive), as well as the respective Magit status buffer. 8783 Unmodified buffers visiting files that are tracked in the current 8784 repository are reverted if ‘magit-revert-buffers’ is non-nil. 8785 8786 -- Function: magit-run-git-with-editor &rest args 8787 Export GIT_EDITOR and start Git. Also prepare for refresh and 8788 return the process object. ARGS is flattened and then used as 8789 arguments to Git. 8790 8791 Display the command line arguments in the echo area. 8792 8793 After Git returns some buffers are refreshed: the buffer that was 8794 current when this function was called (if it is a Magit buffer and 8795 still alive), as well as the respective Magit status buffer. 8796 8797 -- Function: magit-start-git input &rest args 8798 Start Git, prepare for refresh, and return the process object. 8799 8800 If INPUT is non-nil, it has to be a buffer or the name of an 8801 existing buffer. The buffer content becomes the processes standard 8802 input. 8803 8804 Option ‘magit-git-executable’ specifies the Git executable and 8805 option ‘magit-git-global-arguments’ specifies constant arguments. 8806 The remaining arguments ARGS specify arguments to Git. They are 8807 flattened before use. 8808 8809 After Git returns, some buffers are refreshed: the buffer that was 8810 current when this function was called (if it is a Magit buffer and 8811 still alive), as well as the respective Magit status buffer. 8812 Unmodified buffers visiting files that are tracked in the current 8813 repository are reverted if ‘magit-revert-buffers’ is non-nil. 8814 8815 -- Function: magit-start-process &rest args 8816 Start PROGRAM, prepare for refresh, and return the process object. 8817 8818 If optional argument INPUT is non-nil, it has to be a buffer or the 8819 name of an existing buffer. The buffer content becomes the 8820 processes standard input. 8821 8822 The process is started using ‘start-file-process’ and then setup to 8823 use the sentinel ‘magit-process-sentinel’ and the filter 8824 ‘magit-process-filter’. Information required by these functions is 8825 stored in the process object. When this function returns the 8826 process has not started to run yet so it is possible to override 8827 the sentinel and filter. 8828 8829 After the process returns, ‘magit-process-sentinel’ refreshes the 8830 buffer that was current when ‘magit-start-process’ was called (if 8831 it is a Magit buffer and still alive), as well as the respective 8832 Magit status buffer. Unmodified buffers visiting files that are 8833 tracked in the current repository are reverted if 8834 ‘magit-revert-buffers’ is non-nil. 8835 8836 -- Variable: magit-this-process 8837 The child process which is about to start. This can be used to 8838 change the filter and sentinel. 8839 8840 -- Variable: magit-process-raise-error 8841 When this is non-nil, then ‘magit-process-sentinel’ raises an error 8842 if git exits with a non-zero exit status. For debugging purposes. 8843 8844 8845 File: magit.info, Node: Section Plumbing, Next: Refreshing Buffers, Prev: Calling Git, Up: Plumbing 8846 8847 10.2 Section Plumbing 8848 ===================== 8849 8850 * Menu: 8851 8852 * Creating Sections:: 8853 * Section Selection:: 8854 * Matching Sections:: 8855 8856 8857 File: magit.info, Node: Creating Sections, Next: Section Selection, Up: Section Plumbing 8858 8859 10.2.1 Creating Sections 8860 ------------------------ 8861 8862 -- Macro: magit-insert-section &rest args 8863 Insert a section at point. 8864 8865 TYPE is the section type, a symbol. Many commands that act on the 8866 current section behave differently depending on that type. Also if 8867 a variable ‘magit-TYPE-section-map’ exists, then use that as the 8868 text-property ‘keymap’ of all text belonging to the section (but 8869 this may be overwritten in subsections). TYPE can also have the 8870 form ‘(eval FORM)’ in which case FORM is evaluated at runtime. 8871 8872 Optional VALUE is the value of the section, usually a string that 8873 is required when acting on the section. 8874 8875 When optional HIDE is non-nil collapse the section body by default, 8876 i.e., when first creating the section, but not when refreshing the 8877 buffer. Otherwise, expand it by default. This can be overwritten 8878 using ‘magit-section-set-visibility-hook’. When a section is 8879 recreated during a refresh, then the visibility of predecessor is 8880 inherited and HIDE is ignored (but the hook is still honored). 8881 8882 BODY is any number of forms that actually insert the section’s 8883 heading and body. Optional NAME, if specified, has to be a symbol, 8884 which is then bound to the struct of the section being inserted. 8885 8886 Before BODY is evaluated the ‘start’ of the section object is set 8887 to the value of ‘point’ and after BODY was evaluated its ‘end’ is 8888 set to the new value of ‘point’; BODY is responsible for moving 8889 ‘point’ forward. 8890 8891 If it turns out inside BODY that the section is empty, then 8892 ‘magit-cancel-section’ can be used to abort and remove all traces 8893 of the partially inserted section. This can happen when creating a 8894 section by washing Git’s output and Git didn’t actually output 8895 anything this time around. 8896 8897 -- Function: magit-insert-heading &rest args 8898 Insert the heading for the section currently being inserted. 8899 8900 This function should only be used inside ‘magit-insert-section’. 8901 8902 When called without any arguments, then just set the ‘content’ slot 8903 of the object representing the section being inserted to a marker 8904 at ‘point’. The section should only contain a single line when 8905 this function is used like this. 8906 8907 When called with arguments ARGS, which have to be strings, then 8908 insert those strings at point. The section should not contain any 8909 text before this happens and afterwards it should again only 8910 contain a single line. If the ‘face’ property is set anywhere 8911 inside any of these strings, then insert all of them unchanged. 8912 Otherwise use the ‘magit-section-heading’ face for all inserted 8913 text. 8914 8915 The ‘content’ property of the section struct is the end of the 8916 heading (which lasts from ‘start’ to ‘content’) and the beginning 8917 of the body (which lasts from ‘content’ to ‘end’). If the value of 8918 ‘content’ is nil, then the section has no heading and its body 8919 cannot be collapsed. If a section does have a heading then its 8920 height must be exactly one line, including a trailing newline 8921 character. This isn’t enforced; you are responsible for getting it 8922 right. The only exception is that this function does insert a 8923 newline character if necessary. 8924 8925 -- Function: magit-cancel-section 8926 Cancel the section currently being inserted. This exits the 8927 innermost call to ‘magit-insert-section’ and removes all traces of 8928 what has already happened inside that call. 8929 8930 -- Function: magit-define-section-jumper sym title &optional value 8931 Define an interactive function to go to section SYM. TITLE is the 8932 displayed title of the section. 8933 8934 8935 File: magit.info, Node: Section Selection, Next: Matching Sections, Prev: Creating Sections, Up: Section Plumbing 8936 8937 10.2.2 Section Selection 8938 ------------------------ 8939 8940 -- Function: magit-current-section 8941 Return the section at point. 8942 8943 -- Function: magit-region-sections &optional condition multiple 8944 Return a list of the selected sections. 8945 8946 When the region is active and constitutes a valid section 8947 selection, then return a list of all selected sections. This is 8948 the case when the region begins in the heading of a section and 8949 ends in the heading of the same section or in that of a sibling 8950 section. If optional MULTIPLE is non-nil, then the region cannot 8951 begin and end in the same section. 8952 8953 When the selection is not valid, then return nil. In this case, 8954 most commands that can act on the selected sections will instead 8955 act on the section at point. 8956 8957 When the region looks like it would in any other buffer then the 8958 selection is invalid. When the selection is valid then the region 8959 uses the ‘magit-section-highlight’ face. This does not apply to 8960 diffs where things get a bit more complicated, but even here if the 8961 region looks like it usually does, then that’s not a valid 8962 selection as far as this function is concerned. 8963 8964 If optional CONDITION is non-nil, then the selection not only has 8965 to be valid; all selected sections additionally have to match 8966 CONDITION, or nil is returned. See ‘magit-section-match’ for the 8967 forms CONDITION can take. 8968 8969 -- Function: magit-region-values &optional condition multiple 8970 Return a list of the values of the selected sections. 8971 8972 Return the values that themselves would be returned by 8973 ‘magit-region-sections’ (which see). 8974 8975 8976 File: magit.info, Node: Matching Sections, Prev: Section Selection, Up: Section Plumbing 8977 8978 10.2.3 Matching Sections 8979 ------------------------ 8980 8981 ‘M-x magit-describe-section-briefly’ 8982 Show information about the section at point. This command is 8983 intended for debugging purposes. 8984 8985 -- Function: magit-section-ident section 8986 Return an unique identifier for SECTION. The return value has the 8987 form ‘((TYPE . VALUE)...)’. 8988 8989 -- Function: magit-get-section ident &optional root 8990 Return the section identified by IDENT. IDENT has to be a list as 8991 returned by ‘magit-section-ident’. 8992 8993 -- Function: magit-section-match condition &optional section 8994 Return ‘t’ if SECTION matches CONDITION. SECTION defaults to the 8995 section at point. If SECTION is not specified and there also is no 8996 section at point, then return ‘nil’. 8997 8998 CONDITION can take the following forms: 8999 • ‘(CONDITION...)’ 9000 9001 matches if any of the CONDITIONs matches. 9002 9003 • ‘[CLASS...]’ 9004 9005 matches if the section’s class is the same as the first CLASS 9006 or a subclass of that; the section’s parent class matches the 9007 second CLASS; and so on. 9008 9009 • ‘[* CLASS...]’ 9010 9011 matches sections that match ‘[CLASS...]’ and also recursively 9012 all their child sections. 9013 9014 • ‘CLASS’ 9015 9016 matches if the section’s class is the same as CLASS or a 9017 subclass of that; regardless of the classes of the parent 9018 sections. 9019 9020 Each CLASS should be a class symbol, identifying a class that 9021 derives from ‘magit-section’. For backward compatibility CLASS can 9022 also be a "type symbol". A section matches such a symbol if the 9023 value of its ‘type’ slot is ‘eq’. If a type symbol has an entry in 9024 ‘magit--section-type-alist’, then a section also matches that type 9025 if its class is a subclass of the class that corresponds to the 9026 type as per that alist. 9027 9028 Note that it is not necessary to specify the complete section 9029 lineage as printed by ‘magit-describe-section-briefly’, unless of 9030 course you want to be that precise. 9031 9032 -- Function: magit-section-value-if condition &optional section 9033 If the section at point matches CONDITION, then return its value. 9034 9035 If optional SECTION is non-nil then test whether that matches 9036 instead. If there is no section at point and SECTION is nil, then 9037 return nil. If the section does not match, then return nil. 9038 9039 See ‘magit-section-match’ for the forms CONDITION can take. 9040 9041 -- Function: magit-section-case &rest clauses 9042 Choose among clauses on the type of the section at point. 9043 9044 Each clause looks like (CONDITION BODY...). The type of the 9045 section is compared against each CONDITION; the BODY forms of the 9046 first match are evaluated sequentially and the value of the last 9047 form is returned. Inside BODY the symbol ‘it’ is bound to the 9048 section at point. If no clause succeeds or if there is no section 9049 at point return nil. 9050 9051 See ‘magit-section-match’ for the forms CONDITION can take. 9052 Additionally a CONDITION of t is allowed in the final clause and 9053 matches if no other CONDITION match, even if there is no section at 9054 point. 9055 9056 -- Variable: magit-root-section 9057 The root section in the current buffer. All other sections are 9058 descendants of this section. The value of this variable is set by 9059 ‘magit-insert-section’ and you should never modify it. 9060 9061 For diff related sections a few additional tools exist. 9062 9063 -- Function: magit-diff-type &optional section 9064 Return the diff type of SECTION. 9065 9066 The returned type is one of the symbols ‘staged’, ‘unstaged’, 9067 ‘committed’, or ‘undefined’. This type serves a similar purpose as 9068 the general type common to all sections (which is stored in the 9069 ‘type’ slot of the corresponding ‘magit-section’ struct) but takes 9070 additional information into account. When the SECTION isn’t 9071 related to diffs and the buffer containing it also isn’t a 9072 diff-only buffer, then return nil. 9073 9074 Currently the type can also be one of ‘tracked’ and ‘untracked’, 9075 but these values are not handled explicitly in every place they 9076 should be. A possible fix could be to just return nil here. 9077 9078 The section has to be a ‘diff’ or ‘hunk’ section, or a section 9079 whose children are of type ‘diff’. If optional SECTION is nil, 9080 return the diff type for the current section. In buffers whose 9081 major mode is ‘magit-diff-mode’ SECTION is ignored and the type is 9082 determined using other means. In ‘magit-revision-mode’ buffers the 9083 type is always ‘committed’. 9084 9085 -- Function: magit-diff-scope &optional section strict 9086 Return the diff scope of SECTION or the selected section(s). 9087 9088 A diff’s "scope" describes what part of a diff is selected, it is a 9089 symbol, one of ‘region’, ‘hunk’, ‘hunks’, ‘file’, ‘files’, or 9090 ‘list’. Do not confuse this with the diff "type", as returned by 9091 ‘magit-diff-type’. 9092 9093 If optional SECTION is non-nil, then return the scope of that, 9094 ignoring the sections selected by the region. Otherwise return the 9095 scope of the current section, or if the region is active and 9096 selects a valid group of diff related sections, the type of these 9097 sections, i.e., ‘hunks’ or ‘files’. If SECTION (or if the current 9098 section that is nil) is a ‘hunk’ section and the region starts and 9099 ends inside the body of a that section, then the type is ‘region’. 9100 9101 If optional STRICT is non-nil then return nil if the diff type of 9102 the section at point is ‘untracked’ or the section at point is not 9103 actually a ‘diff’ but a ‘diffstat’ section. 9104 9105 9106 File: magit.info, Node: Refreshing Buffers, Next: Conventions, Prev: Section Plumbing, Up: Plumbing 9107 9108 10.3 Refreshing Buffers 9109 ======================= 9110 9111 All commands that create a new Magit buffer or change what is being 9112 displayed in an existing buffer do so by calling ‘magit-mode-setup’. 9113 Among other things, that function sets the buffer local values of 9114 ‘default-directory’ (to the top-level of the repository), 9115 ‘magit-refresh-function’, and ‘magit-refresh-args’. 9116 9117 Buffers are refreshed by calling the function that is the local value 9118 of ‘magit-refresh-function’ (a function named ‘magit-*-refresh-buffer’, 9119 where ‘*’ may be something like ‘diff’) with the value of 9120 ‘magit-refresh-args’ as arguments. 9121 9122 -- Macro: magit-mode-setup buffer switch-func mode refresh-func 9123 &optional refresh-args 9124 This function displays and selects BUFFER, turns on MODE, and 9125 refreshes a first time. 9126 9127 This function displays and optionally selects BUFFER by calling 9128 ‘magit-mode-display-buffer’ with BUFFER, MODE and SWITCH-FUNC as 9129 arguments. Then it sets the local value of 9130 ‘magit-refresh-function’ to REFRESH-FUNC and that of 9131 ‘magit-refresh-args’ to REFRESH-ARGS. Finally it creates the 9132 buffer content by calling REFRESH-FUNC with REFRESH-ARGS as 9133 arguments. 9134 9135 All arguments are evaluated before switching to BUFFER. 9136 9137 -- Function: magit-mode-display-buffer buffer mode &optional 9138 switch-function 9139 This function display BUFFER in some window and select it. BUFFER 9140 may be a buffer or a string, the name of a buffer. The buffer is 9141 returned. 9142 9143 Unless BUFFER is already displayed in the selected frame, store the 9144 previous window configuration as a buffer local value, so that it 9145 can later be restored by ‘magit-mode-bury-buffer’. 9146 9147 The buffer is displayed and selected using SWITCH-FUNCTION. If 9148 that is ‘nil’ then ‘pop-to-buffer’ is used if the current buffer’s 9149 major mode derives from ‘magit-mode’. Otherwise ‘switch-to-buffer’ 9150 is used. 9151 9152 -- Variable: magit-refresh-function 9153 The value of this buffer-local variable is the function used to 9154 refresh the current buffer. It is called with ‘magit-refresh-args’ 9155 as arguments. 9156 9157 -- Variable: magit-refresh-args 9158 The list of arguments used by ‘magit-refresh-function’ to refresh 9159 the current buffer. ‘magit-refresh-function’ is called with these 9160 arguments. 9161 9162 The value is usually set using ‘magit-mode-setup’, but in some 9163 cases it’s also useful to provide commands that can change the 9164 value. For example, the ‘magit-diff-refresh’ transient can be used 9165 to change any of the arguments used to display the diff, without 9166 having to specify again which differences should be shown, but 9167 ‘magit-diff-more-context’, ‘magit-diff-less-context’ and 9168 ‘magit-diff-default-context’ change just the ‘-U<N>’ argument. In 9169 both case this is done by changing the value of this variable and 9170 then calling this ‘magit-refresh-function’. 9171 9172 9173 File: magit.info, Node: Conventions, Prev: Refreshing Buffers, Up: Plumbing 9174 9175 10.4 Conventions 9176 ================ 9177 9178 Also see *note Completion and Confirmation::. 9179 9180 * Menu: 9181 9182 * Theming Faces:: 9183 9184 9185 File: magit.info, Node: Theming Faces, Up: Conventions 9186 9187 10.4.1 Theming Faces 9188 -------------------- 9189 9190 The default theme uses blue for local branches, green for remote 9191 branches, and goldenrod (brownish yellow) for tags. When creating a new 9192 theme, you should probably follow that example. If your theme already 9193 uses other colors, then stick to that. 9194 9195 In older releases these reference faces used to have a background 9196 color and a box around them. The basic default faces no longer do so, 9197 to make Magit buffers much less noisy, and you should follow that 9198 example at least with regards to boxes. (Boxes were used in the past to 9199 work around a conflict between the highlighting overlay and text 9200 property backgrounds. That’s no longer necessary because highlighting 9201 no longer causes other background colors to disappear.) Alternatively 9202 you can keep the background color and/or box, but then have to take 9203 special care to adjust ‘magit-branch-current’ accordingly. By default 9204 it looks mostly like ‘magit-branch-local’, but with a box (by default 9205 the former is the only face that uses a box, exactly so that it sticks 9206 out). If the former also uses a box, then you have to make sure that it 9207 differs in some other way from the latter. 9208 9209 The most difficult faces to theme are those related to diffs, 9210 headings, highlighting, and the region. There are faces that fall into 9211 all four groups - expect to spend some time getting this right. 9212 9213 The ‘region’ face in the default theme, in both the light and dark 9214 variants, as well as in many other themes, distributed with Emacs or by 9215 third-parties, is very ugly. It is common to use a background color 9216 that really sticks out, which is ugly but if that were the only problem 9217 then it would be acceptable. Unfortunately many themes also set the 9218 foreground color, which ensures that all text within the region is 9219 readable. Without doing that there might be cases where some foreground 9220 color is too close to the region background color to still be readable. 9221 But it also means that text within the region loses all syntax 9222 highlighting. 9223 9224 I consider the work that went into getting the ‘region’ face right to 9225 be a good indicator for the general quality of a theme. My 9226 recommendation for the ‘region’ face is this: use a background color 9227 slightly different from the background color of the ‘default’ face, and 9228 do not set the foreground color at all. So for a light theme you might 9229 use a light (possibly tinted) gray as the background color of ‘default’ 9230 and a somewhat darker gray for the background of ‘region’. That should 9231 usually be enough to not collide with the foreground color of any other 9232 face. But if some other faces also set a light gray as background 9233 color, then you should also make sure it doesn’t collide with those (in 9234 some cases it might be acceptable though). 9235 9236 Magit only uses the ‘region’ face when the region is "invalid" by its 9237 own definition. In a Magit buffer the region is used to either select 9238 multiple sibling sections, so that commands which support it act on all 9239 of these sections instead of just the current section, or to select 9240 lines within a single hunk section. In all other cases, the section is 9241 considered invalid and Magit won’t act on it. But such invalid sections 9242 happen, either because the user has not moved point enough yet to make 9243 it valid or because she wants to use a non-magit command to act on the 9244 region, e.g., ‘kill-region’. 9245 9246 So using the regular ‘region’ face for invalid sections is a feature. 9247 It tells the user that Magit won’t be able to act on it. It’s 9248 acceptable if that face looks a bit odd and even (but less so) if it 9249 collides with the background colors of section headings and other things 9250 that have a background color. 9251 9252 Magit highlights the current section. If a section has subsections, 9253 then all of them are highlighted. This is done using faces that have 9254 "highlight" in their names. For most sections, 9255 ‘magit-section-highlight’ is used for both the body and the heading. 9256 Like the ‘region’ face, it should only set the background color to 9257 something similar to that of ‘default’. The highlight background color 9258 must be different from both the ‘region’ background color and the 9259 ‘default’ background color. 9260 9261 For diff related sections Magit uses various faces to highlight 9262 different parts of the selected section(s). Note that hunk headings, 9263 unlike all other section headings, by default have a background color, 9264 because it is useful to have very visible separators between hunks. 9265 That face ‘magit-diff-hunk-heading’, should be different from both 9266 ‘magit-diff-hunk-heading-highlight’ and ‘magit-section-highlight’, as 9267 well as from ‘magit-diff-context’ and ‘magit-diff-context-highlight’. 9268 By default we do that by changing the foreground color. Changing the 9269 background color would lead to complications, and there are already 9270 enough we cannot get around. (Also note that it is generally a good 9271 idea for section headings to always be bold, but only for sections that 9272 have subsections). 9273 9274 When there is a valid region selecting diff-related sibling sections, 9275 i.e., multiple files or hunks, then the bodies of all these sections use 9276 the respective highlight faces, but additionally the headings instead 9277 use one of the faces ‘magit-diff-file-heading-selection’ or 9278 ‘magit-diff-hunk-heading-selection’. These faces have to be different 9279 from the regular highlight variants to provide explicit visual 9280 indication that the region is active. 9281 9282 When theming diff related faces, start by setting the option 9283 ‘magit-diff-refine-hunk’ to ‘all’. You might personally prefer to only 9284 refine the current hunk or not use hunk refinement at all, but some of 9285 the users of your theme want all hunks to be refined, so you have to 9286 cater to that. 9287 9288 (Also turn on ‘magit-diff-highlight-indentation’, 9289 ‘magit-diff-highlight-trailing’, and ‘magit-diff-paint-whitespace’; and 9290 insert some whitespace errors into the code you use for testing.) 9291 9292 For added lines you have to adjust three faces: ‘magit-diff-added’, 9293 ‘magit-diff-added-highlight’, and ‘diff-refined-added’. Make sure that 9294 the latter works well with both of the former, as well as ‘smerge-other’ 9295 and ‘diff-added’. Then do the same for the removed lines, context 9296 lines, lines added by us, and lines added by them. Also make sure the 9297 respective added, removed, and context faces use approximately the same 9298 saturation for both the highlighted and unhighlighted variants. Also 9299 make sure the file and diff headings work nicely with context lines 9300 (e.g., make them look different). Line faces should set both the 9301 foreground and the background color. For example, for added lines use 9302 two different greens. 9303 9304 It’s best if the foreground color of both the highlighted and the 9305 unhighlighted variants are the same, so you will need to have to find a 9306 color that works well on the highlight and unhighlighted background, the 9307 refine background, and the highlight context background. When there is 9308 an hunk internal region, then the added- and removed-lines background 9309 color is used only within that region. Outside the region the 9310 highlighted context background color is used. This makes it easier to 9311 see what is being staged. With an hunk internal region the hunk heading 9312 is shown using ‘magit-diff-hunk-heading-selection’, and so are the thin 9313 lines that are added around the lines that fall within the region. The 9314 background color of that has to be distinct enough from the various 9315 other involved background colors. 9316 9317 Nobody said this would be easy. If your theme restricts itself to a 9318 certain set of colors, then you should make an exception here. 9319 Otherwise it would be impossible to make the diffs look good in each and 9320 every variation. Actually you might want to just stick to the default 9321 definitions for these faces. You have been warned. Also please note 9322 that if you do not get this right, this will in some cases look to users 9323 like bugs in Magit - so please do it right or not at all. 9324 9325 9326 File: magit.info, Node: FAQ, Next: Debugging Tools, Prev: Plumbing, Up: Top 9327 9328 Appendix A FAQ 9329 ************** 9330 9331 The next two nodes lists frequently asked questions. For a list of 9332 frequently *and recently* asked questions, i.e., questions that haven’t 9333 made it into the manual yet, see 9334 <https://github.com/magit/magit/wiki/FAQ>. 9335 9336 Please also see *note Debugging Tools::. 9337 9338 * Menu: 9339 9340 * FAQ - How to ...?:: 9341 * FAQ - Issues and Errors:: 9342 9343 9344 File: magit.info, Node: FAQ - How to ...?, Next: FAQ - Issues and Errors, Up: FAQ 9345 9346 A.1 FAQ - How to ...? 9347 ===================== 9348 9349 * Menu: 9350 9351 * How to pronounce Magit?:: 9352 * How to show git's output?:: 9353 * How to install the gitman info manual?:: 9354 * How to show diffs for gpg-encrypted files?:: 9355 * How does branching and pushing work?:: 9356 * Should I disable VC?:: 9357 9358 9359 File: magit.info, Node: How to pronounce Magit?, Next: How to show git's output?, Up: FAQ - How to ...? 9360 9361 A.1.1 How to pronounce Magit? 9362 ----------------------------- 9363 9364 Either ‘mu[m's] git’ or ‘magi{c => t}’ is fine. 9365 9366 The slogan is "It’s Magit! The magical Git client", so it makes 9367 sense to pronounce Magit like magic, while taking into account that C 9368 and T do not sound the same. 9369 9370 The German "Magie" is not pronounced the same as the English "magic", 9371 so if you speak German then you can use the above rationale to justify 9372 using the former pronunciation; ‘Mag{ie => it}’. 9373 9374 You can also choose to use the former pronunciation just because you 9375 like it better. 9376 9377 Also see <https://magit.vc/assets/videos/magic.mp4>. Also see 9378 <https://emacs.stackexchange.com/questions/13696>. 9379 9380 9381 File: magit.info, Node: How to show git's output?, Next: How to install the gitman info manual?, Prev: How to pronounce Magit?, Up: FAQ - How to ...? 9382 9383 A.1.2 How to show git’s output? 9384 ------------------------------- 9385 9386 To show the output of recently run git commands, press ‘$’ (or, if that 9387 isn’t available, ‘M-x magit-process-buffer’). This will show a buffer 9388 containing a section per git invocation; as always press ‘TAB’ to expand 9389 or collapse them. 9390 9391 By default, git’s output is only inserted into the process buffer if 9392 it is run for side-effects. When the output is consumed in some way, 9393 also inserting it into the process buffer would be too expensive. For 9394 debugging purposes, it’s possible to do so anyway by setting 9395 ‘magit-git-debug’ to ‘t’. 9396 9397 9398 File: magit.info, Node: How to install the gitman info manual?, Next: How to show diffs for gpg-encrypted files?, Prev: How to show git's output?, Up: FAQ - How to ...? 9399 9400 A.1.3 How to install the gitman info manual? 9401 -------------------------------------------- 9402 9403 Git’s manpages can be exported as an info manual called ‘gitman’. 9404 Magit’s own info manual links to nodes in that manual instead of the 9405 actual manpages because Info doesn’t support linking to manpages. 9406 9407 Unfortunately some distributions do not install the ‘gitman’ manual 9408 by default and you will have to install a separate documentation package 9409 to get it. 9410 9411 Magit patches Info adding the ability to visit links to the ‘gitman’ 9412 Info manual by instead viewing the respective manpage. If you prefer 9413 that approach, then set the value of ‘magit-view-git-manual-method’ to 9414 one of the supported packages ‘man’ or ‘woman’, e.g.: 9415 9416 (setq magit-view-git-manual-method 'man) 9417 9418 9419 File: magit.info, Node: How to show diffs for gpg-encrypted files?, Next: How does branching and pushing work?, Prev: How to install the gitman info manual?, Up: FAQ - How to ...? 9420 9421 A.1.4 How to show diffs for gpg-encrypted files? 9422 ------------------------------------------------ 9423 9424 Git supports showing diffs for encrypted files, but has to be told to do 9425 so. Since Magit just uses Git to get the diffs, configuring Git also 9426 affects the diffs displayed inside Magit. 9427 9428 git config --global diff.gpg.textconv "gpg --no-tty --decrypt" 9429 echo "*.gpg filter=gpg diff=gpg" > .gitattributes 9430 9431 9432 File: magit.info, Node: How does branching and pushing work?, Next: Should I disable VC?, Prev: How to show diffs for gpg-encrypted files?, Up: FAQ - How to ...? 9433 9434 A.1.5 How does branching and pushing work? 9435 ------------------------------------------ 9436 9437 Please see *note Branching:: and 9438 <https://emacsair.me/2016/01/17/magit-2.4> 9439 9440 9441 File: magit.info, Node: Should I disable VC?, Prev: How does branching and pushing work?, Up: FAQ - How to ...? 9442 9443 A.1.6 Should I disable VC? 9444 -------------------------- 9445 9446 If you don’t use VC (the built-in version control interface) then you 9447 might be tempted to disable it, not least because we used to recommend 9448 that you do that. 9449 9450 We no longer recommend that you disable VC. Doing so would break 9451 useful third-party packages (such as ‘diff-hl’), which depend on VC 9452 being enabled. 9453 9454 If you choose to disable VC anyway, then you can do so by changing 9455 the value of ‘vc-handled-backends’. 9456 9457 9458 File: magit.info, Node: FAQ - Issues and Errors, Prev: FAQ - How to ...?, Up: FAQ 9459 9460 A.2 FAQ - Issues and Errors 9461 =========================== 9462 9463 * Menu: 9464 9465 * Magit is slow:: 9466 * I changed several thousand files at once and now Magit is unusable:: 9467 * I am having problems committing:: 9468 * I am using MS Windows and cannot push with Magit:: 9469 * I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell, but not in Magit: I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell but not in Magit. 9470 * Expanding a file to show the diff causes it to disappear:: 9471 * Point is wrong in the COMMIT_EDITMSG buffer:: 9472 * The mode-line information isn't always up-to-date:: 9473 * A branch and tag sharing the same name breaks SOMETHING:: 9474 * My Git hooks work on the command-line but not inside Magit:: 9475 * git-commit-mode isn't used when committing from the command-line:: 9476 * Point ends up inside invisible text when jumping to a file-visiting buffer:: 9477 * I am no longer able to save popup defaults:: 9478 9479 9480 File: magit.info, Node: Magit is slow, Next: I changed several thousand files at once and now Magit is unusable, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9481 9482 A.2.1 Magit is slow 9483 ------------------- 9484 9485 See *note Performance:: and *note I changed several thousand files at 9486 once and now Magit is unusable::. 9487 9488 9489 File: magit.info, Node: I changed several thousand files at once and now Magit is unusable, Next: I am having problems committing, Prev: Magit is slow, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9490 9491 A.2.2 I changed several thousand files at once and now Magit is unusable 9492 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 9493 9494 Magit is currently not expected to work well under such conditions. It 9495 sure would be nice if it did. Reaching satisfactory performance under 9496 such conditions will require some heavy refactoring. This is no small 9497 task but I hope to eventually find the time to make it happen. 9498 9499 But for now we recommend you use the command line to complete this 9500 one commit. Also see *note Performance::. 9501 9502 9503 File: magit.info, Node: I am having problems committing, Next: I am using MS Windows and cannot push with Magit, Prev: I changed several thousand files at once and now Magit is unusable, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9504 9505 A.2.3 I am having problems committing 9506 ------------------------------------- 9507 9508 That likely means that Magit is having problems finding an appropriate 9509 emacsclient executable. See *note (with-editor)Configuring 9510 With-Editor:: and *note (with-editor)Debugging::. 9511 9512 9513 File: magit.info, Node: I am using MS Windows and cannot push with Magit, Next: I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell but not in Magit, Prev: I am having problems committing, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9514 9515 A.2.4 I am using MS Windows and cannot push with Magit 9516 ------------------------------------------------------ 9517 9518 It’s almost certain that Magit is only incidental to this issue. It is 9519 much more likely that this is a configuration issue, even if you can 9520 push on the command line. 9521 9522 Detailed setup instructions can be found at 9523 <https://github.com/magit/magit/wiki/Pushing-with-Magit-from-Windows>. 9524 9525 9526 File: magit.info, Node: I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell but not in Magit, Next: Expanding a file to show the diff causes it to disappear, Prev: I am using MS Windows and cannot push with Magit, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9527 9528 A.2.5 I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell, but not in Magit 9529 --------------------------------------------------------------------- 9530 9531 This usually occurs because Emacs doesn’t have the same environment 9532 variables as your shell. Try installing and configuring 9533 <https://github.com/purcell/exec-path-from-shell>. By default it 9534 synchronizes ‘$PATH’, which helps Magit find the same ‘git’ as the one 9535 you are using on the shell. 9536 9537 If SOMETHING is "passphrase caching with gpg-agent for commit and/or 9538 tag signing", then you’ll also need to synchronize ‘$GPG_AGENT_INFO’. 9539 9540 9541 File: magit.info, Node: Expanding a file to show the diff causes it to disappear, Next: Point is wrong in the COMMIT_EDITMSG buffer, Prev: I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell but not in Magit, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9542 9543 A.2.6 Expanding a file to show the diff causes it to disappear 9544 -------------------------------------------------------------- 9545 9546 This is probably caused by a customization of a ‘diff.*’ Git variable. 9547 You probably set that variable for a reason, and should therefore only 9548 undo that setting in Magit by customizing ‘magit-git-global-arguments’. 9549 9550 9551 File: magit.info, Node: Point is wrong in the COMMIT_EDITMSG buffer, Next: The mode-line information isn't always up-to-date, Prev: Expanding a file to show the diff causes it to disappear, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9552 9553 A.2.7 Point is wrong in the ‘COMMIT_EDITMSG’ buffer 9554 --------------------------------------------------- 9555 9556 Neither Magit nor ‘git-commit.el’ fiddle with point in the buffer used 9557 to write commit messages, so something else must be doing it. 9558 9559 You have probably globally enabled a mode which restores point in 9560 file-visiting buffers. It might be a bit surprising, but when you write 9561 a commit message, then you are actually editing a file. 9562 9563 So you have to figure out which package is doing it. ‘saveplace’, 9564 ‘pointback’, and ‘session’ are likely candidates. These snippets might 9565 help: 9566 9567 (setq session-name-disable-regexp "\\(?:\\`'\\.git/[A-Z_]+\\'\\)") 9568 9569 (with-eval-after-load 'pointback 9570 (lambda () 9571 (when (or git-commit-mode git-rebase-mode) 9572 (pointback-mode -1)))) 9573 9574 9575 File: magit.info, Node: The mode-line information isn't always up-to-date, Next: A branch and tag sharing the same name breaks SOMETHING, Prev: Point is wrong in the COMMIT_EDITMSG buffer, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9576 9577 A.2.8 The mode-line information isn’t always up-to-date 9578 ------------------------------------------------------- 9579 9580 Magit is not responsible for the version control information that is 9581 being displayed in the mode-line and looks something like ‘Git-master’. 9582 The built-in "Version Control" package, also known as "VC", updates that 9583 information, and can be told to do so more often: 9584 9585 (setq auto-revert-check-vc-info t) 9586 9587 But doing so isn’t good for performance. For more (overly 9588 optimistic) information see *note (emacs)VC Mode Line::. 9589 9590 If you don’t really care about seeing this information in the 9591 mode-line, but just don’t want to see _incorrect_ information, then 9592 consider simply not displaying it in the mode-line: 9593 9594 (setq-default mode-line-format 9595 (delete '(vc-mode vc-mode) mode-line-format)) 9596 9597 9598 File: magit.info, Node: A branch and tag sharing the same name breaks SOMETHING, Next: My Git hooks work on the command-line but not inside Magit, Prev: The mode-line information isn't always up-to-date, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9599 9600 A.2.9 A branch and tag sharing the same name breaks SOMETHING 9601 ------------------------------------------------------------- 9602 9603 Or more generally, ambiguous refnames break SOMETHING. 9604 9605 Magit assumes that refs are named non-ambiguously across the 9606 "refs/heads/", "refs/tags/", and "refs/remotes/" namespaces (i.e., all 9607 the names remain unique when those prefixes are stripped). We consider 9608 ambiguous refnames unsupported and recommend that you use a 9609 non-ambiguous naming scheme. However, if you do work with a repository 9610 that has ambiguous refnames, please report any issues you encounter, so 9611 that we can investigate whether there is a simple fix. 9612 9613 9614 File: magit.info, Node: My Git hooks work on the command-line but not inside Magit, Next: git-commit-mode isn't used when committing from the command-line, Prev: A branch and tag sharing the same name breaks SOMETHING, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9615 9616 A.2.10 My Git hooks work on the command-line but not inside Magit 9617 ----------------------------------------------------------------- 9618 9619 When Magit calls ‘git’ it adds a few global arguments including 9620 ‘--literal-pathspecs’ and the ‘git’ process started by Magit then passes 9621 that setting on to other ‘git’ process it starts itself. It does so by 9622 setting the environment variable ‘GIT_LITERAL_PATHSPECS’, not by calling 9623 subprocesses with the ‘--literal-pathspecs’ argument. You can therefore 9624 override this setting in hook scripts using ‘unset 9625 GIT_LITERAL_PATHSPECS’. 9626 9627 9628 File: magit.info, Node: git-commit-mode isn't used when committing from the command-line, Next: Point ends up inside invisible text when jumping to a file-visiting buffer, Prev: My Git hooks work on the command-line but not inside Magit, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9629 9630 A.2.11 ‘git-commit-mode’ isn’t used when committing from the command-line 9631 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9632 9633 The reason for this is that ‘git-commit.el’ has not been loaded yet 9634 and/or that the server has not been started yet. These things have 9635 always already been taken care of when you commit from Magit because in 9636 order to do so, Magit has to be loaded and doing that involves loading 9637 ‘git-commit’ and starting the server. 9638 9639 If you want to commit from the command-line, then you have to take 9640 care of these things yourself. Your ‘init.el’ file should contain: 9641 9642 (require 'git-commit) 9643 (server-mode) 9644 9645 Instead of ‘(require ’git-commit)‘ you may also use: 9646 9647 (load "/path/to/magit-autoloads.el") 9648 9649 You might want to do that because loading ‘git-commit’ causes large 9650 parts of Magit to be loaded. 9651 9652 There are also some variations of ‘(server-mode)’ that you might want 9653 to try. Personally I use: 9654 9655 (use-package server 9656 :config (or (server-running-p) (server-mode))) 9657 9658 Now you can use: 9659 9660 $ emacs& 9661 $ EDITOR=emacsclient git commit 9662 9663 However you cannot use: 9664 9665 $ killall emacs 9666 $ EDITOR="emacsclient --alternate-editor emacs" git commit 9667 9668 This will actually end up using ‘emacs’, not ‘emacsclient’. If you 9669 do this, then you can still edit the commit message but 9670 ‘git-commit-mode’ won’t be used and you have to exit ‘emacs’ to finish 9671 the process. 9672 9673 Tautology ahead. If you want to be able to use ‘emacsclient’ to 9674 connect to a running ‘emacs’ instance, even though no ‘emacs’ instance 9675 is running, then you cannot use ‘emacsclient’ directly. 9676 9677 Instead you have to create a script that does something like this: 9678 9679 Try to use ‘emacsclient’ (without using ‘--alternate-editor’). If 9680 that succeeds, do nothing else. Otherwise start ‘emacs &’ (and 9681 ‘init.el’ must call ‘server-start’) and try to use ‘emacsclient’ again. 9682 9683 9684 File: magit.info, Node: Point ends up inside invisible text when jumping to a file-visiting buffer, Next: I am no longer able to save popup defaults, Prev: git-commit-mode isn't used when committing from the command-line, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9685 9686 A.2.12 Point ends up inside invisible text when jumping to a file-visiting buffer 9687 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9688 9689 This can happen when you type ‘RET’ on a hunk to visit the respective 9690 file at the respective position. One solution to this problem is to use 9691 ‘global-reveal-mode’. It makes sure that text around point is always 9692 visible. If that is too drastic for your taste, then you may instead 9693 use ‘magit-diff-visit-file-hook’ to reveal the text, possibly using 9694 ‘reveal-post-command’ or for Org buffers ‘org-reveal’. 9695 9696 9697 File: magit.info, Node: I am no longer able to save popup defaults, Prev: Point ends up inside invisible text when jumping to a file-visiting buffer, Up: FAQ - Issues and Errors 9698 9699 A.2.13 I am no longer able to save popup defaults 9700 ------------------------------------------------- 9701 9702 Magit used to use Magit-Popup to implement the transient popup menus. 9703 Now it used Transient instead, which is Magit-Popup’s successor. 9704 9705 In the older Magit-Popup menus, it was possible to save user settings 9706 (e.g., setting the gpg signing key for commits) by using ‘C-c C-c’ in 9707 the popup buffer. This would dismiss the popup, but save the settings 9708 as the defaults for future popups. 9709 9710 When switching to Transient menus, this functionality is now 9711 available via ‘C-x C-s’ instead; the ‘C-x’ prefix has other options as 9712 well when using Transient, which will be displayed when it is typed. 9713 See <https://magit.vc/manual/transient/Saving-Values.html#Saving-Values> 9714 for more details. 9715 9716 9717 File: magit.info, Node: Debugging Tools, Next: Keystroke Index, Prev: FAQ, Up: Top 9718 9719 B Debugging Tools 9720 ***************** 9721 9722 Magit and its dependencies provide a few debugging tools, and we 9723 appreciate it very much if you use those tools before reporting an 9724 issue. Please include all relevant output when reporting an issue. 9725 9726 ‘M-x magit-version’ 9727 This command shows the currently used versions of Magit, Git, and 9728 Emacs in the echo area. Non-interactively this just returns the 9729 Magit version. 9730 9731 ‘M-x magit-emacs-Q-command’ 9732 This command shows a debugging shell command in the echo area and 9733 adds it to the kill ring. Paste that command into a shell and run 9734 it. 9735 9736 This shell command starts ‘emacs’ with only ‘magit’ and its 9737 dependencies loaded. Neither your configuration nor other 9738 installed packages are loaded. This makes it easier to determine 9739 whether some issue lays with Magit or something else. 9740 9741 If you run Magit from its Git repository, then you should be able 9742 to use ‘make emacs-Q’ instead of the output of this command. 9743 9744 ‘M-x magit-toggle-git-debug’ 9745 This command toggles whether additional git errors are reported. 9746 9747 Magit basically calls git for one of these two reasons: for 9748 side-effects or to do something with its standard output. 9749 9750 When git is run for side-effects then its output, including error 9751 messages, go into the process buffer which is shown when using ‘$’. 9752 9753 When git’s output is consumed in some way, then it would be too 9754 expensive to also insert it into this buffer, but when this option 9755 is non-nil and git returns with a non-zero exit status, then at 9756 least its standard error is inserted into this buffer. 9757 9758 This is only intended for debugging purposes. Do not enable this 9759 permanently, that would negatively affect performance. Also note 9760 that just because git exits with a non-zero exit status and prints 9761 an error message that usually doesn’t mean that it is an error as 9762 far as Magit is concerned, which is another reason we usually hide 9763 these error messages. Whether some error message is relevant in 9764 the context of some unexpected behavior has to be judged on a case 9765 by case basis. 9766 9767 ‘M-x magit-toggle-verbose-refresh’ 9768 This command toggles whether Magit refreshes buffers verbosely. 9769 Enabling this helps figuring out which sections are bottlenecks. 9770 The additional output can be found in the ‘*Messages*’ buffer. 9771 9772 ‘M-x magit-debug-git-executable’ 9773 This command displays a buffer containing information about the 9774 available and used ‘git’ executable(s), and can be useful when 9775 investigating ‘exec-path’ issues. 9776 9777 Also see *note Git Executable::. 9778 9779 ‘M-x with-editor-debug’ 9780 This command displays a buffer containing information about the 9781 available and used ‘emacsclient’ executable(s), and can be useful 9782 when investigating why Magit (or rather ‘with-editor’) cannot find 9783 an appropriate ‘emacsclient’ executable. 9784 9785 Also see *note (with-editor)Debugging::. 9786 9787 Please also see *note FAQ::. 9788 9789 9790 File: magit.info, Node: Keystroke Index, Next: Function and Command Index, Prev: Debugging Tools, Up: Top 9791 9792 Appendix C Keystroke Index 9793 ************************** 9794 9795 9796 * Menu: 9797 9798 * !: Running Git Manually. 9799 (line 13) 9800 * ! !: Running Git Manually. 9801 (line 17) 9802 * ! a: Running Git Manually. 9803 (line 53) 9804 * ! b: Running Git Manually. 9805 (line 56) 9806 * ! g: Running Git Manually. 9807 (line 59) 9808 * ! k: Running Git Manually. 9809 (line 50) 9810 * ! m: Running Git Manually. 9811 (line 62) 9812 * ! p: Running Git Manually. 9813 (line 25) 9814 * ! s: Running Git Manually. 9815 (line 34) 9816 * ! S: Running Git Manually. 9817 (line 38) 9818 * $: Viewing Git Output. (line 17) 9819 * +: Log Buffer. (line 64) 9820 * + <1>: Refreshing Diffs. (line 65) 9821 * -: Log Buffer. (line 67) 9822 * - <1>: Refreshing Diffs. (line 62) 9823 * 0: Refreshing Diffs. (line 68) 9824 * 1: Section Visibility. (line 39) 9825 * 2: Section Visibility. (line 39) 9826 * 3: Section Visibility. (line 39) 9827 * 4: Section Visibility. (line 39) 9828 * 5: Repository List. (line 115) 9829 * :: Running Git Manually. 9830 (line 25) 9831 * =: Log Buffer. (line 59) 9832 * >: Sparse checkouts. (line 17) 9833 * > a: Sparse checkouts. (line 39) 9834 * > d: Sparse checkouts. (line 50) 9835 * > e: Sparse checkouts. (line 21) 9836 * > r: Sparse checkouts. (line 44) 9837 * > s: Sparse checkouts. (line 33) 9838 * ^: Section Movement. (line 28) 9839 * a: Applying. (line 34) 9840 * A: Cherry Picking. (line 9) 9841 * A A: Cherry Picking. (line 17) 9842 * A a: Cherry Picking. (line 23) 9843 * A A <1>: Cherry Picking. (line 85) 9844 * A a <1>: Cherry Picking. (line 91) 9845 * A d: Cherry Picking. (line 51) 9846 * A h: Cherry Picking. (line 40) 9847 * A n: Cherry Picking. (line 62) 9848 * A s: Cherry Picking. (line 72) 9849 * A s <1>: Cherry Picking. (line 88) 9850 * B: Bisecting. (line 9) 9851 * b: Blaming. (line 115) 9852 * b <1>: Branch Commands. (line 13) 9853 * b <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 9854 (line 70) 9855 * B B: Bisecting. (line 16) 9856 * B b: Bisecting. (line 32) 9857 * b b: Branch Commands. (line 47) 9858 * b C: Branch Commands. (line 31) 9859 * b c: Branch Commands. (line 63) 9860 * B g: Bisecting. (line 36) 9861 * B k: Bisecting. (line 46) 9862 * b k: Branch Commands. (line 138) 9863 * b l: Branch Commands. (line 69) 9864 * B m: Bisecting. (line 40) 9865 * b m: Branch Commands. (line 149) 9866 * b n: Branch Commands. (line 54) 9867 * B r: Bisecting. (line 51) 9868 * B s: Bisecting. (line 26) 9869 * b s: Branch Commands. (line 91) 9870 * b S: Branch Commands. (line 118) 9871 * b x: Branch Commands. (line 123) 9872 * c: Blaming. (line 141) 9873 * C: Cloning Repository. (line 20) 9874 * c <1>: Initiating a Commit. (line 9) 9875 * c <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 9876 (line 59) 9877 * C >: Cloning Repository. (line 38) 9878 * c a: Initiating a Commit. (line 18) 9879 * c A: Initiating a Commit. (line 59) 9880 * C b: Cloning Repository. (line 44) 9881 * C C: Cloning Repository. (line 28) 9882 * c c: Initiating a Commit. (line 14) 9883 * C d: Cloning Repository. (line 55) 9884 * C e: Cloning Repository. (line 61) 9885 * c e: Initiating a Commit. (line 21) 9886 * c f: Initiating a Commit. (line 39) 9887 * c F: Initiating a Commit. (line 46) 9888 * C m: Cloning Repository. (line 48) 9889 * C s: Cloning Repository. (line 32) 9890 * c s: Initiating a Commit. (line 49) 9891 * c S: Initiating a Commit. (line 56) 9892 * c w: Initiating a Commit. (line 30) 9893 * C-<return>: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 9894 (line 50) 9895 * C-<tab>: Section Visibility. (line 14) 9896 * C-c C-a: Commit Pseudo Headers. 9897 (line 16) 9898 * C-c C-b: Log Buffer. (line 20) 9899 * C-c C-b <1>: Refreshing Diffs. (line 84) 9900 * C-c C-c: Select from Log. (line 21) 9901 * C-c C-c <1>: Editing Commit Messages. 9902 (line 18) 9903 * C-c C-c <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 9904 (line 7) 9905 * C-c C-d: Refreshing Diffs. (line 75) 9906 * C-c C-d <1>: Editing Commit Messages. 9907 (line 54) 9908 * C-c C-e: Commands Available in Diffs. 9909 (line 24) 9910 * C-c C-f: Log Buffer. (line 23) 9911 * C-c C-f <1>: Refreshing Diffs. (line 87) 9912 * C-c C-i: Commit Pseudo Headers. 9913 (line 13) 9914 * C-c C-k: Select from Log. (line 26) 9915 * C-c C-k <1>: Editing Commit Messages. 9916 (line 22) 9917 * C-c C-k <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 9918 (line 11) 9919 * C-c C-n: Log Buffer. (line 26) 9920 * C-c C-o: Commit Pseudo Headers. 9921 (line 28) 9922 * C-c C-p: Commit Pseudo Headers. 9923 (line 31) 9924 * C-c C-r: Commit Pseudo Headers. 9925 (line 19) 9926 * C-c C-s: Commit Pseudo Headers. 9927 (line 22) 9928 * C-c C-t: Commands Available in Diffs. 9929 (line 15) 9930 * C-c C-t <1>: Commit Pseudo Headers. 9931 (line 25) 9932 * C-c C-w: Using the Revision Stack. 9933 (line 7) 9934 * C-c f: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9935 (line 52) 9936 * C-c f , c: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9937 (line 52) 9938 * C-c f , k: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9939 (line 52) 9940 * C-c f , r: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9941 (line 52) 9942 * C-c f , x: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9943 (line 52) 9944 * C-c f B: Blaming. (line 28) 9945 * C-c f b: Blaming. (line 28) 9946 * C-c f B <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9947 (line 52) 9948 * C-c f b <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9949 (line 52) 9950 * C-c f B b: Blaming. (line 28) 9951 * C-c f B e: Blaming. (line 28) 9952 * C-c f B f: Blaming. (line 28) 9953 * C-c f B q: Blaming. (line 28) 9954 * C-c f B r: Blaming. (line 28) 9955 * C-c f c: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9956 (line 52) 9957 * C-c f D: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9958 (line 52) 9959 * C-c f d: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9960 (line 52) 9961 * C-c f e: Blaming. (line 28) 9962 * C-c f e <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9963 (line 52) 9964 * C-c f f: Blaming. (line 28) 9965 * C-c f f <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9966 (line 52) 9967 * C-c f g: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9968 (line 52) 9969 * C-c f G: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9970 (line 52) 9971 * C-c f L: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9972 (line 52) 9973 * C-c f l: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9974 (line 52) 9975 * C-c f M: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9976 (line 52) 9977 * C-c f m: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9978 (line 52) 9979 * C-c f n: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9980 (line 52) 9981 * C-c f p: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9982 (line 52) 9983 * C-c f q: Blaming. (line 28) 9984 * C-c f q <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9985 (line 52) 9986 * C-c f r: Blaming. (line 28) 9987 * C-c f r <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9988 (line 52) 9989 * C-c f s: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9990 (line 52) 9991 * C-c f s <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9992 (line 52) 9993 * C-c f t: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9994 (line 52) 9995 * C-c f u: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9996 (line 52) 9997 * C-c f u <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 9998 (line 52) 9999 * C-c f v: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10000 (line 52) 10001 * C-c f V: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10002 (line 52) 10003 * C-c g: Transient Commands. (line 20) 10004 * C-c M-g: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10005 (line 58) 10006 * C-c M-g , c: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10007 (line 86) 10008 * C-c M-g , k: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10009 (line 82) 10010 * C-c M-g , r: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10011 (line 78) 10012 * C-c M-g , x: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10013 (line 74) 10014 * C-c M-g B: Blaming. (line 34) 10015 * C-c M-g b: Blaming. (line 45) 10016 * C-c M-g B <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10017 (line 137) 10018 * C-c M-g B b: Blaming. (line 45) 10019 * C-c M-g B e: Blaming. (line 76) 10020 * C-c M-g B f: Blaming. (line 68) 10021 * C-c M-g B q: Blaming. (line 87) 10022 * C-c M-g B r: Blaming. (line 60) 10023 * C-c M-g c: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10024 (line 176) 10025 * C-c M-g D: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10026 (line 91) 10027 * C-c M-g d: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10028 (line 101) 10029 * C-c M-g e: Blaming. (line 76) 10030 * C-c M-g e <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10031 (line 182) 10032 * C-c M-g f: Blaming. (line 68) 10033 * C-c M-g g: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10034 (line 166) 10035 * C-c M-g G: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10036 (line 172) 10037 * C-c M-g L: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10038 (line 109) 10039 * C-c M-g l: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10040 (line 119) 10041 * C-c M-g M: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10042 (line 132) 10043 * C-c M-g n: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10044 (line 153) 10045 * C-c M-g p: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10046 (line 149) 10047 * C-c M-g q: Blaming. (line 87) 10048 * C-c M-g r: Blaming. (line 60) 10049 * C-c M-g s: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10050 (line 63) 10051 * C-c M-g s <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10052 (line 63) 10053 * C-c M-g t: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10054 (line 129) 10055 * C-c M-g u: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10056 (line 69) 10057 * C-c M-g u <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10058 (line 69) 10059 * C-c M-g v: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10060 (line 156) 10061 * C-c M-g V: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10062 (line 160) 10063 * C-c M-i: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10064 (line 35) 10065 * C-c M-s: Editing Commit Messages. 10066 (line 33) 10067 * C-c TAB: Section Visibility. (line 14) 10068 * C-w: Common Commands. (line 22) 10069 * C-x g: Status Buffer. (line 23) 10070 * C-x M-g: Transient Commands. (line 20) 10071 * C-x u: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10072 (line 77) 10073 * d: Diffing. (line 22) 10074 * D: Refreshing Diffs. (line 16) 10075 * d c: Diffing. (line 63) 10076 * d d: Diffing. (line 27) 10077 * D f: Refreshing Diffs. (line 45) 10078 * D F: Refreshing Diffs. (line 49) 10079 * D g: Refreshing Diffs. (line 21) 10080 * d p: Diffing. (line 56) 10081 * d r: Diffing. (line 30) 10082 * D r: Refreshing Diffs. (line 41) 10083 * d s: Diffing. (line 48) 10084 * D s: Refreshing Diffs. (line 25) 10085 * d t: Diffing. (line 67) 10086 * D t: Refreshing Diffs. (line 38) 10087 * d u: Diffing. (line 53) 10088 * d w: Diffing. (line 43) 10089 * D w: Refreshing Diffs. (line 31) 10090 * DEL: Log Buffer. (line 50) 10091 * DEL <1>: Commands Available in Diffs. 10092 (line 56) 10093 * DEL <2>: Blaming. (line 103) 10094 * DEL <3>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10095 (line 25) 10096 * e: Ediffing. (line 10) 10097 * E: Ediffing. (line 21) 10098 * e <1>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10099 (line 46) 10100 * E c: Ediffing. (line 100) 10101 * E i: Ediffing. (line 94) 10102 * E m: Ediffing. (line 33) 10103 * E M: Ediffing. (line 48) 10104 * E r: Ediffing. (line 25) 10105 * E s: Ediffing. (line 87) 10106 * E t: Ediffing. (line 79) 10107 * E u: Ediffing. (line 91) 10108 * E w: Ediffing. (line 97) 10109 * E z: Ediffing. (line 103) 10110 * f: Repository List. (line 111) 10111 * f <1>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10112 (line 52) 10113 * f <2>: Fetching. (line 10) 10114 * F: Pulling. (line 10) 10115 * f a: Fetching. (line 45) 10116 * f C: Branch Commands. (line 31) 10117 * F C: Branch Commands. (line 31) 10118 * f e: Fetching. (line 34) 10119 * F e: Pulling. (line 28) 10120 * f m: Fetching. (line 48) 10121 * f o: Fetching. (line 37) 10122 * f p: Fetching. (line 15) 10123 * F p: Pulling. (line 14) 10124 * f r: Fetching. (line 41) 10125 * f u: Fetching. (line 22) 10126 * F u: Pulling. (line 21) 10127 * g: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers. 10128 (line 26) 10129 * G: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers. 10130 (line 34) 10131 * H: Section Types and Values. 10132 (line 14) 10133 * I: Creating Repository. (line 7) 10134 * j: Log Buffer. (line 31) 10135 * j <1>: Commands Available in Diffs. 10136 (line 43) 10137 * k: Viewing Git Output. (line 24) 10138 * k <1>: Applying. (line 40) 10139 * k <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10140 (line 56) 10141 * k <3>: Stashing. (line 118) 10142 * l: Logging. (line 28) 10143 * L: Refreshing Logs. (line 12) 10144 * L <1>: Log Buffer. (line 7) 10145 * L <2>: Log Margin. (line 52) 10146 * l <1>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10147 (line 94) 10148 * l a: Logging. (line 59) 10149 * l b: Logging. (line 56) 10150 * L d: Log Margin. (line 66) 10151 * L g: Refreshing Logs. (line 17) 10152 * l h: Logging. (line 38) 10153 * l H: Reflog. (line 18) 10154 * l l: Logging. (line 33) 10155 * l L: Logging. (line 53) 10156 * L L: Refreshing Logs. (line 34) 10157 * L L <1>: Log Margin. (line 60) 10158 * L l: Log Margin. (line 63) 10159 * l o: Logging. (line 47) 10160 * l O: Reflog. (line 15) 10161 * l r: Reflog. (line 12) 10162 * L s: Refreshing Logs. (line 21) 10163 * l u: Logging. (line 41) 10164 * L w: Refreshing Logs. (line 27) 10165 * m: Repository List. (line 105) 10166 * m <1>: Merging. (line 10) 10167 * M: Remote Commands. (line 14) 10168 * m a: Merging. (line 42) 10169 * m a <1>: Merging. (line 91) 10170 * M a: Remote Commands. (line 48) 10171 * M C: Remote Commands. (line 32) 10172 * m e: Merging. (line 30) 10173 * m i: Merging. (line 54) 10174 * M k: Remote Commands. (line 60) 10175 * m m: Merging. (line 18) 10176 * m m <1>: Merging. (line 86) 10177 * m n: Merging. (line 36) 10178 * m p: Merging. (line 75) 10179 * M p: Remote Commands. (line 63) 10180 * M P: Remote Commands. (line 67) 10181 * M r: Remote Commands. (line 52) 10182 * m s: Merging. (line 67) 10183 * M u: Remote Commands. (line 56) 10184 * M-1: Section Visibility. (line 45) 10185 * M-2: Section Visibility. (line 45) 10186 * M-3: Section Visibility. (line 45) 10187 * M-4: Section Visibility. (line 45) 10188 * M-<tab>: Section Visibility. (line 29) 10189 * M-n: Section Movement. (line 24) 10190 * M-n <1>: Editing Commit Messages. 10191 (line 41) 10192 * M-n <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10193 (line 40) 10194 * M-p: Section Movement. (line 19) 10195 * M-p <1>: Editing Commit Messages. 10196 (line 36) 10197 * M-p <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10198 (line 37) 10199 * M-w: Blaming. (line 134) 10200 * M-w <1>: Common Commands. (line 39) 10201 * MM: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10202 (line 102) 10203 * Mt: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10204 (line 108) 10205 * n: Section Movement. (line 16) 10206 * n <1>: Blaming. (line 118) 10207 * N: Blaming. (line 121) 10208 * n <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10209 (line 34) 10210 * n <3>: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs. 10211 (line 16) 10212 * o: Submodule Transient. (line 7) 10213 * O: Subtree. (line 9) 10214 * o a: Submodule Transient. (line 20) 10215 * o d: Submodule Transient. (line 45) 10216 * O e: Subtree. (line 37) 10217 * O e p: Subtree. (line 48) 10218 * O e s: Subtree. (line 52) 10219 * o f: Submodule Transient. (line 51) 10220 * O i: Subtree. (line 13) 10221 * O i a: Subtree. (line 24) 10222 * O i c: Subtree. (line 28) 10223 * O i f: Subtree. (line 34) 10224 * O i m: Subtree. (line 31) 10225 * o l: Submodule Transient. (line 48) 10226 * o p: Submodule Transient. (line 32) 10227 * o r: Submodule Transient. (line 26) 10228 * o s: Submodule Transient. (line 40) 10229 * o u: Submodule Transient. (line 36) 10230 * p: Section Movement. (line 11) 10231 * p <1>: Blaming. (line 124) 10232 * P: Blaming. (line 127) 10233 * p <2>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10234 (line 31) 10235 * P <1>: Pushing. (line 10) 10236 * p <3>: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs. 10237 (line 13) 10238 * P C: Branch Commands. (line 31) 10239 * P e: Pushing. (line 29) 10240 * P m: Pushing. (line 45) 10241 * P o: Pushing. (line 33) 10242 * P p: Pushing. (line 15) 10243 * P r: Pushing. (line 37) 10244 * P t: Pushing. (line 52) 10245 * P T: Pushing. (line 59) 10246 * P u: Pushing. (line 22) 10247 * q: Quitting Windows. (line 7) 10248 * q <1>: Log Buffer. (line 14) 10249 * q <2>: Blaming. (line 130) 10250 * q <3>: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs. 10251 (line 19) 10252 * r: Rebasing. (line 10) 10253 * r <1>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10254 (line 43) 10255 * r a: Rebasing. (line 111) 10256 * r e: Rebasing. (line 42) 10257 * r e <1>: Rebasing. (line 107) 10258 * r f: Rebasing. (line 79) 10259 * r i: Rebasing. (line 76) 10260 * r k: Rebasing. (line 91) 10261 * r m: Rebasing. (line 83) 10262 * r p: Rebasing. (line 28) 10263 * r r: Rebasing. (line 97) 10264 * r s: Rebasing. (line 47) 10265 * r s <1>: Rebasing. (line 103) 10266 * r u: Rebasing. (line 35) 10267 * r w: Rebasing. (line 87) 10268 * RET: Repository List. (line 102) 10269 * RET <1>: References Buffer. (line 159) 10270 * RET <2>: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 10271 (line 9) 10272 * RET <3>: Blaming. (line 91) 10273 * RET <4>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10274 (line 15) 10275 * s: Staging and Unstaging. 10276 (line 29) 10277 * S: Staging and Unstaging. 10278 (line 36) 10279 * s <1>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10280 (line 49) 10281 * S-<tab>: Section Visibility. (line 33) 10282 * SPC: Log Buffer. (line 41) 10283 * SPC <1>: Commands Available in Diffs. 10284 (line 53) 10285 * SPC <2>: Blaming. (line 94) 10286 * SPC <3>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10287 (line 19) 10288 * t: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10289 (line 97) 10290 * t <1>: Tagging. (line 9) 10291 * T: Notes. (line 9) 10292 * T a: Notes. (line 47) 10293 * T c: Notes. (line 43) 10294 * t k: Tagging. (line 37) 10295 * T m: Notes. (line 35) 10296 * t p: Tagging. (line 43) 10297 * T p: Notes. (line 28) 10298 * t r: Tagging. (line 18) 10299 * T r: Notes. (line 21) 10300 * t t: Tagging. (line 14) 10301 * T T: Notes. (line 14) 10302 * TAB: Section Visibility. (line 10) 10303 * u: Repository List. (line 108) 10304 * u <1>: Staging and Unstaging. 10305 (line 42) 10306 * U: Staging and Unstaging. 10307 (line 50) 10308 * v: Applying. (line 47) 10309 * V: Reverting. (line 7) 10310 * V a: Reverting. (line 35) 10311 * V s: Reverting. (line 32) 10312 * V V: Reverting. (line 15) 10313 * V v: Reverting. (line 20) 10314 * V V <1>: Reverting. (line 29) 10315 * W: Plain Patches. (line 7) 10316 * w: Maildir Patches. (line 9) 10317 * w a: Plain Patches. (line 20) 10318 * w a <1>: Maildir Patches. (line 23) 10319 * w a <2>: Maildir Patches. (line 38) 10320 * W c: Plain Patches. (line 12) 10321 * w m: Maildir Patches. (line 20) 10322 * W s: Plain Patches. (line 26) 10323 * w s: Maildir Patches. (line 34) 10324 * w w: Maildir Patches. (line 14) 10325 * w w <1>: Maildir Patches. (line 31) 10326 * x: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10327 (line 62) 10328 * x <1>: Resetting. (line 9) 10329 * X f: Resetting. (line 44) 10330 * X h: Resetting. (line 24) 10331 * X i: Resetting. (line 33) 10332 * X k: Resetting. (line 28) 10333 * X m: Resetting. (line 15) 10334 * X s: Resetting. (line 19) 10335 * X w: Resetting. (line 39) 10336 * X w <1>: Wip Modes. (line 64) 10337 * Y: Cherries. (line 18) 10338 * y: References Buffer. (line 7) 10339 * y <1>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10340 (line 74) 10341 * y c: References Buffer. (line 25) 10342 * y o: References Buffer. (line 30) 10343 * y r: References Buffer. (line 34) 10344 * y y: References Buffer. (line 21) 10345 * z: Stashing. (line 9) 10346 * Z: Worktree. (line 9) 10347 * z a: Stashing. (line 52) 10348 * z b: Stashing. (line 105) 10349 * z B: Stashing. (line 110) 10350 * Z b: Worktree. (line 13) 10351 * Z c: Worktree. (line 16) 10352 * z f: Stashing. (line 115) 10353 * Z g: Worktree. (line 26) 10354 * z i: Stashing. (line 20) 10355 * z I: Stashing. (line 42) 10356 * z k: Stashing. (line 98) 10357 * Z k: Worktree. (line 22) 10358 * z l: Stashing. (line 121) 10359 * Z m: Worktree. (line 19) 10360 * z p: Stashing. (line 74) 10361 * z v: Stashing. (line 102) 10362 * z w: Stashing. (line 24) 10363 * z W: Stashing. (line 46) 10364 * z x: Stashing. (line 30) 10365 * z z: Stashing. (line 14) 10366 * z Z: Stashing. (line 36) 10367 10368 10369 File: magit.info, Node: Function and Command Index, Next: Variable Index, Prev: Keystroke Index, Up: Top 10370 10371 Appendix D Function and Command Index 10372 ************************************* 10373 10374 10375 * Menu: 10376 10377 * bug-reference-mode: Commit Mode and Hooks. 10378 (line 48) 10379 * forward-line: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10380 (line 34) 10381 * git-commit-ack: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10382 (line 16) 10383 * git-commit-cc: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10384 (line 28) 10385 * git-commit-check-style-conventions: Commit Message Conventions. 10386 (line 33) 10387 * git-commit-insert-pseudo-header: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10388 (line 13) 10389 * git-commit-next-message: Editing Commit Messages. 10390 (line 41) 10391 * git-commit-prev-message: Editing Commit Messages. 10392 (line 36) 10393 * git-commit-propertize-diff: Commit Mode and Hooks. 10394 (line 40) 10395 * git-commit-reported: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10396 (line 31) 10397 * git-commit-review: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10398 (line 19) 10399 * git-commit-save-message: Editing Commit Messages. 10400 (line 33) 10401 * git-commit-save-message <1>: Commit Mode and Hooks. 10402 (line 26) 10403 * git-commit-setup-changelog-support: Commit Mode and Hooks. 10404 (line 29) 10405 * git-commit-signoff: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10406 (line 22) 10407 * git-commit-suggested: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10408 (line 35) 10409 * git-commit-test: Commit Pseudo Headers. 10410 (line 25) 10411 * git-commit-turn-on-auto-fill: Commit Mode and Hooks. 10412 (line 33) 10413 * git-commit-turn-on-flyspell: Commit Mode and Hooks. 10414 (line 36) 10415 * git-rebase-backward-line: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10416 (line 31) 10417 * git-rebase-break: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10418 (line 70) 10419 * git-rebase-edit: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10420 (line 46) 10421 * git-rebase-exec: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10422 (line 62) 10423 * git-rebase-fixup: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10424 (line 52) 10425 * git-rebase-insert: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10426 (line 74) 10427 * git-rebase-kill-line: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10428 (line 56) 10429 * git-rebase-label: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10430 (line 94) 10431 * git-rebase-merge: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10432 (line 102) 10433 * git-rebase-merge-toggle-editmsg: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10434 (line 108) 10435 * git-rebase-move-line-down: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10436 (line 40) 10437 * git-rebase-move-line-up: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10438 (line 37) 10439 * git-rebase-pick: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10440 (line 59) 10441 * git-rebase-reset: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10442 (line 97) 10443 * git-rebase-reword: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10444 (line 43) 10445 * git-rebase-show-commit: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10446 (line 15) 10447 * git-rebase-show-or-scroll-down: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10448 (line 25) 10449 * git-rebase-show-or-scroll-up: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10450 (line 19) 10451 * git-rebase-squash: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10452 (line 49) 10453 * git-rebase-undo: Editing Rebase Sequences. 10454 (line 77) 10455 * ido-enter-magit-status: Status Buffer. (line 96) 10456 * magit-add-section-hook: Section Hooks. (line 20) 10457 * magit-after-save-refresh-status: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers. 10458 (line 55) 10459 * magit-am: Maildir Patches. (line 9) 10460 * magit-am-abort: Maildir Patches. (line 38) 10461 * magit-am-apply-maildir: Maildir Patches. (line 20) 10462 * magit-am-apply-patches: Maildir Patches. (line 14) 10463 * magit-am-continue: Maildir Patches. (line 31) 10464 * magit-am-skip: Maildir Patches. (line 34) 10465 * magit-apply: Applying. (line 34) 10466 * magit-bisect: Bisecting. (line 9) 10467 * magit-bisect-bad: Bisecting. (line 32) 10468 * magit-bisect-good: Bisecting. (line 36) 10469 * magit-bisect-mark: Bisecting. (line 40) 10470 * magit-bisect-reset: Bisecting. (line 51) 10471 * magit-bisect-run: Bisecting. (line 26) 10472 * magit-bisect-skip: Bisecting. (line 46) 10473 * magit-bisect-start: Bisecting. (line 16) 10474 * magit-blame: Blaming. (line 28) 10475 * magit-blame <1>: Blaming. (line 34) 10476 * magit-blame <2>: Blaming. (line 115) 10477 * magit-blame <3>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10478 (line 52) 10479 * magit-blame <4>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10480 (line 137) 10481 * magit-blame-addition: Blaming. (line 28) 10482 * magit-blame-addition <1>: Blaming. (line 45) 10483 * magit-blame-additions: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10484 (line 52) 10485 * magit-blame-copy-hash: Blaming. (line 134) 10486 * magit-blame-cycle-style: Blaming. (line 141) 10487 * magit-blame-echo: Blaming. (line 28) 10488 * magit-blame-echo <1>: Blaming. (line 76) 10489 * magit-blame-echo <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10490 (line 52) 10491 * magit-blame-next-chunk: Blaming. (line 118) 10492 * magit-blame-next-chunk-same-commit: Blaming. (line 121) 10493 * magit-blame-previous-chunk: Blaming. (line 124) 10494 * magit-blame-previous-chunk-same-commit: Blaming. (line 127) 10495 * magit-blame-quit: Blaming. (line 28) 10496 * magit-blame-quit <1>: Blaming. (line 87) 10497 * magit-blame-quit <2>: Blaming. (line 130) 10498 * magit-blame-quit <3>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10499 (line 52) 10500 * magit-blame-removal: Blaming. (line 28) 10501 * magit-blame-removal <1>: Blaming. (line 60) 10502 * magit-blame-removal <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10503 (line 52) 10504 * magit-blame-reverse: Blaming. (line 28) 10505 * magit-blame-reverse <1>: Blaming. (line 68) 10506 * magit-blame-reverse <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10507 (line 52) 10508 * magit-blob-next: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10509 (line 52) 10510 * magit-blob-next <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10511 (line 153) 10512 * magit-blob-next <2>: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs. 10513 (line 16) 10514 * magit-blob-previous: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10515 (line 52) 10516 * magit-blob-previous <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10517 (line 149) 10518 * magit-blob-previous <2>: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs. 10519 (line 13) 10520 * magit-blob-visit-file: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10521 (line 52) 10522 * magit-blob-visit-file <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10523 (line 160) 10524 * magit-branch: Branch Commands. (line 13) 10525 * magit-branch-and-checkout: Branch Commands. (line 63) 10526 * magit-branch-checkout: Branch Commands. (line 69) 10527 * magit-branch-configure: Branch Commands. (line 31) 10528 * magit-branch-create: Branch Commands. (line 54) 10529 * magit-branch-delete: Branch Commands. (line 138) 10530 * magit-branch-or-checkout: Branch Commands. (line 257) 10531 * magit-branch-orphan: Branch Commands. (line 253) 10532 * magit-branch-rename: Branch Commands. (line 149) 10533 * magit-branch-reset: Branch Commands. (line 123) 10534 * magit-branch-shelve: Auxiliary Branch Commands. 10535 (line 9) 10536 * magit-branch-spinoff: Branch Commands. (line 91) 10537 * magit-branch-spinout: Branch Commands. (line 118) 10538 * magit-branch-unshelve: Auxiliary Branch Commands. 10539 (line 19) 10540 * magit-builtin-completing-read: Support for Completion Frameworks. 10541 (line 41) 10542 * magit-bundle: Bundle. (line 8) 10543 * magit-call-git: Calling Git for Effect. 10544 (line 28) 10545 * magit-call-process: Calling Git for Effect. 10546 (line 31) 10547 * magit-cancel-section: Creating Sections. (line 69) 10548 * magit-checkout: Branch Commands. (line 47) 10549 * magit-cherry: Cherries. (line 18) 10550 * magit-cherry-apply: Cherry Picking. (line 23) 10551 * magit-cherry-copy: Cherry Picking. (line 17) 10552 * magit-cherry-donate: Cherry Picking. (line 51) 10553 * magit-cherry-harvest: Cherry Picking. (line 40) 10554 * magit-cherry-pick: Cherry Picking. (line 9) 10555 * magit-cherry-spinoff: Cherry Picking. (line 72) 10556 * magit-cherry-spinout: Cherry Picking. (line 62) 10557 * magit-clone: Cloning Repository. (line 20) 10558 * magit-clone-bare: Cloning Repository. (line 44) 10559 * magit-clone-mirror: Cloning Repository. (line 48) 10560 * magit-clone-regular: Cloning Repository. (line 28) 10561 * magit-clone-shallow: Cloning Repository. (line 32) 10562 * magit-clone-shallow-exclude: Cloning Repository. (line 61) 10563 * magit-clone-shallow-since: Cloning Repository. (line 55) 10564 * magit-clone-sparse: Cloning Repository. (line 38) 10565 * magit-commit: Initiating a Commit. (line 9) 10566 * magit-commit <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10567 (line 52) 10568 * magit-commit <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10569 (line 176) 10570 * magit-commit-amend: Initiating a Commit. (line 18) 10571 * magit-commit-augment: Initiating a Commit. (line 59) 10572 * magit-commit-create: Initiating a Commit. (line 14) 10573 * magit-commit-extend: Initiating a Commit. (line 21) 10574 * magit-commit-fixup: Initiating a Commit. (line 39) 10575 * magit-commit-instant-fixup: Initiating a Commit. (line 46) 10576 * magit-commit-instant-squash: Initiating a Commit. (line 56) 10577 * magit-commit-reword: Initiating a Commit. (line 30) 10578 * magit-commit-squash: Initiating a Commit. (line 49) 10579 * magit-completing-read: Support for Completion Frameworks. 10580 (line 57) 10581 * magit-copy-buffer-revision: Common Commands. (line 39) 10582 * magit-copy-section-value: Common Commands. (line 22) 10583 * magit-current-section: Section Selection. (line 6) 10584 * magit-cycle-margin-style: Log Margin. (line 63) 10585 * magit-debug-git-executable: Git Executable. (line 55) 10586 * magit-debug-git-executable <1>: Debugging Tools. (line 57) 10587 * magit-define-section-jumper: Creating Sections. (line 74) 10588 * magit-describe-section: Section Types and Values. 10589 (line 14) 10590 * magit-describe-section-briefly: Section Types and Values. 10591 (line 17) 10592 * magit-describe-section-briefly <1>: Matching Sections. (line 7) 10593 * magit-diff: Diffing. (line 22) 10594 * magit-diff <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10595 (line 52) 10596 * magit-diff <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10597 (line 91) 10598 * magit-diff-buffer-file: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10599 (line 52) 10600 * magit-diff-buffer-file <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10601 (line 101) 10602 * magit-diff-default-context: Refreshing Diffs. (line 68) 10603 * magit-diff-dwim: Diffing. (line 27) 10604 * magit-diff-edit-hunk-commit: Commands Available in Diffs. 10605 (line 24) 10606 * magit-diff-flip-revs: Refreshing Diffs. (line 45) 10607 * magit-diff-less-context: Refreshing Diffs. (line 62) 10608 * magit-diff-more-context: Refreshing Diffs. (line 65) 10609 * magit-diff-paths: Diffing. (line 56) 10610 * magit-diff-range: Diffing. (line 30) 10611 * magit-diff-refresh: Refreshing Diffs. (line 16) 10612 * magit-diff-refresh <1>: Refreshing Diffs. (line 21) 10613 * magit-diff-save-default-arguments: Refreshing Diffs. (line 31) 10614 * magit-diff-scope: Matching Sections. (line 110) 10615 * magit-diff-set-default-arguments: Refreshing Diffs. (line 25) 10616 * magit-diff-show-or-scroll-down: Log Buffer. (line 50) 10617 * magit-diff-show-or-scroll-down <1>: Blaming. (line 103) 10618 * magit-diff-show-or-scroll-up: Log Buffer. (line 41) 10619 * magit-diff-show-or-scroll-up <1>: Blaming. (line 94) 10620 * magit-diff-staged: Diffing. (line 48) 10621 * magit-diff-switch-range-type: Refreshing Diffs. (line 41) 10622 * magit-diff-toggle-file-filter: Refreshing Diffs. (line 49) 10623 * magit-diff-toggle-refine-hunk: Refreshing Diffs. (line 38) 10624 * magit-diff-trace-definition: Commands Available in Diffs. 10625 (line 15) 10626 * magit-diff-type: Matching Sections. (line 88) 10627 * magit-diff-unstaged: Diffing. (line 53) 10628 * magit-diff-visit-file: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 10629 (line 9) 10630 * magit-diff-visit-file-other-frame: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 10631 (line 71) 10632 * magit-diff-visit-file-other-window: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 10633 (line 70) 10634 * magit-diff-visit-file-worktree: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 10635 (line 50) 10636 * magit-diff-visit-worktree-file-other-frame: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 10637 (line 73) 10638 * magit-diff-visit-worktree-file-other-window: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 10639 (line 72) 10640 * magit-diff-while-committing: Refreshing Diffs. (line 75) 10641 * magit-diff-while-committing <1>: Editing Commit Messages. 10642 (line 54) 10643 * magit-diff-working-tree: Diffing. (line 43) 10644 * magit-disable-section-inserter: Per-Repository Configuration. 10645 (line 31) 10646 * magit-discard: Applying. (line 40) 10647 * magit-dispatch: Transient Commands. (line 20) 10648 * magit-display-buffer: Switching Buffers. (line 6) 10649 * magit-display-buffer-fullcolumn-most-v1: Switching Buffers. (line 68) 10650 * magit-display-buffer-fullframe-status-topleft-v1: Switching Buffers. 10651 (line 59) 10652 * magit-display-buffer-fullframe-status-v1: Switching Buffers. 10653 (line 54) 10654 * magit-display-buffer-same-window-except-diff-v1: Switching Buffers. 10655 (line 49) 10656 * magit-display-buffer-traditional: Switching Buffers. (line 42) 10657 * magit-display-repository-buffer: Common Commands. (line 9) 10658 * magit-display-repository-buffer <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10659 (line 52) 10660 * magit-display-repository-buffer <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10661 (line 172) 10662 * magit-ediff: Ediffing. (line 21) 10663 * magit-ediff-compare: Ediffing. (line 25) 10664 * magit-ediff-dwim: Ediffing. (line 10) 10665 * magit-ediff-resolve-all: Ediffing. (line 48) 10666 * magit-ediff-resolve-rest: Ediffing. (line 33) 10667 * magit-ediff-show-commit: Ediffing. (line 100) 10668 * magit-ediff-show-staged: Ediffing. (line 94) 10669 * magit-ediff-show-stash: Ediffing. (line 103) 10670 * magit-ediff-show-unstaged: Ediffing. (line 91) 10671 * magit-ediff-show-working-tree: Ediffing. (line 97) 10672 * magit-ediff-stage: Ediffing. (line 87) 10673 * magit-edit-line-commit: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10674 (line 52) 10675 * magit-edit-line-commit <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10676 (line 182) 10677 * magit-emacs-Q-command: Debugging Tools. (line 16) 10678 * magit-fetch: Fetching. (line 10) 10679 * magit-fetch-all: Fetching. (line 45) 10680 * magit-fetch-branch: Fetching. (line 37) 10681 * magit-fetch-from-pushremote: Fetching. (line 15) 10682 * magit-fetch-from-upstream: Fetching. (line 22) 10683 * magit-fetch-modules: Fetching. (line 48) 10684 * magit-fetch-modules <1>: Submodule Transient. (line 51) 10685 * magit-fetch-other: Fetching. (line 34) 10686 * magit-fetch-refspec: Fetching. (line 41) 10687 * magit-file-checkout: Resetting. (line 44) 10688 * magit-file-checkout <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10689 (line 52) 10690 * magit-file-checkout <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10691 (line 86) 10692 * magit-file-delete: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10693 (line 52) 10694 * magit-file-delete <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10695 (line 82) 10696 * magit-file-dispatch: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10697 (line 52) 10698 * magit-file-dispatch <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10699 (line 58) 10700 * magit-file-rename: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10701 (line 52) 10702 * magit-file-rename <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10703 (line 78) 10704 * magit-file-untrack: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10705 (line 52) 10706 * magit-file-untrack <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10707 (line 74) 10708 * magit-find-file: General-Purpose Visit Commands. 10709 (line 9) 10710 * magit-find-file <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10711 (line 52) 10712 * magit-find-file <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10713 (line 156) 10714 * magit-find-file-other-frame: General-Purpose Visit Commands. 10715 (line 19) 10716 * magit-find-file-other-window: General-Purpose Visit Commands. 10717 (line 14) 10718 * magit-generate-buffer-name-default-function: Naming Buffers. 10719 (line 16) 10720 * magit-get-section: Matching Sections. (line 14) 10721 * magit-git: Calling Git for Effect. 10722 (line 46) 10723 * magit-git-command: Running Git Manually. 10724 (line 25) 10725 * magit-git-command-topdir: Running Git Manually. 10726 (line 17) 10727 * magit-git-exit-code: Getting a Value from Git. 10728 (line 10) 10729 * magit-git-failure: Getting a Value from Git. 10730 (line 17) 10731 * magit-git-false: Getting a Value from Git. 10732 (line 25) 10733 * magit-git-insert: Getting a Value from Git. 10734 (line 29) 10735 * magit-git-items: Getting a Value from Git. 10736 (line 41) 10737 * magit-git-lines: Getting a Value from Git. 10738 (line 37) 10739 * magit-git-mergetool: Running Git Manually. 10740 (line 62) 10741 * magit-git-mergetool <1>: Ediffing. (line 79) 10742 * magit-git-str: Getting a Value from Git. 10743 (line 75) 10744 * magit-git-string: Getting a Value from Git. 10745 (line 32) 10746 * magit-git-success: Getting a Value from Git. 10747 (line 13) 10748 * magit-git-true: Getting a Value from Git. 10749 (line 21) 10750 * magit-git-wash: Calling Git for Effect. 10751 (line 50) 10752 * magit-go-backward: Log Buffer. (line 20) 10753 * magit-go-backward <1>: Refreshing Diffs. (line 84) 10754 * magit-go-forward: Log Buffer. (line 23) 10755 * magit-go-forward <1>: Refreshing Diffs. (line 87) 10756 * magit-hunk-set-window-start: Section Movement. (line 45) 10757 * magit-ido-completing-read: Support for Completion Frameworks. 10758 (line 46) 10759 * magit-init: Creating Repository. (line 7) 10760 * magit-insert-am-sequence: Status Sections. (line 25) 10761 * magit-insert-assumed-unchanged-files: Status Sections. (line 98) 10762 * magit-insert-bisect-log: Status Sections. (line 39) 10763 * magit-insert-bisect-output: Status Sections. (line 33) 10764 * magit-insert-bisect-rest: Status Sections. (line 36) 10765 * magit-insert-diff-filter-header: Status Header Sections. 10766 (line 35) 10767 * magit-insert-error-header: Status Header Sections. 10768 (line 26) 10769 * magit-insert-head-branch-header: Status Header Sections. 10770 (line 38) 10771 * magit-insert-heading: Creating Sections. (line 41) 10772 * magit-insert-ignored-files: Status Sections. (line 83) 10773 * magit-insert-local-branches: References Sections. (line 16) 10774 * magit-insert-merge-log: Status Sections. (line 17) 10775 * magit-insert-modules: Status Module Sections. 10776 (line 12) 10777 * magit-insert-modules-overview: Status Module Sections. 10778 (line 30) 10779 * magit-insert-modules-unpulled-from-pushremote: Status Module Sections. 10780 (line 45) 10781 * magit-insert-modules-unpulled-from-upstream: Status Module Sections. 10782 (line 40) 10783 * magit-insert-modules-unpushed-to-pushremote: Status Module Sections. 10784 (line 55) 10785 * magit-insert-modules-unpushed-to-upstream: Status Module Sections. 10786 (line 50) 10787 * magit-insert-push-branch-header: Status Header Sections. 10788 (line 45) 10789 * magit-insert-rebase-sequence: Status Sections. (line 21) 10790 * magit-insert-recent-commits: Status Sections. (line 110) 10791 * magit-insert-remote-branches: References Sections. (line 19) 10792 * magit-insert-remote-header: Status Header Sections. 10793 (line 58) 10794 * magit-insert-repo-header: Status Header Sections. 10795 (line 55) 10796 * magit-insert-section: Creating Sections. (line 6) 10797 * magit-insert-sequencer-sequence: Status Sections. (line 29) 10798 * magit-insert-skip-worktree-files: Status Sections. (line 92) 10799 * magit-insert-staged-changes: Status Sections. (line 53) 10800 * magit-insert-stashes: Status Sections. (line 56) 10801 * magit-insert-status-headers: Status Header Sections. 10802 (line 12) 10803 * magit-insert-tags: References Sections. (line 22) 10804 * magit-insert-tags-header: Status Header Sections. 10805 (line 49) 10806 * magit-insert-tracked-files: Status Sections. (line 80) 10807 * magit-insert-unpulled-cherries: Status Sections. (line 119) 10808 * magit-insert-unpulled-from-pushremote: Status Sections. (line 66) 10809 * magit-insert-unpulled-from-upstream: Status Sections. (line 62) 10810 * magit-insert-unpulled-or-recent-commits: Status Sections. (line 104) 10811 * magit-insert-unpushed-cherries: Status Sections. (line 125) 10812 * magit-insert-unpushed-to-pushremote: Status Sections. (line 74) 10813 * magit-insert-unpushed-to-upstream: Status Sections. (line 70) 10814 * magit-insert-unstaged-changes: Status Sections. (line 50) 10815 * magit-insert-untracked-files: Status Sections. (line 42) 10816 * magit-insert-upstream-branch-header: Status Header Sections. 10817 (line 41) 10818 * magit-insert-user-header: Status Header Sections. 10819 (line 65) 10820 * magit-jump-to-diffstat-or-diff: Commands Available in Diffs. 10821 (line 43) 10822 * magit-kill-this-buffer: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs. 10823 (line 19) 10824 * magit-list-repositories: Repository List. (line 6) 10825 * magit-list-submodules: Listing Submodules. (line 13) 10826 * magit-list-submodules <1>: Submodule Transient. (line 48) 10827 * magit-log: Logging. (line 28) 10828 * magit-log <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10829 (line 52) 10830 * magit-log <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10831 (line 109) 10832 * magit-log-all: Logging. (line 59) 10833 * magit-log-all-branches: Logging. (line 56) 10834 * magit-log-branches: Logging. (line 53) 10835 * magit-log-buffer-file: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10836 (line 52) 10837 * magit-log-buffer-file <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10838 (line 119) 10839 * magit-log-bury-buffer: Log Buffer. (line 14) 10840 * magit-log-current: Logging. (line 33) 10841 * magit-log-double-commit-limit: Log Buffer. (line 64) 10842 * magit-log-half-commit-limit: Log Buffer. (line 67) 10843 * magit-log-head: Logging. (line 38) 10844 * magit-log-maybe-show-more-commits: Section Movement. (line 58) 10845 * magit-log-maybe-update-blob-buffer: Section Movement. (line 72) 10846 * magit-log-maybe-update-revision-buffer: Section Movement. (line 65) 10847 * magit-log-merged: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10848 (line 52) 10849 * magit-log-merged <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10850 (line 132) 10851 * magit-log-move-to-parent: Log Buffer. (line 26) 10852 * magit-log-move-to-revision: Log Buffer. (line 31) 10853 * magit-log-other: Logging. (line 47) 10854 * magit-log-refresh: Refreshing Logs. (line 12) 10855 * magit-log-refresh <1>: Refreshing Logs. (line 17) 10856 * magit-log-refresh <2>: Log Buffer. (line 7) 10857 * magit-log-related: Logging. (line 41) 10858 * magit-log-save-default-arguments: Refreshing Logs. (line 27) 10859 * magit-log-select-pick: Select from Log. (line 21) 10860 * magit-log-select-quit: Select from Log. (line 26) 10861 * magit-log-set-default-arguments: Refreshing Logs. (line 21) 10862 * magit-log-toggle-commit-limit: Log Buffer. (line 59) 10863 * magit-log-trace-definition: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10864 (line 52) 10865 * magit-log-trace-definition <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 10866 (line 129) 10867 * magit-margin-settings: Log Margin. (line 52) 10868 * magit-maybe-set-dedicated: Switching Buffers. (line 89) 10869 * magit-merge: Merging. (line 10) 10870 * magit-merge <1>: Merging. (line 86) 10871 * magit-merge-abort: Merging. (line 91) 10872 * magit-merge-absorb: Merging. (line 42) 10873 * magit-merge-editmsg: Merging. (line 30) 10874 * magit-merge-into: Merging. (line 54) 10875 * magit-merge-nocommit: Merging. (line 36) 10876 * magit-merge-plain: Merging. (line 18) 10877 * magit-merge-preview: Merging. (line 75) 10878 * magit-merge-squash: Merging. (line 67) 10879 * magit-mode-bury-buffer: Quitting Windows. (line 7) 10880 * magit-mode-display-buffer: Refreshing Buffers. (line 32) 10881 * magit-mode-quit-window: Quitting Windows. (line 34) 10882 * magit-mode-setup: Refreshing Buffers. (line 17) 10883 * magit-notes: Notes. (line 9) 10884 * magit-notes-edit: Notes. (line 14) 10885 * magit-notes-merge: Notes. (line 35) 10886 * magit-notes-merge-abort: Notes. (line 47) 10887 * magit-notes-merge-commit: Notes. (line 43) 10888 * magit-notes-prune: Notes. (line 28) 10889 * magit-notes-remove: Notes. (line 21) 10890 * magit-patch: Plain Patches. (line 7) 10891 * magit-patch-apply: Plain Patches. (line 20) 10892 * magit-patch-apply <1>: Maildir Patches. (line 23) 10893 * magit-patch-create: Plain Patches. (line 12) 10894 * magit-patch-save: Plain Patches. (line 26) 10895 * magit-pop-revision-stack: Using the Revision Stack. 10896 (line 7) 10897 * magit-process: Viewing Git Output. (line 17) 10898 * magit-process-file: Getting a Value from Git. 10899 (line 57) 10900 * magit-process-git: Getting a Value from Git. 10901 (line 50) 10902 * magit-process-kill: Viewing Git Output. (line 24) 10903 * magit-pull: Pulling. (line 10) 10904 * magit-pull-branch: Pulling. (line 28) 10905 * magit-pull-from-pushremote: Pulling. (line 14) 10906 * magit-pull-from-upstream: Pulling. (line 21) 10907 * magit-push: Pushing. (line 10) 10908 * magit-push-current: Pushing. (line 29) 10909 * magit-push-current-to-pushremote: Pushing. (line 15) 10910 * magit-push-current-to-upstream: Pushing. (line 22) 10911 * magit-push-implicitly: Pushing. (line 74) 10912 * magit-push-matching: Pushing. (line 45) 10913 * magit-push-other: Pushing. (line 33) 10914 * magit-push-refspecs: Pushing. (line 37) 10915 * magit-push-tag: Pushing. (line 59) 10916 * magit-push-tags: Pushing. (line 52) 10917 * magit-push-to-remote: Pushing. (line 91) 10918 * magit-rebase: Rebasing. (line 10) 10919 * magit-rebase-abort: Rebasing. (line 111) 10920 * magit-rebase-autosquash: Rebasing. (line 79) 10921 * magit-rebase-branch: Rebasing. (line 42) 10922 * magit-rebase-continue: Rebasing. (line 97) 10923 * magit-rebase-edit: Rebasing. (line 107) 10924 * magit-rebase-edit-commit: Rebasing. (line 83) 10925 * magit-rebase-interactive: Rebasing. (line 76) 10926 * magit-rebase-onto-pushremote: Rebasing. (line 28) 10927 * magit-rebase-onto-upstream: Rebasing. (line 35) 10928 * magit-rebase-remove-commit: Rebasing. (line 91) 10929 * magit-rebase-reword-commit: Rebasing. (line 87) 10930 * magit-rebase-skip: Rebasing. (line 103) 10931 * magit-rebase-subset: Rebasing. (line 47) 10932 * magit-reflog-current: Reflog. (line 12) 10933 * magit-reflog-head: Reflog. (line 18) 10934 * magit-reflog-other: Reflog. (line 15) 10935 * magit-refresh: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers. 10936 (line 26) 10937 * magit-refresh-all: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers. 10938 (line 34) 10939 * magit-refs-set-show-commit-count: References Buffer. (line 34) 10940 * magit-region-sections: Section Selection. (line 9) 10941 * magit-region-values: Section Selection. (line 35) 10942 * magit-remote: Remote Commands. (line 14) 10943 * magit-remote-add: Remote Commands. (line 48) 10944 * magit-remote-configure: Remote Commands. (line 32) 10945 * magit-remote-prune: Remote Commands. (line 63) 10946 * magit-remote-prune-refspecs: Remote Commands. (line 67) 10947 * magit-remote-remove: Remote Commands. (line 60) 10948 * magit-remote-rename: Remote Commands. (line 52) 10949 * magit-remote-set-url: Remote Commands. (line 56) 10950 * magit-repolist-column-branch: Repository List. (line 51) 10951 * magit-repolist-column-branches: Repository List. (line 58) 10952 * magit-repolist-column-flag: Repository List. (line 64) 10953 * magit-repolist-column-flags: Repository List. (line 76) 10954 * magit-repolist-column-ident: Repository List. (line 40) 10955 * magit-repolist-column-path: Repository List. (line 44) 10956 * magit-repolist-column-stashes: Repository List. (line 61) 10957 * magit-repolist-column-unpulled-from-pushremote: Repository List. 10958 (line 87) 10959 * magit-repolist-column-unpulled-from-upstream: Repository List. 10960 (line 83) 10961 * magit-repolist-column-unpushed-to-pushremote: Repository List. 10962 (line 95) 10963 * magit-repolist-column-unpushed-to-upstream: Repository List. 10964 (line 91) 10965 * magit-repolist-column-upstream: Repository List. (line 54) 10966 * magit-repolist-column-version: Repository List. (line 47) 10967 * magit-repolist-fetch: Repository List. (line 111) 10968 * magit-repolist-find-file-other-frame: Repository List. (line 115) 10969 * magit-repolist-mark: Repository List. (line 105) 10970 * magit-repolist-status: Repository List. (line 102) 10971 * magit-repolist-unmark: Repository List. (line 108) 10972 * magit-reset-hard: Resetting. (line 24) 10973 * magit-reset-index: Staging and Unstaging. 10974 (line 78) 10975 * magit-reset-index <1>: Resetting. (line 33) 10976 * magit-reset-keep: Resetting. (line 28) 10977 * magit-reset-mixed: Resetting. (line 15) 10978 * magit-reset-quickly: Resetting. (line 9) 10979 * magit-reset-soft: Resetting. (line 19) 10980 * magit-reset-worktree: Resetting. (line 39) 10981 * magit-reset-worktree <1>: Wip Modes. (line 64) 10982 * magit-restore-window-configuration: Quitting Windows. (line 24) 10983 * magit-reverse: Applying. (line 47) 10984 * magit-reverse-in-index: Staging and Unstaging. 10985 (line 58) 10986 * magit-revert: Reverting. (line 7) 10987 * magit-revert-and-commit: Reverting. (line 15) 10988 * magit-revert-no-commit: Reverting. (line 20) 10989 * magit-run: Running Git Manually. 10990 (line 13) 10991 * magit-run-git: Calling Git for Effect. 10992 (line 34) 10993 * magit-run-git-async: Calling Git for Effect. 10994 (line 59) 10995 * magit-run-git-gui: Running Git Manually. 10996 (line 59) 10997 * magit-run-git-with-editor: Calling Git for Effect. 10998 (line 71) 10999 * magit-run-git-with-input: Calling Git for Effect. 11000 (line 37) 11001 * magit-run-gitk: Running Git Manually. 11002 (line 50) 11003 * magit-run-gitk-all: Running Git Manually. 11004 (line 53) 11005 * magit-run-gitk-branches: Running Git Manually. 11006 (line 56) 11007 * magit-save-window-configuration: Switching Buffers. (line 80) 11008 * magit-section-backward: Section Movement. (line 11) 11009 * magit-section-backward-siblings: Section Movement. (line 19) 11010 * magit-section-case: Matching Sections. (line 66) 11011 * magit-section-cycle: Section Visibility. (line 14) 11012 * magit-section-cycle-diffs: Section Visibility. (line 29) 11013 * magit-section-cycle-global: Section Visibility. (line 33) 11014 * magit-section-forward: Section Movement. (line 16) 11015 * magit-section-forward-siblings: Section Movement. (line 24) 11016 * magit-section-hide: Section Visibility. (line 55) 11017 * magit-section-hide-children: Section Visibility. (line 67) 11018 * magit-section-ident: Matching Sections. (line 10) 11019 * magit-section-match: Matching Sections. (line 18) 11020 * magit-section-set-window-start: Section Movement. (line 52) 11021 * magit-section-show: Section Visibility. (line 52) 11022 * magit-section-show-children: Section Visibility. (line 62) 11023 * magit-section-show-headings: Section Visibility. (line 58) 11024 * magit-section-show-level-1: Section Visibility. (line 39) 11025 * magit-section-show-level-1-all: Section Visibility. (line 45) 11026 * magit-section-show-level-2: Section Visibility. (line 39) 11027 * magit-section-show-level-2-all: Section Visibility. (line 45) 11028 * magit-section-show-level-3: Section Visibility. (line 39) 11029 * magit-section-show-level-3-all: Section Visibility. (line 45) 11030 * magit-section-show-level-4: Section Visibility. (line 39) 11031 * magit-section-show-level-4-all: Section Visibility. (line 45) 11032 * magit-section-toggle: Section Visibility. (line 10) 11033 * magit-section-toggle-children: Section Visibility. (line 70) 11034 * magit-section-up: Section Movement. (line 28) 11035 * magit-section-value-if: Matching Sections. (line 57) 11036 * magit-sequence-abort: Cherry Picking. (line 91) 11037 * magit-sequence-abort <1>: Reverting. (line 35) 11038 * magit-sequence-continue: Cherry Picking. (line 85) 11039 * magit-sequence-continue <1>: Reverting. (line 29) 11040 * magit-sequence-skip: Cherry Picking. (line 88) 11041 * magit-sequence-skip <1>: Reverting. (line 32) 11042 * magit-shell-command: Running Git Manually. 11043 (line 38) 11044 * magit-shell-command-topdir: Running Git Manually. 11045 (line 34) 11046 * magit-show-commit: Diffing. (line 63) 11047 * magit-show-commit <1>: Blaming. (line 91) 11048 * magit-show-refs: References Buffer. (line 7) 11049 * magit-show-refs-current: References Buffer. (line 25) 11050 * magit-show-refs-head: References Buffer. (line 21) 11051 * magit-show-refs-other: References Buffer. (line 30) 11052 * magit-snapshot-both: Stashing. (line 36) 11053 * magit-snapshot-index: Stashing. (line 42) 11054 * magit-snapshot-worktree: Stashing. (line 46) 11055 * magit-sparse-checkout: Sparse checkouts. (line 17) 11056 * magit-sparse-checkout-add: Sparse checkouts. (line 39) 11057 * magit-sparse-checkout-disable: Sparse checkouts. (line 50) 11058 * magit-sparse-checkout-enable: Sparse checkouts. (line 21) 11059 * magit-sparse-checkout-reapply: Sparse checkouts. (line 44) 11060 * magit-sparse-checkout-set: Sparse checkouts. (line 33) 11061 * magit-stage: Staging and Unstaging. 11062 (line 29) 11063 * magit-stage-buffer-file: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11064 (line 52) 11065 * magit-stage-buffer-file <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11066 (line 63) 11067 * magit-stage-file: Staging from File-Visiting Buffers. 11068 (line 11) 11069 * magit-stage-file <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11070 (line 52) 11071 * magit-stage-file <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11072 (line 63) 11073 * magit-stage-modified: Staging and Unstaging. 11074 (line 36) 11075 * magit-start-git: Calling Git for Effect. 11076 (line 82) 11077 * magit-start-process: Calling Git for Effect. 11078 (line 100) 11079 * magit-stash: Stashing. (line 9) 11080 * magit-stash-apply: Stashing. (line 52) 11081 * magit-stash-both: Stashing. (line 14) 11082 * magit-stash-branch: Stashing. (line 105) 11083 * magit-stash-branch-here: Stashing. (line 110) 11084 * magit-stash-clear: Stashing. (line 118) 11085 * magit-stash-drop: Stashing. (line 98) 11086 * magit-stash-format-patch: Stashing. (line 115) 11087 * magit-stash-index: Stashing. (line 20) 11088 * magit-stash-keep-index: Stashing. (line 30) 11089 * magit-stash-list: Stashing. (line 121) 11090 * magit-stash-pop: Stashing. (line 74) 11091 * magit-stash-show: Diffing. (line 67) 11092 * magit-stash-show <1>: Stashing. (line 102) 11093 * magit-stash-worktree: Stashing. (line 24) 11094 * magit-stashes-maybe-update-stash-buffer: Section Movement. (line 92) 11095 * magit-status: Status Buffer. (line 23) 11096 * magit-status-here: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11097 (line 52) 11098 * magit-status-here <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11099 (line 166) 11100 * magit-status-maybe-update-blob-buffer: Section Movement. (line 87) 11101 * magit-status-maybe-update-revision-buffer: Section Movement. 11102 (line 77) 11103 * magit-status-maybe-update-stash-buffer: Section Movement. (line 82) 11104 * magit-status-quick: Status Buffer. (line 70) 11105 * magit-submodule: Submodule Transient. (line 7) 11106 * magit-submodule-add: Submodule Transient. (line 20) 11107 * magit-submodule-populate: Submodule Transient. (line 32) 11108 * magit-submodule-register: Submodule Transient. (line 26) 11109 * magit-submodule-synchronize: Submodule Transient. (line 40) 11110 * magit-submodule-unpopulate: Submodule Transient. (line 45) 11111 * magit-submodule-update: Submodule Transient. (line 36) 11112 * magit-subtree: Subtree. (line 9) 11113 * magit-subtree-add: Subtree. (line 24) 11114 * magit-subtree-add-commit: Subtree. (line 28) 11115 * magit-subtree-export: Subtree. (line 37) 11116 * magit-subtree-import: Subtree. (line 13) 11117 * magit-subtree-merge: Subtree. (line 31) 11118 * magit-subtree-pull: Subtree. (line 34) 11119 * magit-subtree-push: Subtree. (line 48) 11120 * magit-subtree-split: Subtree. (line 52) 11121 * magit-switch-to-repository-buffer: Common Commands. (line 6) 11122 * magit-switch-to-repository-buffer-other-frame: Common Commands. 11123 (line 8) 11124 * magit-switch-to-repository-buffer-other-window: Common Commands. 11125 (line 7) 11126 * magit-tag: Tagging. (line 9) 11127 * magit-tag-create: Tagging. (line 14) 11128 * magit-tag-delete: Tagging. (line 37) 11129 * magit-tag-prune: Tagging. (line 43) 11130 * magit-tag-release: Tagging. (line 18) 11131 * magit-toggle-buffer-lock: Modes and Buffers. (line 18) 11132 * magit-toggle-git-debug: Debugging Tools. (line 29) 11133 * magit-toggle-margin: Refreshing Logs. (line 34) 11134 * magit-toggle-margin <1>: Log Margin. (line 60) 11135 * magit-toggle-margin-details: Log Margin. (line 66) 11136 * magit-toggle-verbose-refresh: Debugging Tools. (line 52) 11137 * magit-unstage: Staging and Unstaging. 11138 (line 42) 11139 * magit-unstage-all: Staging and Unstaging. 11140 (line 50) 11141 * magit-unstage-buffer-file: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11142 (line 52) 11143 * magit-unstage-buffer-file <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11144 (line 69) 11145 * magit-unstage-file: Staging from File-Visiting Buffers. 11146 (line 18) 11147 * magit-unstage-file <1>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11148 (line 52) 11149 * magit-unstage-file <2>: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11150 (line 69) 11151 * magit-version: Git Executable. (line 59) 11152 * magit-version <1>: Debugging Tools. (line 11) 11153 * magit-visit-ref: References Buffer. (line 159) 11154 * magit-wip-commit: Wip Modes. (line 85) 11155 * magit-wip-log: Wip Modes. (line 47) 11156 * magit-wip-log-current: Wip Modes. (line 55) 11157 * magit-worktree: Worktree. (line 9) 11158 * magit-worktree-branch: Worktree. (line 16) 11159 * magit-worktree-checkout: Worktree. (line 13) 11160 * magit-worktree-delete: Worktree. (line 22) 11161 * magit-worktree-move: Worktree. (line 19) 11162 * magit-worktree-status: Worktree. (line 26) 11163 * scroll-down: Commands Available in Diffs. 11164 (line 56) 11165 * scroll-up: Commands Available in Diffs. 11166 (line 53) 11167 * with-editor-cancel: Editing Commit Messages. 11168 (line 22) 11169 * with-editor-cancel <1>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 11170 (line 11) 11171 * with-editor-debug: Debugging Tools. (line 64) 11172 * with-editor-finish: Editing Commit Messages. 11173 (line 18) 11174 * with-editor-finish <1>: Editing Rebase Sequences. 11175 (line 7) 11176 * with-editor-usage-message: Commit Mode and Hooks. 11177 (line 51) 11178 11179 11180 File: magit.info, Node: Variable Index, Prev: Function and Command Index, Up: Top 11181 11182 Appendix E Variable Index 11183 ************************* 11184 11185 11186 * Menu: 11187 11188 * auto-revert-buffer-list-filter: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11189 (line 73) 11190 * auto-revert-interval: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11191 (line 69) 11192 * auto-revert-mode: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11193 (line 57) 11194 * auto-revert-stop-on-user-input: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11195 (line 65) 11196 * auto-revert-use-notify: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11197 (line 46) 11198 * auto-revert-verbose: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11199 (line 94) 11200 * branch.autoSetupMerge: Branch Git Variables. 11201 (line 71) 11202 * branch.autoSetupRebase: Branch Git Variables. 11203 (line 85) 11204 * branch.NAME.description: Branch Git Variables. 11205 (line 42) 11206 * branch.NAME.merge: Branch Git Variables. 11207 (line 10) 11208 * branch.NAME.pushRemote: Branch Git Variables. 11209 (line 29) 11210 * branch.NAME.rebase: Branch Git Variables. 11211 (line 20) 11212 * branch.NAME.remote: Branch Git Variables. 11213 (line 15) 11214 * core.notesRef: Notes. (line 53) 11215 * git-commit-finish-query-functions: Commit Message Conventions. 11216 (line 18) 11217 * git-commit-known-pseudo-headers: Commit Pseudo Headers. 11218 (line 9) 11219 * git-commit-major-mode: Commit Mode and Hooks. 11220 (line 12) 11221 * git-commit-post-finish-hook: Commit Mode and Hooks. 11222 (line 54) 11223 * git-commit-setup-hook: Commit Mode and Hooks. 11224 (line 21) 11225 * git-commit-style-convention-checks: Commit Message Conventions. 11226 (line 38) 11227 * git-commit-summary-max-length: Commit Message Conventions. 11228 (line 13) 11229 * git-rebase-auto-advance: Editing Rebase Sequences. 11230 (line 80) 11231 * git-rebase-confirm-cancel: Editing Rebase Sequences. 11232 (line 86) 11233 * git-rebase-show-instructions: Editing Rebase Sequences. 11234 (line 83) 11235 * global-auto-revert-mode: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11236 (line 21) 11237 * magit-auto-revert-immediately: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11238 (line 30) 11239 * magit-auto-revert-mode: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11240 (line 17) 11241 * magit-auto-revert-tracked-only: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers. 11242 (line 51) 11243 * magit-bisect-show-graph: Bisecting. (line 57) 11244 * magit-blame-disable-modes: Blaming. (line 165) 11245 * magit-blame-echo-style: Blaming. (line 151) 11246 * magit-blame-goto-chunk-hook: Blaming. (line 170) 11247 * magit-blame-read-only: Blaming. (line 161) 11248 * magit-blame-styles: Blaming. (line 147) 11249 * magit-blame-time-format: Blaming. (line 157) 11250 * magit-branch-adjust-remote-upstream-alist: Branch Commands. (line 202) 11251 * magit-branch-direct-configure: Branch Commands. (line 19) 11252 * magit-branch-prefer-remote-upstream: Branch Commands. (line 158) 11253 * magit-branch-read-upstream-first: Branch Commands. (line 153) 11254 * magit-buffer-name-format: Naming Buffers. (line 25) 11255 * magit-bury-buffer-function: Quitting Windows. (line 16) 11256 * magit-cherry-margin: Cherries. (line 21) 11257 * magit-clone-always-transient: Cloning Repository. (line 12) 11258 * magit-clone-default-directory: Cloning Repository. (line 84) 11259 * magit-clone-name-alist: Cloning Repository. (line 94) 11260 * magit-clone-set-remote-head: Cloning Repository. (line 66) 11261 * magit-clone-set-remote.pushDefault: Cloning Repository. (line 75) 11262 * magit-clone-url-format: Cloning Repository. (line 114) 11263 * magit-commit-ask-to-stage: Initiating a Commit. (line 65) 11264 * magit-commit-diff-inhibit-same-window: Initiating a Commit. (line 97) 11265 * magit-commit-extend-override-date: Initiating a Commit. (line 72) 11266 * magit-commit-reword-override-date: Initiating a Commit. (line 75) 11267 * magit-commit-show-diff: Initiating a Commit. (line 69) 11268 * magit-commit-squash-confirm: Initiating a Commit. (line 78) 11269 * magit-completing-read-function: Support for Completion Frameworks. 11270 (line 27) 11271 * magit-define-global-key-bindings: Global Bindings. (line 6) 11272 * magit-diff-adjust-tab-width: Diff Options. (line 17) 11273 * magit-diff-buffer-file-locked: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11274 (line 104) 11275 * magit-diff-extra-stat-arguments: Diff Options. (line 112) 11276 * magit-diff-hide-trailing-cr-characters: Diff Options. (line 77) 11277 * magit-diff-highlight-hunk-region-functions: Diff Options. (line 80) 11278 * magit-diff-highlight-indentation: Diff Options. (line 63) 11279 * magit-diff-highlight-trailing: Diff Options. (line 59) 11280 * magit-diff-paint-whitespace: Diff Options. (line 38) 11281 * magit-diff-paint-whitespace-lines: Diff Options. (line 52) 11282 * magit-diff-refine-hunk: Diff Options. (line 6) 11283 * magit-diff-refine-ignore-whitespace: Diff Options. (line 13) 11284 * magit-diff-unmarked-lines-keep-foreground: Diff Options. (line 105) 11285 * magit-diff-visit-previous-blob: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff. 11286 (line 38) 11287 * magit-direct-use-buffer-arguments: Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables. 11288 (line 73) 11289 * magit-display-buffer-function: Switching Buffers. (line 25) 11290 * magit-display-buffer-noselect: Switching Buffers. (line 17) 11291 * magit-dwim-selection: Completion and Confirmation. 11292 (line 42) 11293 * magit-ediff-dwim-resolve-function: Ediffing. (line 105) 11294 * magit-ediff-dwim-show-on-hunks: Ediffing. (line 111) 11295 * magit-ediff-quit-hook: Ediffing. (line 124) 11296 * magit-ediff-show-stash-with-index: Ediffing. (line 118) 11297 * magit-generate-buffer-name-function: Naming Buffers. (line 6) 11298 * magit-git-debug: Viewing Git Output. (line 26) 11299 * magit-git-debug <1>: Getting a Value from Git. 11300 (line 68) 11301 * magit-git-executable: Git Executable. (line 26) 11302 * magit-git-global-arguments: Global Git Arguments. 11303 (line 6) 11304 * magit-keep-region-overlay: The Selection. (line 52) 11305 * magit-list-refs-sortby: Additional Completion Options. 11306 (line 6) 11307 * magit-log-auto-more: Log Buffer. (line 69) 11308 * magit-log-buffer-file-locked: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files. 11309 (line 124) 11310 * magit-log-margin: Log Margin. (line 12) 11311 * magit-log-margin-show-committer-date: Log Margin. (line 44) 11312 * magit-log-section-commit-count: Status Sections. (line 114) 11313 * magit-log-select-margin: Select from Log. (line 28) 11314 * magit-log-show-color-graph-limit: Log Buffer. (line 78) 11315 * magit-log-show-refname-after-summary: Log Buffer. (line 74) 11316 * magit-log-show-signatures-limit: Log Buffer. (line 84) 11317 * magit-log-trace-definition-function: Commands Available in Diffs. 11318 (line 17) 11319 * magit-module-sections-hook: Status Module Sections. 11320 (line 19) 11321 * magit-module-sections-nested: Status Module Sections. 11322 (line 22) 11323 * magit-no-confirm: Action Confirmation. (line 18) 11324 * magit-pop-revision-stack-format: Using the Revision Stack. 11325 (line 34) 11326 * magit-post-clone-hook: Cloning Repository. (line 133) 11327 * magit-post-commit-hook: Initiating a Commit. (line 86) 11328 * magit-post-display-buffer-hook: Switching Buffers. (line 85) 11329 * magit-pre-display-buffer-hook: Switching Buffers. (line 76) 11330 * magit-prefer-remote-upstream: Branch Git Variables. 11331 (line 108) 11332 * magit-prefix-use-buffer-arguments: Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables. 11333 (line 65) 11334 * magit-process-extreme-logging: Viewing Git Output. (line 56) 11335 * magit-process-raise-error: Calling Git for Effect. 11336 (line 125) 11337 * magit-pull-or-fetch: Fetching. (line 52) 11338 * magit-reflog-margin: Reflog. (line 20) 11339 * magit-refresh-args: Refreshing Buffers. (line 52) 11340 * magit-refresh-buffer-hook: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers. 11341 (line 41) 11342 * magit-refresh-function: Refreshing Buffers. (line 47) 11343 * magit-refresh-status-buffer: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers. 11344 (line 46) 11345 * magit-refs-filter-alist: References Buffer. (line 137) 11346 * magit-refs-focus-column-width: References Buffer. (line 75) 11347 * magit-refs-margin: References Buffer. (line 89) 11348 * magit-refs-margin-for-tags: References Buffer. (line 112) 11349 * magit-refs-pad-commit-counts: References Buffer. (line 45) 11350 * magit-refs-primary-column-width: References Buffer. (line 63) 11351 * magit-refs-sections-hook: References Sections. (line 13) 11352 * magit-refs-show-commit-count: References Buffer. (line 36) 11353 * magit-refs-show-remote-prefix: References Buffer. (line 57) 11354 * magit-remote-add-set-remote.pushDefault: Remote Commands. (line 83) 11355 * magit-remote-direct-configure: Remote Commands. (line 20) 11356 * magit-remote-git-executable: Git Executable. (line 32) 11357 * magit-repolist-columns: Repository List. (line 12) 11358 * magit-repository-directories: Status Buffer. (line 57) 11359 * magit-revision-filter-files-on-follow: Revision Buffer. (line 55) 11360 * magit-revision-insert-related-refs: Revision Buffer. (line 6) 11361 * magit-revision-show-gravatars: Revision Buffer. (line 15) 11362 * magit-revision-use-hash-sections: Revision Buffer. (line 31) 11363 * magit-root-section: Matching Sections. (line 81) 11364 * magit-save-repository-buffers: Automatic Saving of File-Visiting Buffers. 11365 (line 13) 11366 * magit-section-cache-visibility: Section Visibility. (line 95) 11367 * magit-section-initial-visibility-alist: Section Visibility. (line 79) 11368 * magit-section-movement-hook: Section Movement. (line 41) 11369 * magit-section-set-visibility-hook: Section Visibility. (line 105) 11370 * magit-section-show-child-count: Section Options. (line 9) 11371 * magit-section-visibility-indicator: Section Visibility. (line 122) 11372 * magit-shell-command-verbose-prompt: Running Git Manually. 11373 (line 43) 11374 * magit-stashes-margin: Stashing. (line 123) 11375 * magit-status-headers-hook: Status Header Sections. 11376 (line 17) 11377 * magit-status-margin: Status Options. (line 6) 11378 * magit-status-sections-hook: Status Sections. (line 10) 11379 * magit-submodule-list-columns: Listing Submodules. (line 20) 11380 * magit-this-process: Calling Git for Effect. 11381 (line 121) 11382 * magit-uniquify-buffer-names: Naming Buffers. (line 65) 11383 * magit-unstage-committed: Staging and Unstaging. 11384 (line 52) 11385 * magit-update-other-window-delay: Section Movement. (line 97) 11386 * magit-visit-ref-behavior: References Buffer. (line 168) 11387 * magit-wip-after-apply-mode: Legacy Wip Modes. (line 18) 11388 * magit-wip-after-apply-mode-lighter: Legacy Wip Modes. (line 54) 11389 * magit-wip-after-save-local-mode-lighter: Legacy Wip Modes. (line 51) 11390 * magit-wip-after-save-mode: Legacy Wip Modes. (line 13) 11391 * magit-wip-before-change-mode: Legacy Wip Modes. (line 31) 11392 * magit-wip-before-change-mode-lighter: Legacy Wip Modes. (line 57) 11393 * magit-wip-initial-backup-mode: Legacy Wip Modes. (line 35) 11394 * magit-wip-initial-backup-mode-lighter: Legacy Wip Modes. (line 60) 11395 * magit-wip-merge-branch: Wip Graph. (line 6) 11396 * magit-wip-mode: Wip Modes. (line 30) 11397 * magit-wip-mode-lighter: Wip Modes. (line 98) 11398 * magit-wip-namespace: Wip Modes. (line 91) 11399 * notes.displayRef: Notes. (line 57) 11400 * pull.rebase: Branch Git Variables. 11401 (line 50) 11402 * remote.NAME.fetch: Remote Git Variables. 11403 (line 14) 11404 * remote.NAME.push: Remote Git Variables. 11405 (line 23) 11406 * remote.NAME.pushurl: Remote Git Variables. 11407 (line 18) 11408 * remote.NAME.tagOpts: Remote Git Variables. 11409 (line 27) 11410 * remote.NAME.url: Remote Git Variables. 11411 (line 10) 11412 * remote.pushDefault: Branch Git Variables. 11413 (line 62) 11414 11415 11416 11417 Tag Table: 11418 Node: Top774 11419 Node: Introduction6559 11420 Node: Installation11275 11421 Node: Installing from Melpa11605 11422 Node: Installing from the Git Repository12680 11423 Node: Post-Installation Tasks15494 11424 Node: Getting Started16779 11425 Node: Interface Concepts22590 11426 Node: Modes and Buffers22969 11427 Node: Switching Buffers24680 11428 Node: Naming Buffers29419 11429 Node: Quitting Windows32494 11430 Node: Automatic Refreshing of Magit Buffers34429 11431 Node: Automatic Saving of File-Visiting Buffers37310 11432 Node: Automatic Reverting of File-Visiting Buffers38494 11433 Node: Risk of Reverting Automatically43479 11434 Node: Sections45861 11435 Node: Section Movement46787 11436 Node: Section Visibility51661 11437 Node: Section Hooks58348 11438 Node: Section Types and Values60754 11439 Node: Section Options62169 11440 Node: Transient Commands62640 11441 Node: Transient Arguments and Buffer Variables64116 11442 Node: Completion Confirmation and the Selection71133 11443 Node: Action Confirmation71579 11444 Node: Completion and Confirmation80084 11445 Node: The Selection83269 11446 Node: The hunk-internal region86167 11447 Node: Support for Completion Frameworks87256 11448 Node: Additional Completion Options92141 11449 Node: Mouse Support92739 11450 Node: Running Git93315 11451 Node: Viewing Git Output93560 11452 Node: Git Process Status96264 11453 Node: Running Git Manually97229 11454 Node: Git Executable99919 11455 Node: Global Git Arguments102927 11456 Node: Inspecting103732 11457 Node: Status Buffer104889 11458 Node: Status Sections109900 11459 Node: Status Header Sections115427 11460 Node: Status Module Sections118046 11461 Node: Status Options120543 11462 Node: Repository List121906 11463 Node: Logging126684 11464 Node: Refreshing Logs129523 11465 Node: Log Buffer130944 11466 Node: Log Margin135767 11467 Node: Select from Log138920 11468 Node: Reflog141130 11469 Node: Cherries142767 11470 Node: Diffing144605 11471 Node: Refreshing Diffs147639 11472 Node: Commands Available in Diffs151328 11473 Node: Diff Options153841 11474 Node: Revision Buffer159304 11475 Node: Ediffing162624 11476 Node: References Buffer168674 11477 Node: References Sections179268 11478 Node: Bisecting180125 11479 Node: Visiting Files and Blobs182436 11480 Node: General-Purpose Visit Commands182964 11481 Node: Visiting Files and Blobs from a Diff183917 11482 Node: Blaming187361 11483 Node: Manipulating194349 11484 Node: Creating Repository194691 11485 Node: Cloning Repository195228 11486 Node: Staging and Unstaging201669 11487 Node: Staging from File-Visiting Buffers205642 11488 Node: Applying206748 11489 Node: Committing208821 11490 Node: Initiating a Commit209404 11491 Node: Editing Commit Messages214594 11492 Node: Using the Revision Stack217367 11493 Node: Commit Pseudo Headers220412 11494 Node: Commit Mode and Hooks221707 11495 Node: Commit Message Conventions224565 11496 Node: Branching226552 11497 Node: The Two Remotes226778 11498 Node: Branch Commands229431 11499 Node: Branch Git Variables242281 11500 Node: Auxiliary Branch Commands247651 11501 Node: Merging248767 11502 Node: Resolving Conflicts252923 11503 Node: Rebasing258297 11504 Node: Editing Rebase Sequences263086 11505 Node: Information About In-Progress Rebase267302 11506 Ref: Information About In-Progress Rebase-Footnote-1276415 11507 Node: Cherry Picking277011 11508 Node: Reverting281345 11509 Node: Resetting282764 11510 Node: Stashing284590 11511 Node: Transferring290971 11512 Node: Remotes291193 11513 Node: Remote Commands291345 11514 Node: Remote Git Variables295384 11515 Node: Fetching296655 11516 Node: Pulling299138 11517 Node: Pushing300164 11518 Node: Plain Patches304455 11519 Node: Maildir Patches305926 11520 Node: Miscellaneous307405 11521 Node: Tagging307751 11522 Node: Notes309644 11523 Node: Submodules311979 11524 Node: Listing Submodules312197 11525 Node: Submodule Transient314345 11526 Node: Subtree316790 11527 Node: Worktree318721 11528 Node: Sparse checkouts319797 11529 Node: Bundle322573 11530 Node: Common Commands322948 11531 Node: Wip Modes325576 11532 Node: Wip Graph330467 11533 Node: Legacy Wip Modes332780 11534 Node: Commands for Buffers Visiting Files335667 11535 Node: Minor Mode for Buffers Visiting Blobs343894 11536 Node: Customizing344692 11537 Node: Per-Repository Configuration346288 11538 Node: Essential Settings348542 11539 Node: Safety348888 11540 Node: Performance350649 11541 Ref: Log Performance353612 11542 Ref: Diff Performance354917 11543 Ref: Refs Buffer Performance356258 11544 Ref: Committing Performance356833 11545 Node: Microsoft Windows Performance357815 11546 Node: MacOS Performance359006 11547 Ref: MacOS Performance-Footnote-1360029 11548 Node: Global Bindings360111 11549 Node: Plumbing362339 11550 Node: Calling Git363168 11551 Node: Getting a Value from Git364693 11552 Node: Calling Git for Effect368421 11553 Node: Section Plumbing374315 11554 Node: Creating Sections374543 11555 Node: Section Selection378439 11556 Node: Matching Sections380235 11557 Node: Refreshing Buffers386156 11558 Node: Conventions389300 11559 Node: Theming Faces389492 11560 Node: FAQ397597 11561 Node: FAQ - How to ...?398035 11562 Node: How to pronounce Magit?398392 11563 Node: How to show git's output?399195 11564 Node: How to install the gitman info manual?399981 11565 Node: How to show diffs for gpg-encrypted files?400951 11566 Node: How does branching and pushing work?401547 11567 Node: Should I disable VC?401880 11568 Node: FAQ - Issues and Errors402483 11569 Node: Magit is slow403428 11570 Node: I changed several thousand files at once and now Magit is unusable403721 11571 Node: I am having problems committing404447 11572 Node: I am using MS Windows and cannot push with Magit404928 11573 Node: I am using macOS and SOMETHING works in shell but not in Magit405546 11574 Node: Expanding a file to show the diff causes it to disappear406380 11575 Node: Point is wrong in the COMMIT_EDITMSG buffer406968 11576 Node: The mode-line information isn't always up-to-date408016 11577 Node: A branch and tag sharing the same name breaks SOMETHING409079 11578 Node: My Git hooks work on the command-line but not inside Magit409966 11579 Node: git-commit-mode isn't used when committing from the command-line410812 11580 Node: Point ends up inside invisible text when jumping to a file-visiting buffer413083 11581 Node: I am no longer able to save popup defaults413932 11582 Node: Debugging Tools414913 11583 Node: Keystroke Index418087 11584 Node: Function and Command Index459701 11585 Node: Variable Index517902 11586 11587 End Tag Table 11588 11589 11590 Local Variables: 11591 coding: utf-8 11592 End: