1 =========================================
2 TopGit -- A different patch queue manager
3 =========================================
9 TopGit aims to make handling of large amounts of interdependent topic
10 branches easier. In fact, it is designed especially for the case where
11 you maintain a queue of third-party patches on top of another (perhaps
12 Git-controlled) project and want to easily organize, maintain and submit
13 them -- TopGit achieves that by keeping a separate topic branch for each
14 patch and providing some tools to maintain the branches.
18 :REQUIREMENTS_: Installation requirements
19 :USAGE_: Command Line details
20 :`NO UNDO`_: Where's the undo!!!
21 :CONVENTIONS_: Suggestions for organizing your TopGit branches
22 :GLOSSARY_: All the TopGit vocabulary in one place
23 :TECHNICAL_: How it works behind the scenes
29 TopGit is a collection of POSIX shell scripts so a POSIX-compliant shell is
30 required along with some standard POSIX-compliant utilities (e.g. sed, awk,
31 cat, etc.). Git version 1.8.5 or later is also required.
33 To use TopGit with linked working trees (the ``git worktree add`` command),
34 at least Git version 2.5.0 (obviously, since that's when the ``git worktree``
35 command first appeared) is needed in which case linked working trees are then
36 fully supported for use with TopGit.
38 The scripts need to be preprocessed and installed and currently the Makefile
39 that does this requires GNU make, but that's an install-time-only requirement.
41 It is possible, however, to use the DESTDIR functionality to install TopGit to
42 a staging area on one machine, archive that and then unarchive it on another
43 machine to perform an install (provided the build prefix and other options are
44 compatible with the final installed location).
50 See the file ``INSTALL``.
56 The TopGit git repository can be found at <http://repo.or.cz/topgit/pro>.
62 Why not use something like StGIT or Guilt or ``rebase -i`` for maintaining
63 your patch queue? The advantage of these tools is their simplicity;
64 they work with patch *series* and defer to the reflog facility for
65 version control of patches (reordering of patches is not
66 version-controlled at all). But there are several disadvantages -- for
67 one, these tools (especially StGIT) do not actually fit well with plain
68 Git at all: it is basically impossible to take advantage of the index
69 effectively when using StGIT. But more importantly, these tools
70 horribly fail in the face of a distributed environment.
72 TopGit has been designed around three main tenets:
74 (i) TopGit is as thin a layer on top of Git as possible. You
75 still maintain your index and commit using Git; TopGit will only
76 automate a few indispensable tasks.
78 (ii) TopGit is anxious about *keeping* your history. It will
79 never rewrite your history, and all metadata is also tracked
80 by Git, smoothly and non-obnoxiously. It is good to have a
81 *single* point when the history is cleaned up, and that is at
82 the point of inclusion in the upstream project; locally, you
83 can see how your patch has evolved and easily return to older
86 (iii) TopGit is specifically designed to work in a
87 distributed environment. You can have several instances of
88 TopGit-aware repositories and smoothly keep them all
89 up-to-date and transfer your changes between them.
91 As mentioned above, the main intended use-case for TopGit is tracking
92 third-party patches, where each patch is effectively a single topic
93 branch. In order to flexibly accommodate even complex scenarios when
94 you track many patches where many are independent but some depend on
95 others, TopGit ignores the ancient Quilt heritage of patch series and
96 instead allows the patches to freely form graphs (DAGs just like Git
97 history itself, only "one level higher"). For now, you have to manually
98 specify which patches the current one depends on, but TopGit might help
99 you with that in the future in a darcs-like fashion.
101 A glossary_ plug: The union (i.e. merge) of patch dependencies is called
102 a *base* of the patch (topic branch).
104 Of course, TopGit is perhaps not the right tool for you:
106 (i) TopGit is not complicated, but StGIT et al. are somewhat
107 simpler, conceptually. If you just want to make a linear
108 purely-local patch queue, deferring to StGIT instead might
111 (ii) When using TopGit, your history can get a little hairy
112 over time, especially with all the merges rippling through.
121 ## Create and evolve a topic branch
122 $ tg create t/gitweb/pathinfo-action
123 tg: Automatically marking dependency on master
124 tg: Creating t/gitweb/pathinfo-action base from master...
130 ## Create another topic branch on top of the former one
131 $ tg create t/gitweb/nifty-links
132 tg: Automatically marking dependency on t/gitweb/pathinfo-action
133 tg: Creating t/gitweb/nifty-links base from t/gitweb/pathinfo-action...
137 ## Create another topic branch on top of master and submit
138 ## the resulting patch upstream
139 $ tg create t/revlist/author-fixed master
140 tg: Creating t/revlist/author-fixed base from master...
144 tg: Sent t/revlist/author-fixed
146 To: git@vger.kernel.org
147 Cc: gitster@pobox.com
148 Subject: [PATCH] Fix broken revlist --author when --fixed-string
150 ## Create another topic branch depending on two others non-trivially
151 $ tg create t/whatever t/revlist/author-fixed t/gitweb/nifty-links
152 tg: Creating t/whatever base from t/revlist/author-fixed...
153 tg: Merging t/whatever base with t/gitweb/nifty-links...
155 tg: Please commit merge resolution and call: tg update --continue
156 tg: It is also safe to abort this operation using `git reset --hard`
157 tg: but please remember you are on the base branch now;
158 tg: you will want to switch to a different branch.
161 $ tg update --continue
165 ## Update a single topic branch and propagate the changes to
167 $ git checkout t/gitweb/nifty-links
170 $ git checkout t/whatever
172 Topic Branch: t/whatever (1 commit)
173 Subject: [PATCH] Whatever patch
175 Depends: t/revlist/author-fixed t/gitweb/nifty-links
177 t/gitweb/nifty-links (1 commit)
179 tg: Updating base with t/gitweb/nifty-links changes...
181 tg: Please commit merge resolution and call `tg update --continue`
182 tg: (use `tg status` to see more options)
185 $ tg update --continue
186 tg: Updating t/whatever against new base...
188 tg: Please commit merge resolution and call `tg update --continue`
189 tg: (use `tg status` to see more options)
192 $ tg update --continue
194 ## Update a single topic branch and propagate the changes
195 ## further through the dependency chain
196 $ git checkout t/gitweb/pathinfo-action
199 $ git checkout t/whatever
201 Topic Branch: t/whatever (1/2 commits)
202 Subject: [PATCH] Whatever patch
204 Depends: t/revlist/author-fixed t/gitweb/nifty-links
206 t/gitweb/pathinfo-action (<= t/gitweb/nifty-links) (1 commit)
208 tg: Recursing to t/gitweb/nifty-links...
209 [t/gitweb/nifty-links] tg: Updating base with t/gitweb/pathinfo-action changes...
211 [t/gitweb/nifty-links] tg: Please commit merge resolution and call `tg update --continue`
212 [t/gitweb/nifty-links] tg: (use `tg status` to see more options)
215 $ tg update --continue
216 [t/gitweb/nifty-links] tg: Updating t/gitweb/nifty-links against new base...
218 [t/gitweb/nifty-links] tg: Please commit merge resolution and call `tg update --continue`
219 [t/gitweb/nifty-links] tg: (use `tg status` to see more options)
222 $ tg update --continue
223 tg: Updating base with t/gitweb/nifty-links changes...
224 tg: Updating t/whatever against new base...
226 ## Clone a TopGit-controlled repository
229 $ tg remote --populate origin
234 ## Add a TopGit remote to a repository and push to it
235 $ git remote add foo URL
239 ## Update from a non-default TopGit remote
248 When using TopGit there are several common conventions used when working with
249 TopGit branches. None of them are enforced, they are only suggestions.
251 There are three typical uses for a TopGit branch:
254 Normal TopGit branches that represent a single patch. These are known
255 as "patch" TopGit branches.
257 Empty TopGit branches with no dependencies (an empty ``.topdeps`` file)
258 that represent a base upon which other "normal" TopGit branches depend.
259 These are known as "base" TopGit branches (not to be confused with
260 the refs/top-bases/... refs).
262 Empty TopGit branches that serve as a staging area to bring together
263 several other TopGit branches into one place so they can be used/tested
264 all together. These are known as "stage" TopGit branches.
266 An "empty" TopGit branch is one that does not have any changes of its own --
267 it may still have dependencies though ("stage" branches do, "base" branches do
268 not). The ``tg summary`` output shows empty branches with a ``0`` in the
269 listing. Normal "patch" branches that have not been annihilated, "base" and
270 "stage" branches fall into this category. (Annihilated branches are normally
271 omitted from the ``tg summary`` output but can be shown if given explicitly as
272 an argument to the ``tg summary`` command. However, the message line will be
273 incorrect since an annihilated branch has no ``.topmsg`` file of its own.)
275 A "patch" branch name typically starts with ``t/`` whereas "base" and "stage"
276 branch names often do not.
278 A "base" branch is created by using the ``--no-deps`` option of ``tg create``
279 which will automatically suggest a "[BASE]" message prefix rather than
280 "[PATCH]". A "stage" branch is created like a normal patch branch except that
281 the only changes that will ever be made to it are typically to add/remove
282 dependencies. Its subject prefix must be manually changed to "[STAGE]" to
285 Since both "base" and "stage" branches typically only have a use for the
286 "Subject:" ilne from their ``.topmsg`` file, they are quite easily created
287 using the ``--topmsg`` option of ``tg create``.
289 Use of "stage" and "base" branches is completely optional. However, without
290 use of a "stage" branch it will be difficult to test multiple independent
291 patches together all at once. A "base" branch is merely a convenience that
292 provides more explicit control over when a common base for a set of patches
293 gets updated as well as providing a branch that shows in ``tg summary`` output
294 and participates in ``tg remote --populate`` setup.
296 When using the ``tg tag`` command to create tags that record the current state
297 of one or more TopGit branches, the tags are often created with a name that
300 One last thing, you have enabled ``git rerere`` haven't you?
306 Beware, there is no "undo" after running a ``tg update``!
308 Well, that's not entirely correct. Since ``tg update`` never discards commits
309 an "undo" operation is technically feasible provided the old values of all the
310 refs that were affected by the ``tg update`` operation can be determined and
311 then they are simply changed back to their previous values.
313 In practice though, it can be extremely tedious and error prone looking through
314 log information to try and determine what the correct previous values were.
315 Although, since TopGit tries to make sure reflogs are enabled for top-bases
316 refs, using Git's ``@{date}`` notation on all the refs dumped out by a
317 ``tg tag --refs foo``, where "foo" is the branch that was updated whose update
318 needs to be undone, may work.
320 Alternatively, ``tg tag --stash`` can be used prior to the update and then
321 ``tg revert`` used after the update to restore the previous state. This
322 assumes, of course, that you remember to run ``tg tag --stash`` first.
324 The ``tg update`` command understands a ``--stash`` option that tells it to
325 automatically run ``tg tag --stash`` before it starts making changes (if
326 everything is up-to-date it won't run the stash command at all).
328 The ``--stash`` option is the default nowadays when running ``tg update``,
329 add the ``--no-stash`` option to turn it off.
331 There is a preference for this. Setting the config value ``topgit.autostash``
332 to ``false`` will implicitly add the ``--no-stash`` option to any ``tg update``
333 command unless an explicit ``--stash`` option is given.
335 If you are likely to ever want to undo a ``tg update``, setting
336 ``topgit.autostash`` to ``false`` is highly discouraged!
338 Note that the tags saved by ``tg tag --stash`` are stored in the
339 ``refs/tgstash`` ref and its reflog. Unfortunately, while Git is happy to
340 maintain the reflog (once it's been enabled which ``tg tag`` guarantees for
341 ``refs/tgstash``), Git is unable to view an annotated/signed tag's reflog!
342 Instead Git dereferences the tag and shows the wrong thing. Use the
343 ``tg tag -g`` command to view the ``refs/tgstash`` reflog instead.
349 No, this is not a section about budget nonsense. ;)
351 TopGit keeps its metadata in ``.topdeps`` and ``.topmsg`` files. In an effort
352 to facilitate cherry-picking and other Git activities on the patch changes
353 themselves while ignoring the TopGit metadata, TopGit attempts to keep all
354 changes to ``.topdeps`` and ``.topmsg`` files limited to commits that do NOT
355 contain changes to any other files.
357 This is a departure from previous TopGit versions that made no such effort.
359 Primarily this affects ``tg create`` and ``tg import`` (which makes use of
360 ``tg create``) as ``tg create`` will commit the initial versions of
361 ``.topdeps`` and ``.topmsg`` for a new TopGit-controlled branch in their own
362 commit instead of mixing them in with changes to other files.
364 The ``pre-commit`` hook will also attempt to separate out any ``.topdeps`` and
365 ``.topmsg`` changes from commits that include changes to other files.
367 It is possible to defeat these checks without much effort (``pre-commit`` hooks
368 can easily be bypassed, ``tg create`` has a ``--no-commit`` option, many Git
369 commands simply do not run the ``pre-commit`` hook, etc.).
371 If you really, really, really, really want to change the default back to the
372 old behavior of previous TopGit versions where no such sequestration took
373 place, then set the ``topgit.sequester`` config variable explicitly to the
374 value ``false``. But this is not recommended.
377 AMENDING AND REBASING AND UPDATE-REF'ING
378 ----------------------------------------
382 It is okay to manually update a top-bases/... ref when a) it has no depedencies
383 (i.e. it was created with the ``tg create`` ``--no-deps`` option) and b) the
384 old top-bases/... ref value can be fast-forwarded to the new top-bases/...
385 value OR the new value contains ALL of the changes in the old value through
386 some other mechanism (perhaps they were cherry-picked or otherwise applied to
387 the new top-bases/... ref). The same rules apply to non-TopGit-controlled
390 Ignoring this rule and proceeding anyway with a non-fast-forward update to a
391 top-bases/... ref will result in changes present in the new value being merged
392 into the branch (at ``tg update`` time) as expected (possibly with conflicts),
393 but any changes that were contained in the old version of the top-bases/... ref
394 which have been dropped (i.e. are NOT contained in the new version of the
395 top-bases/... ref) will continue to be present in the branch! To get rid of
396 the dropped commits, one or more "revert" commits will have to be manually
397 applied to the tip of the new top-bases/... value (which will then be merged
398 into the branch at next ``tg update`` time).
400 The only time it's safe to amend, rebase, filter or otherwise rewrite commits
401 contained in a TopGit controlled branch or non-TopGit branch is when those
402 commits are NOT reachable via any other ref!
404 Furthermore, while it is safe to rewrite merge commits (provided they meet the
405 same conditions) the merge commits themselves and the branches they are merging
406 in must be preserved during the rewrite and that can be rather tricky to get
407 right so it's not recommended.
409 For example, if, while working on a TopGit-controlled branch ``foo``, a bad
410 typo is noticed, it's okay to ammend/rebase to fix that provided neither
411 ``tg update`` nor ``tg create`` has already been used to cause some other ref
412 to be able to reach the commit with the typo.
414 If an amend or rerwite is done anyway even though the commit with the typo is
415 reachable from some other ref, the typo won't really be removed. What will
416 happen instead is that the new version without the typo will ultimately be
417 merged into the other ref(s) (at ``tg update`` time) likely causing a conflict
418 that will have to be manually resolved and the commit with the typo will
419 continue to be reachable from those other refs!
421 Instead just make a new commit to fix the typo. The end result will end up
422 being the same but without the merge conflicts.
424 See also the discussion in the `NO UNDO`_ section.
430 TopGit needs to check many things to determine whether a TopGit branch is
431 up-to-date or not. This can involve a LOT of git commands for a complex
432 dependency tree. In order to speed things up, TopGit keeps a cache of results
433 in a ``tg-cache`` subdirectory in the ``.git`` directory.
435 Results are tagged with the original hash values used to get that result so
436 that items which have not been changed return their results quickly and items
437 which have been changed compute their new result and cache it for future use.
439 The ``.git/tg-cache`` directory may be removed at any time and the cache will
440 simply be recreated in an on-demand fashion as needed, at some speed penalty,
441 until it's fully rebuilt.
443 To force the cache to be fully pre-loaded, run the ``tg summary`` command
444 without any arguments. Otherwise, normal day-to-day TopGit operations should
445 keep it more-or-less up-to-date.
447 While each TopGit command is running, it uses a temporary subdirectory also
448 located in the ``.git`` directory. These directories are named
449 ``tg-tmp.XXXXXX`` where the ``XXXXXX`` part will be random letters and digits.
451 These temporary directories should always be removed automatically after each
452 TopGit command finishes running. As long as you are not in a subshell as a
453 result of a TopGit command stopping and waiting for a manual merge resolution,
454 it's safe to remove any of these directories that may have somehow accidentally
455 been left behind as a result of some failure that occurred while running a
456 TopGit command (provided, of course, it's not actually being used by a TopGit
457 command currently running in another terminal window or by another user on the
463 ``tg [-C <dir>] [-r <remote> | -u] [-c <name>=<val>] <subcommand> [<subcommand option/argument>...]``
465 -C <dir> Change directory to <dir> before doing anything
466 -r <remote> Pretend ``topgit.remote`` is set to <remote>
467 -u Pretend ``topgit.remote`` is not set
468 -c <name=val> Pass config option to git, may be repeated
470 The ``tg`` tool has several subcommands:
472 :`tg annihilate`_: Mark a TopGit-controlled branch as defunct
473 :`tg base`_: Show base commit for one or more TopGit branches
474 :`tg checkout`_: Shortcut for git checkout with name matching
475 :`tg create`_: Create a new TopGit-controlled branch
476 :`tg delete`_: Delete a TopGit-controlled branch cleanly
477 :`tg depend`_: Add a new dependency to a TopGit-controlled branch
478 :`tg export`_: Export TopGit branch patches to files or a branch
479 :`tg files`_: Show files changed by a TopGit branch
480 :`tg help`_: Show TopGit help optionally using a browser
481 :`tg import`_: Import commit(s) to separate TopGit branches
482 :`tg info`_: Show status information about a TopGit branch
483 :`tg log`_: Run git log limiting revisions to a TopGit branch
484 :`tg mail`_: Shortcut for git send-email with ``tg patch`` output
485 :`tg migrate-bases`_: Transition top-bases to new location
486 :`tg next`_: Show branches directly depending on a TopGit branch
487 :`tg patch`_: Generate a patch file for a TopGit branch
488 :`tg prev`_: Show non-annihilated TopGit dependencies for a branch
489 :`tg push`_: Run git push on TopGit branch(es) and depedencies
490 :`tg rebase`_: Auto continue git rebase if rerere resolves conflicts
491 :`tg remote`_: Set up remote for fetching/pushing TopGit branches
492 :`tg revert`_: Revert ref(s) to a state stored in a ``tg tag``
493 :`tg status`_: Show current TopGit status (e.g. in-progress update)
494 :`tg summary`_: Show various information about TopGit branches
495 :`tg tag`_: Create tag that records current TopGit branch state
496 :`tg update`_: Update TopGit branch(es) with respect to dependencies
500 Our sophisticated integrated help facility. Mostly duplicates
505 # to get help for a particular command:
507 # to get help for a particular command in a browser window:
508 $ tg help -w <command>
509 # to get help on TopGit itself
511 # to get help on TopGit itself in a browser
516 Our sophisticated status facility. Similar to Git's status command
517 but shows any in-progress update that's awaiting a merge resolution
518 or any other on-going TopGit activity (such as a branch creation).
520 With a single ``--verbose`` (or ``-v``) option include a short status
521 display for any dirty (but not untracked) files. This also causes all
522 non file status lines to be prefixed with "## ".
524 With two (or more) ``--verbose`` (or ``-v``) options, additionally
525 show full symbolic ref names and unabbreviated hash values.
527 With the ``--exit-code`` option the exit code will be non-zero if any
528 TopGit or Git operation is currently in progress or the working
533 Create a new TopGit-controlled topic branch of the given name
534 (required argument) and switch to it. If no dependencies are
535 specified (by extra arguments passed after the first one), the
536 current branch is assumed to be the only dependency.
538 By default ``tg create`` opens an editor on the new ``.topmsg`` file
539 and then commits the new ``.topmsg`` and ``.topdeps`` files
540 automatically with a suitable default commit message.
542 The commit message can be changed with the ``-m`` (or ``--message``) or
543 ``-F`` (or ``--file``) option. The automatic commit can be suppressed
544 by using the ``--no-ccmmit`` option. Running the editor on the new
545 ``.topmsg`` file can be suppressed by using ``-n`` (or ``--no-edit``)
546 (which also suppresses the automatic commit) or by providing an
547 explicit value for the new ``.topmsg`` file using the ``--topmsg`` or
548 ``--topmsg-file`` option. In any case the ``.topmsg`` content will be
549 automatically reformated to have a ``Subject:`` header line if needed.
551 If more than one dependency is listed, the automatic commit will not
552 take place until AFTER all the listed dependencies have been merged
553 into a base commit which will require some manual merge resolutions if
554 conflicts occur during the merge operations.
556 Previous versions of TopGit behaved as though the ``--no-edit`` option
557 was always given on the command line.
559 The default behavior has been changed to promote a separation between
560 commits that modify ``.topmsg`` and/or ``.topdeps`` and commits that
561 modify other files. This facilitates cleaner cherry picking and other
562 patch maintenance activities.
564 You should edit the patch description (contained in the ``.topmsg``
565 file) as appropriate. It will already contain some prefilled bits.
566 You can set the ``topgit.to``, ``topgit.cc`` and ``topgit.bcc``
567 git configuration variables (see ``man git-config``) in order to
568 have ``tg create`` add these headers with the given default values
569 to ``.topmsg`` before invoking the editor.
571 The main task of ``tg create`` is to set up the topic branch base
572 from the dependencies. This may fail due to merge conflicts if more
573 than one dependency is given. In that case, after you commit the
574 conflict resolution, you should call ``tg update --continue`` to
575 finish merging the dependencies into the new topic branch base.
577 With the ``--no-deps`` option at most one dependency may be listed
578 which may be any valid committish (instead of just refs/heads/...) and
579 the newly created TopGit-controlled branch will have an empty
580 ``.topdeps`` file. This may be desirable in order to create a TopGit-
581 controlled branch that has no changes of its own and serves merely to
582 mark the common dependency that all other TopGit-controlled branches
583 in some set of TopGit-controlled branches depend on. A plain,
584 non-TopGit-controlled branch can be used for the same purpose, but the
585 advantage of a TopGit-controlled branch with no dependencies is that it
586 will be pushed with ``tg push``, it will show up in the ``tg summary``
587 and ``tg info`` output with the subject from its ``.topmsg`` file
588 thereby documenting what it's for and finally it can be set up with
589 ``tg create -r`` and/or ``tg remote --populate`` to facilitate sharing.
591 For example, ``tg create --no-deps release v2.1`` will create a TopGit-
592 controlled ``release`` branch based off the ``v2.1`` tag that can then
593 be used as a base for creation of other TopGit-controlled branches.
594 Then when the time comes to move the base for an entire set of changes
595 up to ``v2.2`` the command ``git update-ref top-bases/release v2.2^0``
596 can be used followed by ``tg update --all``. Note that it's only safe
597 to update ``top-bases/release`` directly in this manner because a) it
598 has no depedencies since it was created with the ``--no-deps`` option
599 and b) the old ``top-bases/release`` value can be fast-forwarded to the
600 new ``top-bases/release`` value.
602 Using ``--no-deps`` it's also possible to use ``tg create`` on an
603 unborn branch (omit the dependency name or specify ``HEAD``). The
604 unborn branch itself can be made into the new TopGit branch (rather
605 than being born empty and then having the new TopGit branch based off
606 that) by specifying ``HEAD`` as the new branch's name (which is
607 probably what you normally want to do in this case anyway so you can
608 just run ``tg create --no-deps HEAD`` to accomplish that).
610 In an alternative use case, if ``-r <branch>`` is given instead of a
611 dependency list, the topic branch is created based on the given
612 remote branch. With just ``-r`` the remote branch name is assumed
613 to be the same as the local topic branch being created. Since no
614 new commits are created in this mode (only two refs will be updated)
615 the editor will never be run for this use case. Note that no other
616 options may be combined with ``-r``.
618 The ``--quiet`` (or ``-q``) option suppresses most informational
623 Remove a TopGit-controlled topic branch of the given name
624 (required argument). Normally, this command will remove only an
625 empty branch (base == head) without dependendents; use ``-f`` to
626 remove a non-empty branch or a branch that is depended upon by
629 The ``-f`` option is also useful to force removal of a branch's
630 base, if you used ``git branch -D B`` to remove branch B, and then
631 certain TopGit commands complain, because the base of branch B
634 Normally ``tg delete`` will refuse to delete the current branch.
635 However, giving ``-f`` twice (or more) will force it to do so but it
636 will first detach your HEAD.
638 IMPORTANT: Currently, this command will *NOT* remove the branch
639 from the dependency list in other branches. You need to take
640 care of this *manually*. This is even more complicated in
641 combination with ``-f`` -- in that case, you need to manually
642 unmerge the removed branch's changes from the branches depending
645 See also ``tg annihilate``.
647 | TODO: ``-a`` to delete all empty branches, depfix, revert
651 Make a commit on the current TopGit-controlled topic branch
652 that makes it equal to its base, including the presence or
653 absence of .topmsg and .topdeps. Annihilated branches are not
654 displayed by ``tg summary``, so they effectively get out of your
655 way. However, the branch still exists, and ``tg push`` will
656 push it (except if given the ``-a`` option). This way, you can
657 communicate that the branch is no longer wanted.
659 When annihilating a branch that has dependents (i.e. branches
660 that depend on it), those dependents have the dependencies of
661 the branch being annihilated added to them if they do not already
662 have them as dependencies. Essentially the DAG is repaired to
663 skip over the annihilated branch.
665 Normally, this command will remove only an empty branch
666 (base == head, except for changes to the .top* files); use
667 ``-f`` to annihilate a non-empty branch.
669 After completing the annihilation itself, normally ``tg update``
670 is run on any modified dependents. Use the ``--no-update`` option
671 to suppress running ``tg update``.
675 Change the dependencies of a TopGit-controlled topic branch.
676 This should have several subcommands, but only ``add`` is
679 The ``add`` subcommand takes an argument naming a topic branch to
680 be added, adds it to ``.topdeps``, performs a commit and then
681 updates your topic branch accordingly. If you want to do other
682 things related to the dependency addition, like adjusting
683 ``.topmsg``, use the option ``--no-commit``. Adding the
684 ``--no-update`` (or ``--no-commit``) option will suppress the
685 ``tg update`` normally performed after committing the change.
687 It is safe to run ``tg depend add`` in a dirty worktree, but the
688 normally performed ``tg update`` will be suppressed in that case
689 (even if neither ``--no-update`` nor ``--no-commit`` is given).
691 You have enabled ``git rerere`` haven't you?
693 | TODO: Subcommand for removing dependencies, obviously
697 List files changed by the current or specified topic branch.
700 -i list files based on index instead of branch
701 -w list files based on working tree instead of branch
705 Show summary information about the current or specified topic
708 Numbers in parenthesis after a branch name such as "(11/3 commits)"
709 indicate how many commits on the branch (11) and how many of those
710 are non-merge commits (3).
712 Alternatively, if ``--heads`` is used then which of the independent
713 TopGit branch heads (as output by ``tg summary --tgish-only --heads)``
714 contains the specified commit (which may be any committish -- defaults
715 to ``HEAD`` if not given). Zero or more results will be output.
717 If ``--leaves`` is used then the unique list of leaves of the current
718 or specified topic branch is shown as one fully-qualified ref per line.
719 Duplicates are suppressed and a tag name will be used when appropriate.
720 A "leaf" is any dependency that is either not a TopGit branch or is
721 the base of a non-annihilated TopGit branch with no non-annihilated
724 A linearized patch series can only be automatically created for a
725 TopGit topic branch (including its recursive dependencies) when exactly
726 one line is output by ``tg info --leaves <topic-branch>``.
730 Generate a patch from the current or specified topic branch.
731 This means that the diff between the topic branch base and head
732 (latest commit) is shown, appended to the description found in
733 the ``.topmsg`` file.
735 The patch is simply dumped to stdout. In the future, ``tg patch``
736 will be able to automatically send the patches by mail or save
737 them to files. (TODO)
740 -i base patch generation on index instead of branch
741 -w base patch generation on working tree instead of branch
742 --binary pass --binary to ``git diff-tree`` to enable generation
744 --diff-opt options after the branch name (and an optional ``--``)
745 are passed directly to ``git diff-tree``
747 In order to pass a sole explicit ``-w`` through to ``git diff-tree`` it
748 must be separated from the ``tg`` options by an explicit ``--``.
749 Or it can be spelled as ``--ignore-all-space`` to distinguuish it from
750 ``tg``'s ``-w`` option.
752 If additional non-``tg`` options are passed through to
753 ``git diff-tree`` (other than ``--binary`` which is fully supported)
754 the resulting ``tg patch`` output may not be appliable.
758 Send a patch from the current or specified topic branch as
761 Takes the patch given on the command line and emails it out.
762 Destination addresses such as To, Cc and Bcc are taken from the
765 Since it actually boils down to ``git send-email``, please refer
766 to the documentation for that for details on how to setup email
767 for git. You can pass arbitrary options to this command through
768 the ``-s`` parameter, but you must double-quote everything. The
769 ``-r`` parameter with a msgid can be used to generate in-reply-to
770 and reference headers to an earlier mail.
772 WARNING: be careful when using this command. It easily sends
773 out several mails. You might want to run::
775 git config sendemail.confirm always
777 to let ``git send-email`` ask for confirmation before sending any
781 -i base patch generation on index instead of branch
782 -w base patch generation on working tree instead of branch
784 | TODO: ``tg mail patchfile`` to mail an already exported patch
785 | TODO: mailing patch series
786 | TODO: specifying additional options and addresses on command line
790 Register the given remote as TopGit-controlled. This will create
791 the namespace for the remote branch bases and teach ``git fetch``
792 to operate on them. However, from TopGit 0.8 onwards you need to
793 use ``tg push``, or ``git push --mirror``, for pushing
794 TopGit-controlled branches.
796 ``tg remote`` takes an optional remote name argument, and an
797 optional ``--populate`` switch. Use ``--populate`` for your
798 origin-style remotes: it will seed the local topic branch system
799 based on the remote topic branches. ``--populate`` will also make
800 ``tg remote`` automatically fetch the remote, and ``tg update`` look
801 at branches of this remote for updates by default.
803 Using ``--populate`` with a remote name causes the ``topgit.remote``
804 git configuration variable to be set to the given remote name.
808 Show overview of all TopGit-tracked topic branches and their
809 up-to-date status. With a branch name limit output to that branch.
810 Using ``--deps-only`` or ``--rdeps`` changes the default from all
811 branches to just the current ``HEAD`` branch but using ``--all`` as
812 the branch name will show results for all branches instead of ``HEAD``.
815 marks the current topic branch
818 indicates that it introduces no changes of its own
821 indicates respectively whether it is local-only
825 indicates respectively if it is ahead or out-of-date
826 with respect to its remote mate
829 indicates that it is out-of-date with respect to its
833 indicates that it has missing dependencies [even if
834 they are recursive ones]
837 indicates that it is out-of-date with respect to
840 This can take a longish time to accurately determine all the
841 relevant information about each branch; you can pass ``-t`` (or ``-l``
842 or ``--list``) to get just a terse list of topic branch names quickly.
844 Passing ``--heads`` shows independent topic branch names and when
845 combined with ``--rdeps`` behaves as though ``--rdeps`` were run with
846 the output of ``--heads``.
848 Using ``--heads-only`` behaves as though the output of ``--heads`` was
849 passed as the list of branches along with ``--without-deps``.
851 Alternatively, you can pass ``--graphviz`` to get a dot-suitable output
852 for drawing a dependency graph between the topic branches.
854 You can also use the ``--sort`` option to sort the branches using
855 a topological sort. This is especially useful if each
856 TopGit-tracked topic branch depends on a single parent branch,
857 since it will then print the branches in the dependency order.
858 In more complex scenarios, a text graph view would be much more
859 useful, but that has not yet been implemented.
861 The ``--deps`` option outputs dependency information between
862 branches in a machine-readable format. Feed this to ``tsort`` to
863 get the output from --sort.
865 The ``--deps-only`` option outputs a sorted list of the unique branch
866 names given on the command line plus all of their recursive
867 dependencies (subject to ``--exclude`` of course). When
868 ``--deps-only`` is given the default is to just display information for
869 ``HEAD``, but that can be changed by using ``--all`` as the branch
870 name. Each branch name will appear only once in the output no matter
871 how many times it's visited while tracing the dependency graph or how
872 many branch names are given on the command line to process.
874 The ``--rdeps`` option outputs dependency information in an indented
875 text format that clearly shows all the dependencies and their
876 relationships to one another. When ``--rdeps`` is given the default is
877 to just display information for ``HEAD``, but that can be changed by
878 using ``--all`` as the branch name or by adding the ``--heads`` option.
879 Note that ``tg summary --rdeps --heads`` can be particularly helpful in
880 seeing all the TopGit-controlled branches in the repository and their
881 relationships to one another.
883 Adding ``--with-deps`` replaces the given list of branches (which will
884 default to ``HEAD`` if none are given) with the result of running
885 ``tg summary --deps-only --tgish`` on the list of branches. This can
886 be helpful in limiting ``tg summary`` output to only the list of given
887 branches and their dependencies when many TopGit-controlled branches
888 are present in the repository. When it would be allowed,
889 ``--with-deps`` is now the default. Use ``--without-deps`` to switch
890 back to the old behavior.
892 With ``--exclude branch``, branch can be excluded from the output
893 meaning it will be skipped and its name will be omitted from any
894 dependency output. The ``--exclude`` option may be repeated to omit
895 more than one branch from the output. Limiting the output to a single
896 branch that has been excluded will result in no output at all.
898 The ``--tgish-only`` option behaves as though any non-TopGit-controlled
899 dependencies encountered during processing had been listed after an
900 ``--exclude`` option.
902 Note that the branch name can be specified as ``HEAD`` or ``@`` as a
903 shortcut for the TopGit-controlled branch that ``HEAD`` is a
904 symbolic ref to. The ``tg summary @`` command can be quite useful.
907 -i Use TopGit metadata from the index instead of the branch
908 -w Use TopGit metadata from the working tree instead of the branch
913 Switch to a topic branch. You can use ``git checkout <branch>``
914 to get the same effect, but this command helps you navigate
915 the dependency graph, or allows you to match the topic branch
916 name using a regular expression, so it can be more convenient.
918 There following subcommands are available:
921 Check out a branch that directly
922 depends on your current branch.
925 Check out a branch that this branch
928 ``tg checkout [goto] [--] <pattern>``
929 Check out a topic branch that
930 matches ``<pattern>``. ``<pattern>``
931 is used as a sed pattern to filter
932 all the topic branches. Both ``goto`` and
933 ``--`` may be omitted provided ``<pattern>``
934 is not ``push``, ``pop``, ``-a``, ``--all``,
935 ``goto``, ``..``, ``--``, ``next``, ``child``,
936 ``prev``, ``parent``, ``-h`` or ``--help``.
939 An alias for ``push``.
941 ``tg checkout child``
942 An alias for ``push``.
945 An alias for ``push``.
948 An alias for ``pop``.
950 ``tg checkout parent``
951 An alias for ``pop``.
954 An alias for ``pop``.
956 If any of the above commands can find more than one possible
957 branch to switch to, you will be presented with the matches
958 and asked to select one of them.
960 If the ``--ignore-other-worktrees`` (or ``--iow``) option is given and
961 the current Git version is at least 2.5.0 then the full
962 ``--ignore-other-worktrees`` option will be passed along to the
963 ``git checkout`` command when it's run (otherwise the option will be
964 silently ignored and not passed to Git as it would cause an error).
966 The ``<pattern>`` of ``tg checkout goto`` is optional. If you don't
967 supply it, all the available topic branches are listed and you
968 can select one of them.
970 Normally, the ``push`` and ``pop`` commands moves one step in
971 the dependency graph of the topic branches. The ``-a`` option
972 causes them (and their aliases) to move as far as possible.
973 That is, ``tg checkout push -a`` moves to a topic branch that
974 depends (directly or indirectly) on the current branch and
975 that no other branch depends on. ``tg checkout pop -a``
976 moves to a regular branch that the current topic branch
977 depends on (directly or indirectly). If there is more than
978 one possibility, you will be prompted for your selection.
982 Export a tidied-up history of the current topic branch and its
983 dependencies, suitable for feeding upstream. Each topic branch
984 corresponds to a single commit or patch in the cleaned up
985 history (corresponding basically exactly to ``tg patch`` output
986 for the topic branch).
988 The command has three possible outputs now -- either a Git branch
989 with the collapsed history, a Git branch with a linearized
990 history, or a quilt series in new directory.
992 In the case where you are producing collapsed history in a new
993 branch, you can use this collapsed structure either for
994 providing a pull source for upstream, or for further
995 linearization e.g. for creation of a quilt series using git log::
997 git log --pretty=email -p --topo-order origin..exported
999 To better understand the function of ``tg export``, consider this
1000 dependency structure::
1002 origin/master - t/foo/blue - t/foo/red - master
1003 `- t/bar/good <,----------'
1004 `- t/baz ------------'
1006 (where each of the branches may have a hefty history). Then::
1008 master$ tg export for-linus
1010 will create this commit structure on the branch ``for-linus``::
1012 origin/master - t/foo/blue -. merge - t/foo/red -.. merge - master
1013 `- t/bar/good <,-------------------'/
1014 `- t/baz ---------------------'
1016 In this mode, ``tg export`` works on the current topic branch, and
1017 can be called either without an option (in that case,
1018 ``--collapse`` is assumed), or with the ``--collapse`` option, and
1019 with one mandatory argument: the name of the branch where the
1020 exported result will be stored.
1022 When using the linearize mode::
1024 master$ tg export --linearize for-linus
1026 you get a linear history respecting the dependencies of your
1027 patches in a new branch ``for-linus``. The result should be more
1028 or less the same as using quilt mode and then reimporting it
1029 into a Git branch. (More or less because the topological order
1030 can usually be extended in more than one way into a total order,
1031 and the two methods may choose different ones.) The result
1032 might be more appropriate for merging upstream, as it contains
1035 Note that you might get conflicts during linearization because
1036 the patches are reordered to get a linear history. If linearization
1037 would produce conflicts then using ``--quilt`` will also likely result
1038 in conflicts when the exported quilt series is applied. Since the
1039 ``--quilt`` mode simply runs a series of ``tg patch`` commands to
1040 generate the patches in the exported quilt series and those patches
1041 will end up being applied linearly, the same conflicts that would be
1042 produced by the ``--linearize`` option will then occur at that time.
1044 To avoid conflicts produced by ``--linearize`` (or by applying the
1045 ``--quilt`` output), use the default ``--collapse`` mode and then use
1046 ``tg rebase`` (or ``git rebase -m`` directly) on the collapsed branch
1047 (with a suitable <upstream>) followed by ``git format-patch`` on the
1048 rebased result to produce a conflict-free patch set. A suitable
1049 upstream may be determined with the ``tg info --leaves`` command (if
1050 it outputs more than one line, linearization will be problematic).
1052 You have enabled ``git rerere`` haven't you?
1054 When using the quilt mode::
1056 master$ tg export --quilt for-linus
1058 would create the following directory ``for-linus``::
1060 for-linus/t/foo/blue.diff
1061 for-linus/t/foo/red.diff
1062 for-linus/t/bar/good.diff
1063 for-linus/t/baz.diff
1070 With ``--quilt``, you can also pass the ``-b`` parameter followed
1071 by a comma-separated explicit list of branches to export, or
1072 the ``--all`` parameter (which can be shortened to ``-a``) to
1073 export them all. The ``--binary`` option enables producing Git
1074 binary patches. These options are currently only supported
1077 In ``--quilt`` mode the patches are named like the originating
1078 topgit branch. So usually they end up in subdirectories of the
1079 output directory. With the ``--flatten`` option the names are
1080 mangled so that they end up directly in the output dir (slashes
1081 are replaced with underscores). With the ``--strip[=N]`` option
1082 the first ``N`` subdirectories (all if no ``N`` is given) get
1083 stripped off. Names are always ``--strip``'d before being
1084 ``--flatten``'d. With the option ``--numbered`` (which implies
1085 ``--flatten``) the patch names get a number as prefix to allow
1086 getting the order without consulting the series file, which
1087 eases sending out the patches.
1089 | TODO: Make stripping of non-essential headers configurable
1090 | TODO: Make stripping of [PATCH] and other prefixes configurable
1091 | TODO: ``--mbox`` option to export instead as an mbox file
1092 | TODO: support ``--all`` option in other modes of operation
1093 | TODO: For quilt exporting, export the linearized history created in
1094 a temporary branch--this would allow producing conflict-less
1099 Import commits within the given revision range into TopGit,
1100 creating one topic branch per commit. The dependencies are set
1101 up to form a linear sequence starting on your current branch --
1102 or a branch specified by the ``-d`` parameter, if present.
1104 The branch names are auto-guessed from the commit messages and
1105 prefixed by ``t/`` by default; use ``-p <prefix>`` to specify an
1106 alternative prefix (even an empty one).
1108 Alternatively, you can use the ``-s NAME`` parameter to specify
1109 the name of the target branch; the command will then take one
1110 more argument describing a *single* commit to import.
1114 Update the current, specified or all topic branches with respect
1115 to changes in the branches they depend on and remote branches.
1116 This is performed in two phases -- first, changes within the
1117 dependencies are merged to the base, then the base is merged
1118 into the topic branch. The output will guide you on what to do
1119 next in case of conflicts.
1121 You have enabled ``git rerere`` haven't you?
1123 When ``-a`` (or ``--all``) is specifed, updates all topic branches
1124 matched by ``<pattern>``'s (see ``git-for-each-ref(1)`` for details),
1125 or all if no ``<pattern>`` is given. Any topic branches with missing
1126 dependencies will be skipped entirely unless ``--skip-missing`` is
1129 When ``--skip-missing`` is specifed, an attempt is made to update topic
1130 branches with missing dependencies by skipping only the dependencies
1131 that are missing. Caveat utilitor.
1133 When ``--stash`` is specified (or the ``topgit.autostash`` config
1134 value is set to ``true``), a ref stash will be automatically created
1135 just before beginning updates if any are needed. The ``--no-stash``
1136 option may be used to disable a ``topgit.autostash=true`` setting.
1137 See the ``tg tag`` ``--stash`` option for details.
1139 After the update, if a single topic branch was specified, it is
1140 left as the current one; if ``-a`` was specified, it returns to
1141 the branch which was current at the beginning.
1143 If your dependencies are not up-to-date, ``tg update`` will first
1144 recurse into them and update them.
1146 If a remote branch update brings in dependencies on branches
1147 that are not yet instantiated locally, you can either bring in
1148 all the new branches from the remote using ``tg remote
1149 --populate``, or only pick out the missing ones using ``tg create
1150 -r`` (``tg summary`` will point out branches with incomplete
1151 dependencies by showing an ``!`` next to them).
1153 | TODO: ``tg update -a -c`` to autoremove (clean) up-to-date branches
1157 If ``-a`` or ``--all`` was specified, pushes all non-annihilated
1158 TopGit-controlled topic branches, to a remote repository.
1159 Otherwise, pushes the specified topic branches -- or the
1160 current branch, if you don't specify which. By default, the
1161 remote gets all the dependencies (both TopGit-controlled and
1162 non-TopGit-controlled) and bases pushed to it too. If
1163 ``--tgish-only`` was specified, only TopGit-controlled
1164 dependencies will be pushed, and if ``--no-deps`` was specified,
1165 no dependencies at all will be pushed.
1167 The ``--dry-run`` and ``--force`` options are passed directly to
1168 ``git push`` if given.
1170 The remote may be specified with the ``-r`` option. If no remote
1171 was specified, the configured default TopGit remote will be
1176 Prints the base commit of each of the named topic branches, or
1177 the current branch if no branches are named. Prints an error
1178 message and exits with exit code 1 if the named branch is not
1183 Prints the git log of the named topgit branch -- or the current
1184 branch, if you don't specify a name.
1186 This is really just a convenient shortcut for:
1188 ``git log --first-parent --no-merges $(tg base <name>)..<name>``
1190 where ``<name>`` is the name of the TopGit topic branch (or omitted
1191 for the current branch).
1193 NOTE: if you have merged changes from a different repository, this
1194 command might not list all interesting commits.
1198 Creates a TopGit annotated/signed tag or lists the reflog of one.
1200 A TopGit annotated tag records the current state of one or more TopGit
1201 branches and their dependencies and may be used to revert to the tagged
1202 state at any point in the future.
1204 When reflogs are enabled (the default in a non-bare repository) and
1205 combined with the ``--force`` option a single tag name may be used as a
1206 sort of TopGit branch state stash. The special branch name ``--all``
1207 may be used to tag the state of all current TopGit branches to
1208 facilitate this function and has the side-effect of suppressing the
1209 out-of-date check allowing out-of-date branches to be included.
1211 As a special feature, ``--stash`` may be used as the tag name in which
1212 case ``--all`` is implied if no branch name is listed (instead of the
1213 normal default of ``HEAD``), ``--force`` and ``--no-edit`` (use
1214 ``--edit`` to change that) are automatically activated and the tag will
1215 be saved to ``refs/tgstash`` instead of ``refs/tags/<tagname>``.
1216 The ``--stash`` tag name may also be used with the ``-g``/``--reflog``
1219 The mostly undocumented option ``--allow-outdated`` will bypass the
1220 out-of-date check and is implied when ``--stash`` or ``--all`` is used.
1222 A TopGit annotated/signed tag is simply a Git annotated/signed tag with
1223 a "TOPGIT REFS" section appended to the end of the tag message (and
1224 preceding the signature for signed tags). PEM-style begin and end
1225 lines surround one line per ref where the format of each line is
1226 full-hash SP ref-name. A line will be included for each branch given
1227 on the command line and each ref they depend on either directly or
1230 If more than one TopGit branch is given on the command line, a new
1231 commit will be created that has an empty tree and all of the given
1232 TopGit branches as parents and that commit will be tagged. If a single
1233 TopGit branch is given, then it will be tagged. If the ``--tree``
1234 option is used then it will be used instead of an empty tree (a new
1235 commit will be created if necessary to guarantee the specified tree is
1236 what's in the commit the newly created tag refers to). The argument to
1237 the ``--tree`` option may be any valid treeish.
1239 All the options for creating a tag serve the same purpose as their Git
1240 equivalents except for two. The ``--refs`` option suppresses tag
1241 creation entirely and emits the "TOPGIT REFS" section that would have
1242 been included with the tag. If the ``--no-edit`` option is given and
1243 no message is supplied (via the ``-m`` or ``-F`` option) then the
1244 default message created by TopGit will be used without running the
1247 With ``-g`` or ``--reflog`` show the reflog for a tag. With the
1248 ``--reflog-message`` option the message from the reflog is shown.
1249 With the ``--commit-message`` option the first line of the tag's
1250 message (if the object is a tag) or the commit message (if the object
1251 is a commit) falling back to the reflog message for tree and blob
1252 objects is shown. The default is ``--reflog-message`` unless the
1253 ``--stash`` (``refs/tgstash``) is being shown in which case the default
1254 is then ``--commit-message``. Just add either option explicitly to
1255 override the default.
1257 When showing reflogs, non-tag entries are annotated with their type
1258 unless ``--no-type`` is given.
1260 TopGit tags are created with a reflog if core.logallrefupdates is
1261 enabled (the default for non-bare repositories). Unfortunately Git
1262 is incapable of showing an annotated/signed tag's reflog
1263 (using git log -g) as it will first resolve the tag before checking to
1264 see if it has a reflog. Git can, however, show reflogs for lightweight
1265 tags (using git log -g) just fine but that's not helpful here. Use
1266 ``tg tag`` with the ``-g`` or ``--reflog`` option to see the reflog for
1267 an actual tag object. This also works on non-TopGit annotated/signed
1268 tags as well provided they have a reflog.
1270 The number of entries shown may be limited with the ``-n`` option. If
1271 the tagname is omitted then ``--stash`` is assumed.
1273 The ``--delete`` option is a convenience option that runs the
1274 ``git update-ref -d`` command on the specified tag removing it and its
1275 reflog (if it has one).
1277 The ``--clear`` option clears all but the most recent (the ``@{0}``)
1278 reflog entries from the reflog for the specified tag. It's equivalent
1279 to dropping all the higher numbered reflog entries.
1281 The ``--drop`` option drops the specified reflog entry and requires the
1282 given tagname to have an ``@{n}`` suffix where ``n`` is the reflog
1283 entry number to be dropped. This is really just a convenience option
1284 that runs the appropriate ``git reflog delete`` command.
1286 Note that when combined with ``tg revert``, a tag created by ``tg tag``
1287 can be used to transfer TopGit branches. Simply create the tag, push
1288 it somewhere and then have the recipient run ``tg revert`` to recreate
1289 the TopGit branches. This may be helpful in situations where it's not
1290 feasible to push all the refs corresponding to the TopGit-controlled
1291 branches and their top-bases.
1295 Provides a ``git rebase`` rerere auto continue function. It may be
1296 used as a drop-in replacement front-end for ``git rebase -m`` that
1297 automatically continues the rebase when ``git rerere`` information is
1298 sufficient to resolve all conflicts.
1300 You have enabled ``git rerere`` haven't you?
1302 If the ``-m`` or ``--merge`` option is not present then ``tg rebase``
1303 will complain and not do anything.
1305 When ``git rerere`` is enabled, previously resolved conflicts are
1306 remembered and can be automatically staged (see ``rerere.autoUpdate``).
1308 However, even with auto staging, ``git rebase`` still stops and
1309 requires an explicit ``git rebase --continue`` to keep going.
1311 In the case where ``git rebase -m`` is being used to flatten history
1312 (such as after a ``tg export --collapse`` prior to a
1313 ``git format-patch``), there's a good chance all conflicts have already
1314 been resolved during normal merge maintenance operations so there's no
1315 reason ``git rebase`` could not automatically continue, but there's no
1316 option to make it do so.
1318 The ``tg rebase`` command provides a ``git rebase --auto-continue``
1321 All the same rebase options can be used (they are simply passed through
1322 to Git unchanged). However, the ``rerere.autoUpdate`` option is
1323 automatically temporarily enabled while running ``git rebase`` and
1324 should ``git rebase`` stop asking one to resolve and continue, but all
1325 conflicts have already been resolved and staged using rerere
1326 information, then ``git rebase --continue`` will be automatically run.
1330 Provides the ability to revert one or more TopGit branches and their
1331 dependencies to a previous state contained within a tag created using
1332 the ``tg tag`` command. In addition to the actual revert mode
1333 operation a list mode operation is also provided to examine a tag's ref
1336 The default mode (``-l`` or ``--list``) shows the state of one or more
1337 of the refs/branches stored in the tag data. When no refs are given on
1338 the command line, all refs in the tag data are shown. With the special
1339 ref name ``--heads`` then the indepedent heads contained in the tag
1340 data are shown. The ``--deps`` option shows the specified refs and all
1341 of their dependencies in a single list with no duplicates. The
1342 ``--rdeps`` option shows a display similar to ``tg summary --rdeps``
1343 for each ref or all independent heads if no ref is given on the command
1344 line. The standard ``--no-short``, ``--short=n`` etc. options may be
1345 used to override the default ``--short`` output. With ``--hash`` (or
1346 ``--hash-only``) show only the hash in ``--list`` mode in which case
1347 the default is ``--no-short``. The ``--hash`` option can be used much
1348 like the ``git rev-parse --verify`` command to extract a specific hash
1349 value out of a TopGit tag.
1351 The revert mode has three submodes, dry-run mode (``-n`` or
1352 ``--dry-run``), force mode (``-f`` or ``--force``) and interactive mode
1353 (``-i`` or ``--interactive``). If ``--dry-run`` (or ``-n``) is given
1354 no ref updates will actually be performed but what would have been
1355 updated is shown instead. If ``--interactive`` (or ``-i``) is given
1356 then the editor is invoked on an instruction sheet allowing manual
1357 selection of the refs to be updated before proceeding. Since revert is
1358 potentially a destructive operation, at least one of the submodes must
1359 be specified explicitly. If no refs are listed on the command line
1360 then all refs in the tag data are reverted. Otherwise the listed refs
1361 and all of their dependencies (unless ``--no-deps`` is given) are
1362 reverted. Unless ``--no-stash`` is given a new stash will be created
1363 using ``tg tag --stash`` (except, of course, in dry-run mode) just
1364 before actually performing the updates to facilitate recovery from
1367 Both modes accept fully-qualified (i.e. starts with ``refs/``) ref
1368 names as well as unqualified names (which will be assumed to be located
1369 under ``refs/heads/``). In revert mode a tgish ref will always have
1370 both its ``refs/heads/`` and ``refs/top-bases/`` values included no
1371 matter how it's listed unless ``--no-deps`` is given and the ref is
1372 fully qualified (i.e. starts with ``refs/``) or one or the other of its
1373 values was removed from the instruction sheet in interactive mode. In
1374 list mode a tgish ref will always have both its ``refs/heads/`` and
1375 ``refs/top-bases/`` values included only when using the ``--deps`` or
1376 ``--rdeps`` options.
1378 The ``--tgish-only`` option excludes non-tgish refs (i.e. refs that do
1379 not have a ``refs/heads/<name>``, ``refs/top-bases/<name>`` pair).
1381 The ``--exclude`` option (which can be repeated) excludes specific
1382 refs. If the name given to ``--exclude`` is not fully-qualified (i.e.
1383 starts with ``refs/``) then it will exclude both members of a tgish ref
1386 The ``--quiet`` (or ``-q``) option may be used in revert mode to
1387 suppress non-dry-run ref change status messages.
1389 The special tag name ``--stash`` (as well as with ``@{n}`` suffixes)
1390 can be used to refer to ``refs/tgstash``.
1392 The ``tg revert`` command supports tags of tags that contains TopGit
1393 refs. So, for example, if you do this::
1396 git tag -f -a -m "tag the tag" newtag newtag
1398 Then ``newtag`` will be a tag of a tag containing a ``TOPGIT REFS``
1399 section. ``tg revert`` knows how to dereference the outermost
1400 tag to get to the next (and the next etc.) tag to find the
1401 ``TOPGIT REFS`` section so after the above sequence, the tag ``newtag``
1402 can still be used successfully with ``tg revert``.
1404 NOTE: If HEAD points to a ref that is updated by a revert operation
1405 then NO WARNING whatsoever will be issued, but the index and working
1406 tree will always be left completely untouched (and the reflog for
1407 the pointed-to ref can always be used to find the previous value).
1411 Outputs the direct dependencies for the current or named branch.
1414 -i show dependencies based on index instead of branch
1415 -w show dependencies based on working tree instead of branch
1419 Outputs all branches which directly depend on the current or
1423 -i show dependencies based on index instead of branch
1424 -w show dependencies based on working tree instead of branch
1428 Transition top-bases from old location to new location.
1430 Beginning with TopGit release 0.19.4, TopGit has the ability to store
1431 the top-bases refs in either the old ``ref/top-bases/...`` location or
1432 the new ``refs/heads/{top-bases}/...`` location. Starting with TopGit
1433 release 0.20.0, the default is the new location.
1435 By storing the top-bases under heads, Git is less likely to complain
1436 when manipulating them, hosting providers are more likely to provide
1437 access to them and Git prevents them from pointing at anything other
1438 than a commit object. All in all a win for everyone.
1440 TopGit attempts to automatically detect whether the new or old location
1441 is being used for the top-bases and just do the right thing. However,
1442 by explicitly setting the config value ``topgit.top-bases`` to either
1443 ``refs`` for the old location or ``heads`` for the new location the
1444 auto-detection can be bypassed. If no top-bases refs are present in
1445 the repository the default prior to TopGit release 0.20.0 is to use the
1446 old location but starting with TopGit release 0.20.0 the default is to
1447 use the new location.
1449 The ``tg migrate-bases`` command may be used to migrate top-bases refs
1450 from the old location to the new location (or, by using the
1451 undocumented ``--reverse`` option, vice versa).
1453 With few exceptions (``tg create -r`` and ``tg revert``), all top-bases
1454 refs (both local *and* remote refs) are expected to be stored in the
1455 same location (either new or old). A repository's current location for
1456 storing top-bases refs may be shown with the ``tg --top-bases`` command.
1464 TopGit stores all the topic branches in the regular ``refs/heads/``
1465 namespace (so we recommend distinguishing them with the ``t/`` prefix).
1466 Apart from that, TopGit also maintains a set of auxiliary refs in
1467 ``refs/top-*``. Currently, only ``refs/top-bases/`` is used, containing the
1468 current *base* of the given topic branch -- this is basically a merge of
1469 all the branches the topic branch depends on; it is updated during ``tg
1470 update`` and then merged to the topic branch, and it is the base of a
1471 patch generated from the topic branch by ``tg patch``.
1473 All the metadata is tracked within the source tree and history of the
1474 topic branch itself, in ``.top*`` files; these files are kept isolated
1475 within the topic branches during TopGit-controlled merges and are of
1476 course omitted during ``tg patch``. The state of these files in base
1477 commits is undefined; look at them only in the topic branches
1478 themselves. Currently, two files are defined:
1481 Contains the description of the topic branch in a
1482 mail-like format, plus the author information, whatever
1483 Cc headers you choose or the post-three-dashes message.
1484 When mailing out your patch, basically only a few extra
1485 mail headers are inserted and then the patch itself is
1486 appended. Thus, as your patches evolve, you can record
1487 nuances like whether the particular patch should have
1488 To-list / Cc-maintainer or vice-versa and similar
1489 nuances, if your project is into that. ``From`` is
1490 prefilled from your current ``GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT``; other
1491 headers can be prefilled from various optional
1492 ``topgit.*`` git config options.
1495 Contains the one-per-line list of branches this branch
1496 depends on, pre-seeded by ``tg create``. A (continuously
1497 updated) merge of these branches will be the *base* of
1500 IMPORTANT: DO NOT EDIT ``.topdeps`` MANUALLY!!! If you do so, you need to
1501 know exactly what you are doing, since this file must stay in sync with
1502 the Git history information, otherwise very bad things will happen.
1504 TopGit also automagically installs a bunch of custom commit-related
1505 hooks that will verify whether you are committing the ``.top*`` files in a
1506 sane state. It will add the hooks to separate files within the ``hooks/``
1507 subdirectory, and merely insert calls to them to the appropriate hooks
1508 and make them executable (but will make sure the original hook's code is
1509 not called if the hook was not executable beforehand).
1511 Another automagically installed piece is a ``.git/info/attributes``
1512 specifier for an ``ours`` merge strategy for the files ``.topmsg`` and
1513 ``.topdeps``, and the (intuitive) ``ours`` merge strategy definition in
1520 There are two remaining issues with accessing topic branches in remote
1523 (i) Referring to remote topic branches from your local repository
1524 (ii) Developing some of the remote topic branches locally
1526 There are two somewhat contradictory design considerations here:
1528 (a) Hacking on multiple independent TopGit remotes in a single
1530 (b) Having a self-contained topic system in local refs space
1532 To us, (a) does not appear to be very convincing, while (b) is quite
1533 desirable for ``git-log topic`` etc. working, and increased conceptual
1536 Thus, we choose to instantiate all the topic branches of given remote
1537 locally; this is performed by ``tg remote --populate``. ``tg update``
1538 will also check if a branch can be updated from its corresponding remote
1539 branch. The logic needs to be somewhat involved if we are to "do the
1540 right thing". First, we update the base, handling the remote branch as
1541 if it was the first dependency; thus, conflict resolutions made in the
1542 remote branch will be carried over to our local base automagically.
1543 Then, the base is merged into the remote branch and the result is merged
1544 to the local branch -- again, to carry over remote conflict resolutions.
1545 In the future, this order might be adjustable on a per-update basis, in
1546 case local changes happen to be diverging more than the remote ones.
1547 (See the details in `The Update Process`_ for more in depth coverage.)
1549 All commands by default refer to the remote that ``tg remote --populate``
1550 was called on the last time (stored in the ``topgit.remote`` git
1551 configuration variable). You can manually run any command with a
1552 different base remote by passing ``-r REMOTE`` *before* the subcommand
1559 A familiarity with the terms in the GLOSSARY_ is helpful for understanding the
1560 content of this sections. See also the IMPLEMENTATION_ section.
1565 When a branch is "updated" using the ``tg update`` command the following steps
1568 1) The branch and all of its dependencies (and theirs recursively)
1569 are checked to see which ones are *out-of-date*. See glossary_.
1571 2) Each of the branch's direct dependencies (i.e. they are listed in
1572 the branch's ``.topdeps`` file) which is out of date is updated
1573 before proceeding (yup, this is a recursive process).
1575 3) Each of the branch's direct dependencies (i.e. they are listed in
1576 the branch's ``.topdes`` file) that was updated in the previous
1577 step is now merged into the branch's corresponding base. If a
1578 remote is involved, and the branch's corresponding base does NOT
1579 contain the remote branch's corresponding base that remote base is
1580 also merged into the branch's base at this time as well (it will be
1581 the first item merged into the branch's base).
1583 4) If the branch has a corresponding remote branch and the branch
1584 does not already contain it, it's merged into the branch's base
1585 (which was possibly already updated in step (3) to contain the
1586 remote branch's base but not the remote branch itself) on a detached
1587 HEAD. Yup, this step can be a bit confusing and no, the updated
1588 base from step (3) has not yet been merged into the branch itself
1589 yet either. If there is no remote branch this step does not apply.
1590 Using a detached HEAD allows the remote branch to be merged into the
1591 contents of the base without actually perturbing the base's ref.
1593 5) If there is a remote branch present then use the result of step (4)
1594 otherwise use the branch's base and merge that into the branch
1597 That's it! Simple, right? ;)
1599 Unless the auto stash option has been disabled (see `no undo`_, `tg update`_
1600 and `tg tag`_), a copy of all the old refs values will be stashed away
1601 immediately after step (1) before starting step (2), but only if anything is
1602 actually found to be out-of-date.
1607 The ``tg update`` command regularly performs merges while executing an update
1608 operation. In order to speed things up, it attempts to do in-index merges
1609 where possible. It accomplishes this by using a separate, temporary index
1610 file and the ``git read-tree -m --aggressive`` command possibly assisted by
1611 the ``git merge-index`` and ``git merge-file`` commands. This combination may
1612 be repeated more than once to perform an octopus in-index merge. If this
1613 fails, the files are checked out and a normal ``git merge`` three-way merge is
1614 performed (possily multiple times). If the normal ``git merge`` fails then
1615 user intervention is required to resolve the merge conflict(s) and continue.
1617 Since the ``tg annihilate``, ``tg create`` and ``tg depend add`` commands may
1618 end up running the ``tg update`` machinery behind the scenes to complete their
1619 operation they may also result in any of these merge strategies being used.
1621 In addition to the normal Git merge strategies (if the in-index merging fails),
1622 there are four possible TopGit merge strategies that may be shown. Since they
1623 all involve use of the ``git read-tree -m --aggressive`` command they are all
1624 variations of a "trivial aggressive" merge. The "trivial" part because all of
1625 the merges done by ``git read-tree -m`` are described as "trivial" and the
1626 "aggressive" part because the ``--aggressive`` option is always used.
1628 1) "trivial aggressive"
1629 Only two heads were involved and all merging was completed by
1630 the ``git read-tree -m --aggressive`` command.
1632 2) "trivial aggressive automatic"
1633 Only two heads were involved but after the
1634 ``git read-tree -m --aggressive`` command completed there were
1635 still unresolved items and ``git merge-index`` had to be run
1636 (using the ``tg index-merge-one-file`` driver) which ultimately
1637 ran ``git merge-file`` at least once to perform a simple
1638 automatic three-way merge. Hence the "automatic" description
1639 and the "Auto-merging ..." output line(s).
1641 3) "trivial aggressive octopus"
1642 This is the same as a "trivial aggressive" merge except that
1643 more than two heads were involved and after merging the first
1644 two heads, the ``git read-tree -m --aggressive`` step was
1645 repeated again on the result for each additional head. All
1646 merging was completed via multiple
1647 ``git read-tree -m --aggressive`` commands only.
1648 This beast is relatively rare in the wild.
1650 4) "trivial aggressive automatic octopus"
1651 This is very similar to the "trivial aggressive octopus"
1652 except that at least one of the ``git read-tree -m --aggressive``
1653 commands left unresolved items that were handled the same way
1654 as the "trivial aggressive automatic" strategy. This species
1655 is commonly seen in the wild.
1662 Version-controlled file stored at the root level of each
1663 TopGit branch that contains the patch header for a TopGit
1664 branch. See also IMPLEMENTATION_;
1667 Version-controlled file stored at the root level of each
1668 TopGit branch that lists the branch's dependencies one per
1669 line omitting the leading ``refs/heads/`` part. See also
1673 Given two Git commit identifiers (e.g. hashes) C1 and C2,
1674 commit C1 "contains" commit C2 if either they are the same
1675 commit or C2 can be reached from C1 by following one or more
1676 parent links from C1 (perhaps via one or more intermediate
1677 commits along the way). In other words, if C1 contains C2
1678 then C2 is an ancestor of C1 or conversely C1 is a descendant
1679 of C2. Since a TopGit branch name is also the name of a Git
1680 branch (something located under the ``refs/heads`` Git
1681 namespace) and similarly for a TopGit base, they can both be
1682 resolved to a Git commit identifier and then participate in
1683 a branch containment test. An easy mnemonic for this is
1684 "children contain the genes of their parents."
1687 See branch containment.
1690 Excellent system for managing a history of changes to one
1691 or more possibly interrelated patches.
1694 A Git branch that has an associated TopGit base. Conceptually
1695 it represents a single patch that is the difference between
1696 the associated TopGit base and the TopGit branch. In other
1697 words ``git diff-tree <TopGit base> <TopGit branch>`` except
1698 that any ``.topdeps`` and/or ``.topmsg`` files are excluded
1699 from the result and the contents of the ``.topmsg`` file from
1700 the TopGit branch is prefixed to the result.
1703 A Git branch that records the base upon which a TopGit branch's
1704 single conceptual "patch" is built. The name of the Git branch
1705 is derived from the TopGit branch name by stripping off the
1706 leading ``refs/heads/`` and appending the correct prefix where
1707 all TopGit bases are stored (typically either
1708 ``refs/top-bases/`` or ``refs/heads/{top-bases}/`` -- the
1709 prefix for any given repository can be shown by using the
1710 ``tg --top-bases`` command and updated using the
1711 ``tg migrate-bases`` command).
1713 All of a TopGit branch's dependencies are merged into the
1714 corresponding TopGit base during a ``tg update`` of a branch.
1719 TopGit ``[PATCH]`` branch
1720 A TopGit branch whose subject starts with ``[PATCH]``. By
1721 convention these TopGit branches contain a single patch
1722 (equivalent to a single patch file) and have at least one
1723 dependency (i.e. their ``.topdeps`` files are never empty).
1725 TopGit ``[BASE]`` branch
1726 A TopGit branch whose subject starts with ``[BASE]``. By
1727 convention these TopGit branches do not actually contain
1728 any changes and their ``.topdeps`` files are empty. They
1729 are used to control a base dependency that another set of
1730 branches depends on.
1732 TopGit ``[STAGE]`` branch
1733 A TopGit branch whose subject starts with ``[STAGE]``. By
1734 convention these TopGit branches do not actually contain any
1735 changes of their own but do have one or (typically) more
1736 dependencies in their ``.topdeps`` file. These branches are
1737 used to bring together one or (typically) more independent
1738 TopGit ``[PATCH]`` branches into a single branch so that
1739 testing and/or evaluation can be performed on the result.
1742 When merging two (or more) heads that touch the same lines in
1743 the file but in different ways the result is a merge conflict
1744 that requires manual intervention. If a merge conflict occurs
1745 with more than two heads (an octopus merge) it's generally
1746 replaced by multiple three-way merges so that by the time a
1747 user sees a merge conflict needing manual resolution, there
1748 will be only two heads involved.
1751 A Git merge strategy (see the "MERGE STRATEGIES" section of
1752 ``git help merge``) or one of the TopGit `merge strategies`_
1753 used to merge two or more heads.
1755 TopGit merge strategy
1756 See the `Merge Strategies`_ section above for details but
1757 basically these are just in-index merges done using the
1758 ``git read-tree -m --aggressive`` command one or more times
1759 possibily assisted by the ``git merge-index`` and the
1760 ``git merge-file`` commands.
1763 A merge involving more than two heads. Note that if there are
1764 less than three independent heads the resulting merge that
1765 started out as an octopus will end up not actually being an
1769 A TopGit branch is considered to be "out-of-date" when ANY of
1770 the following are true:
1772 a) The TopGit branch does NOT contain its
1775 b) The TopGit branch does NOT contain its
1776 corresponding remote branch (there may not be
1777 a remote branch in which case this does not apply)
1779 c) The TopGit branch's base does NOT contain its
1780 corresponding remote branch's base (there may not be
1781 a remote branch in which case this does not apply)
1783 d) Any of the TopGit branches listed in the branch's
1784 ``.topdeps`` file are NOT contained by the branch.
1785 (See "branch containment" above.)
1787 e) Any of the TopGit branches listed in the branch's
1788 ``.topdeps`` file are out-of-date.
1790 Note that if a remote branch is present and is NOT out-of-date
1791 then it will contain its own base and (c) is mostly redundant.
1793 remote TopGit branch
1794 A Git branch with the same branch name as a TopGit branch
1795 but living under ``refs/remotes/<some remote>/`` instead
1796 of just ``refs/heads/``.
1799 The TopGit base branch corresponding to a remote TopGit branch,
1800 which lives under ``refs/remotes/`` somewhere (depending on
1801 what the output of ``tg --top-bases`` is for that remote).
1804 A three-way merge takes a common base and two heads (call them
1805 A and B) and creates a new file that is the common base plus
1806 all of the changes made between the common base and head A
1807 *AND* all of the changes made between the common base and
1808 head B. The technique used to accomplish this is called a
1815 The following references are useful to understand the development of
1816 topgit and its subcommands.
1819 http://public-inbox.org/git/36ca99e90904091034m4d4d31dct78acb333612e678@mail.gmail.com/T/#u
1822 THIRD-PARTY SOFTWARE
1823 --------------------
1825 The following software understands TopGit branches:
1827 * `magit <http://magit.github.io/>`_ -- a git mode for emacs
1829 IMPORTANT: Magit requires its topgit mode to be enabled first, as
1830 described in its documentation, in the "Activating extensions"
1831 subsection. If this is not done, it will not push TopGit branches
1832 correctly, so it's important to enable it even if you plan to mostly use
1833 TopGit from the command line.