3 Jonas Fonseca <fonseca@diku.dk>
5 This is the manual for tig, the ncurses-based text-mode interface for git.
6 Tig allows you to browse changes in a git repository and can additionally act
7 as a pager for output of various git commands. When used as a pager, it will
8 display input from stdin and colorize it.
10 When browsing repositories, tig uses the underlying git commands to present
11 the user with various views, such as summarized commit log and showing the
12 commit with the log message, diffstat, and the diff.
14 ifndef::backend-docbook[]
18 endif::backend-docbook[]
20 [[calling-conventions]]
28 If stdin is a pipe, any log or diff options will be ignored and the pager view
29 will be opened loading data from stdin. The pager mode can be used for
30 colorizing output from various git commands.
32 Example on how to colorize the output of git-show(1):
34 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
36 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
42 All git command options specified on the command line will be passed to the
43 given command and all will be shell quoted before they are passed to the
46 NOTE: If you specify options for the main view, you should not use the
47 `--pretty` option as this option will be set automatically to the format
48 expected by the main view.
50 Example on how to view a commit and show both author and committer
53 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
54 $ tig show --pretty=fuller
55 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
57 See the <<refspec, "Specifying revisions">> section below for an introduction
58 to revision options supported by the git commands. For details on specific git
59 command options, refer to the man page of the command in question.
65 Several options related to the interface with git can be configured via
68 [[configuration-files]]
72 Upon startup, tig first reads the system wide configuration file
73 (`{sysconfdir}/tigrc` by default) and then proceeds to read the user's
74 configuration file (`~/.tigrc` by default). The paths to either of these files
75 can be overridden through the following environment variables:
78 Path of the user configuration file.
81 Path of the system wide configuration file.
87 Commits that are referenced by tags and branch heads will be marked by the
88 reference name surrounded by '[' and ']':
90 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
91 2006-03-26 19:42 Petr Baudis | [cogito-0.17.1] Cogito 0.17.1
92 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
94 If you want to filter out certain directories under `.git/refs/`, say `tmp`
95 you can do it by setting the following variable:
97 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
98 $ TIG_LS_REMOTE="git ls-remote . | sed /\/tmp\//d" tig
99 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
101 Or set the variable permanently in your environment.
104 Set command for retrieving all repository references. The command
105 should output data in the same format as git-ls-remote(1).
111 It is possible to alter which commands are used for the different views. If
112 for example you prefer commits in the main view to be sorted by date and only
113 show 500 commits, use:
115 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
116 $ TIG_MAIN_CMD="git log --date-order -n500 --pretty=raw %s" tig
117 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
119 Or set the variable permanently in your environment.
121 Notice, how `%s` is used to specify the commit reference. There can be a
122 maximum of 5 `%s` ref specifications.
125 The command used for the diff view. By default, git show is used
129 The command used for the log view. If you prefer to have both
130 author and committer shown in the log view be sure to pass
131 `--pretty=fuller` to git log.
134 The command used for the main view. Note, you must always specify
135 the option: `--pretty=raw` since the main view parser expects to
143 The command used for the tree view. Takes two arguments, the first
144 is the revision ID and the second is the path of the directory tree,
145 empty for the root directory. Defaults to "git ls-tree %s %s".
148 The command used for the blob view. Takes one argument which is
149 the blob ID. Defaults to "git cat-file blob %s".
155 The display consists of a status window on the last line of the screen and one
156 or more views. The default is to only show one view at the time but it is
157 possible to split both the main and log view to also show the commit diff.
159 If you are in the log view and press 'Enter' when the current line is a commit
162 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
163 commit 4d55caff4cc89335192f3e566004b4ceef572521
164 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
166 You will split the view so that the log view is displayed in the top window
167 and the diff view in the bottom window. You can switch between the two views
168 by pressing 'Tab'. To maximize the log view again, simply press 'l'.
171 Current Head and Commit ID
172 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
174 The viewer keeps track of both what head and commit ID you are currently
175 viewing. The commit ID will follow the cursor line and change every time
176 you highlight a different commit. Whenever you reopen the diff view it will be
177 reloaded, if the commit ID changed.
179 The head ID is used when opening the main and log view to indicate from what
180 revision to show history.
186 Various 'views' of a repository is presented. Each view is based on output
187 from an external command, most often 'git log', 'git diff', or 'git show'.
190 Is the default view, and it shows a one line summary of each commit
191 in the chosen list of revisions. The summary includes commit date,
192 author, and the first line of the log message. Additionally, any
193 repository references, such as tags, will be shown.
196 Presents a more rich view of the revision log showing the whole log
197 message and the diffstat.
200 Shows either the diff of the current working tree, that is, what
201 has changed since the last commit, or the commit diff complete
202 with log message, diffstat and diff.
205 Lists directory trees associated with the current revision allowing
206 subdirectories to be descended or ascended and file blobs to be
210 Displays the file content or "blob" of data associated with a file
214 Displays the file content annotated or blamed by commits.
217 Displays status of files in the working tree and allows changes to be
218 staged/unstaged as well as adding of untracked files.
221 Displays diff changes for staged or unstanged files being tracked or
222 file content of untracked files.
225 Is used for displaying both input from stdin and output from git
226 commands entered in the internal prompt.
229 Displays key binding quick reference.
235 Each view has a title window which shows the name of the view, current commit
236 ID if available, and where the view is positioned:
238 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
239 [main] c622eefaa485995320bc743431bae0d497b1d875 - commit 1 of 61 (1%)
240 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
242 By default, the title of the current view is highlighted using bold font. For
243 long loading views (taking over 3 seconds) the time since loading started will
246 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
247 [main] 77d9e40fbcea3238015aea403e06f61542df9a31 - commit 1 of 779 (0%) 5s
248 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
253 Below the default key bindings are shown.
259 `-------`--------------------------------------------------------------------
261 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
262 m Switch to main view.
263 d Switch to diff view.
264 l Switch to log view.
265 p Switch to pager view.
266 t Switch to (directory) tree view.
267 f Switch to (file) blob view.
268 B Switch to blame view.
269 h Switch to help view
270 S Switch to status view
271 c Switch to stage view
272 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
274 [[view-manipulation]]
278 `-------`--------------------------------------------------------------------
280 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
281 q Close view, if multiple views are open it will jump back to the \
282 previous view in the view stack. If it is the last open view it \
283 will quit. Use 'Q' to quit all views at once.
284 Enter This key is "context sensitive" depending on what view you are \
285 currently in. When in log view on a commit line or in the main \
286 view, split the view and show the commit diff. In the diff view \
287 pressing Enter will simply scroll the view one line down.
288 Tab Switch to next view.
289 R Reload and refresh the current view.
290 M Maximize the current view to fill the whole display.
291 Up This key is "context sensitive" and will move the cursor one \
292 line up. However, if you opened a diff view from the main view \
293 (split- or full-screen) it will change the cursor to point to \
294 the previous commit in the main view and update the diff view \
296 Down Similar to 'Up' but will move down.
297 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
303 `-------`--------------------------------------------------------------------
305 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
306 j Move cursor one line up.
307 k Move cursor one line down.
309 -,a Move cursor one page up.
310 PgDown Space Move cursor one page down.
311 Home Jump to first line.
312 End Jump to last line.
313 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
319 `-------`--------------------------------------------------------------------
321 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
322 Insert Scroll view one line up.
323 Delete Scroll view one line down.
324 w Scroll view one page up.
325 s Scroll view one page down.
326 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
332 `-------`--------------------------------------------------------------------
334 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
335 / Search the view. Opens a prompt for entering search regex to use.
336 ? Search backwards in the view. Also prompts for regex.
337 n Find next match for the current search regex.
338 N Find previous match for the current search regex.
339 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
345 `-------`--------------------------------------------------------------------
347 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
350 z Stop all background loading. This can be useful if you use \
351 tig in a repository with a long history without limiting \
354 '.' Toggle line numbers on/off.
355 D Toggle date display on/off.
356 A Toggle author display on/off.
357 g Toggle revision graph visualization on/off.
358 F Toggle reference display on/off (tag and branch names).
359 ':' Open prompt. This allows you to specify what git command \
360 to run. Example `:log -p`
361 u Update status of file. In the status view, this allows you to add an \
362 untracked file or stage changes to a file for next commit (similar to \
363 running git-add <filename>). In the stage view, when pressing this on \
364 a diff chunk line stages only that chunk for next commit, when not on \
365 a diff chunk line all changes in the displayed diff is staged.
366 M Resolve unmerged file by launching git-mergetool(1). Note, to work \
367 correctly this might require some initial configuration of your \
368 preferred merge tool. See the manpage of git-mergetool(1).
369 ! Checkout file with unstaged changes. This will reset the file to \
370 contain the content it had at last commit.
371 @ Move to next chunk in the stage view.
372 ',' Move tree view to the parent tree.
373 e Open file in editor.
374 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
376 [[external-commands]]
380 Tig also comes with a few builtin external commands. These are simple shell
381 commands that are run and can take arguments from the current browsing state,
382 such as the current commit ID. The default commands are:
384 `-------`--------------------------------------------------------------------
386 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
387 C git cherry-pick %(commit)
389 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
392 Revision Specification
393 ----------------------
395 This section describes various ways to specify what revisions to display or
396 otherwise limit the view to. Tig does not itself parse the described
397 revision options so refer to the relevant git man pages for further
398 information. Relevant man pages besides git-log(1) are git-diff(1) and
401 You can tune the interaction with git by making use of the options explained
402 in this section. For example, by configuring the environment variables
403 described in the <<history-commands, "History commands">> section.
409 If you are interested only in those revisions that made changes to a specific
410 file (or even several files) list the files like this:
412 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
413 $ tig Makefile README
414 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
416 To avoid ambiguity with tig's subcommands or repository references such as tag
417 name, be sure to separate file names from other git options using "\--". So if
418 you have a file named 'status' it will clash with the 'status' subcommand, and
419 thus you will have to use:
421 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
423 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
425 NOTE: For the main view, avoiding ambiguity will in some cases require you to
426 specify two "\--" options. The first will make tig stop option processing
427 and the latter will be passed to git log.
429 [[date-number-limiting]]
430 Limit by Date or Number
431 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
433 To speed up interaction with git, you can limit the amount of commits to show
434 both for the log and main view. Either limit by date using e.g.
435 `--since=1.month` or limit by the number of commits using `-n400`.
437 If you are only interested in changed that happened between two dates you can
440 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
441 $ tig --after="May 5th" --before="2006-05-16 15:44"
442 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
444 NOTE: If you want to avoid having to quote dates containing spaces you can use
445 "." instead, e.g. `--after=May.5th`.
447 [[commit-range-limiting]]
448 Limiting by Commit Ranges
449 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
451 Alternatively, commits can be limited to a specific range, such as "all
452 commits between 'tag-1.0' and 'tag-2.0'". For example:
454 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
455 $ tig tag-1.0..tag-2.0
456 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
458 This way of commit limiting makes it trivial to only browse the commits which
459 haven't been pushed to a remote branch. Assuming 'origin' is your upstream
460 remote branch, using:
462 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
464 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
466 will list what will be pushed to the remote branch. Optionally, the ending
467 'HEAD' can be left out since it is implied.
469 [[reachability-limiting]]
470 Limiting by Reachability
471 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
473 Git interprets the range specifier "tag-1.0..tag-2.0" as "all commits
474 reachable from 'tag-2.0' but not from 'tag-1.0'". Where reachability refers
475 to what commits are ancestors (or part of the history) of the branch or tagged
476 revision in question.
478 If you prefer to specify which commit to preview in this way use the
481 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
482 $ tig tag-2.0 ^tag-1.0
483 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
485 You can think of '^' as a negation operator. Using this alternate syntax, it
486 is possible to further prune commits by specifying multiple branch cut offs.
489 Combining Revisions Specification
490 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
492 Revisions options can to some degree be combined, which makes it possible to
493 say "show at most 20 commits from within the last month that changed files
494 under the Documentation/ directory."
496 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
497 $ tig --since=1.month -n20 -- Documentation/
498 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
501 Examining All Repository References
502 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
504 In some cases, it can be useful to query changes across all references in a
505 repository. An example is to ask "did any line of development in this
506 repository change a particular file within the last week". This can be
509 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
510 $ tig --all --since=1.week -- Makefile
511 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
519 Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Jonas Fonseca <fonseca@diku.dk>
521 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
522 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
523 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
524 (at your option) any later version.
527 References and Related Tools
528 ----------------------------
539 Other git repository browsers: