\input texinfo.tex @c -*-texinfo-*- @c %**start of header @setfilename magit.info @settitle Magit User Manual @c %**end of header @dircategory Emacs @direntry * Magit: (magit). Using Git from Emacs with Magit. @end direntry @setchapternewpage off @c Put everything in one index (arbitrarily chosen to be the concept index). @syncodeindex fn cp @syncodeindex ky cp @syncodeindex pg cp @syncodeindex vr cp @copying Copyright @copyright{} 2008 Marius Vollmer @quotation Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts. @end quotation @end copying @titlepage @title Magit User Manual @author Marius Vollmer @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll @insertcopying @end titlepage @contents @ifnottex @node Top @top Magit User Manual @end ifnottex @menu * Introduction:: * Status:: * History:: * Resetting:: * Branching and Merging:: * Rebasing:: * Pushing and Pulling:: @end menu @node Introduction @chapter Introduction Magit is an interface to the distributed version control system Git, implemented as an extension to Emacs. With Magit, you can inspect and modify any number of Git repositories. You can review and commit the changes you have made to the tracked files, for example, and you can browse the history of past changes. Magit is not a complete interface to Git, it just makes using the most common Git command-line tools more convenient. Thus, while Magit is a good way to experiment with Git, using it will not save you from learning Git itself. This manual provides a tour of all Magit features and short discussions of how you would typically use them together for simple version control tasks. It does not, in its current form, give a introduction to version control in general, or to Git in particular. The main entry point to Magit is @kbd{M-x magit-status}, which will put you in Magit's status buffer. You will be using it frequently, so it is probably a good idea to bind @code{magit-status} to a key of your choice. @node Status @chapter Status Running @kbd{M-x magit-status} displays the main interface of Magit, the status buffer. Almost all operations are initiated with single letter keystrokes from that buffer. You can have multiple status buffers active at the same time, each associated with its own Git repository. Running @kbd{M-x magit-status} in a buffer visiting a file inside a Git repository will display the status buffer for that repository. Running @kbd{magit-status} outside of any Git repository or when giving it a prefix argument will ask you for the directory to run it in. You need to explicitly refresh the status buffer. You can type @kbd{g} in the status buffer itself, or just use @kbd{M-x magit-status} instead of @kbd{C-x b} when switching to it. The @dfn{header} at the top of the status buffer shows a short summary of the repository state: where it is located, which branch is checked out, etc. Below the header are three or four sections that show details about the working tree and the staging area. The first of these sections lists @emph{untracked files}. These are the files that are present in your working tree but are not known to Git; they are neither tracked in the current branch nor explicitly ignored. You can move point to one of the listed files and type @kbd{s} to add it to the staging area. Or you can tell Git to ignore the file by typing @kbd{i}. Magit has no shortcuts for removing or renaming files (yet). You need to use @code{git rm} or @code{git mv} in a shell and then refresh the status buffer. The next section, named @emph{Unstaged changes}, show the differences between the working tree and the staging area. Thus, it shows the modifications that have not been staged yet and would thus not be included if you would commit now. The next section, @emph{Staged changes}, shows the differences between the staging area and the current head. These are the changes that would be included if you would commit now. Unlike other version control interfaces, Magit does not usually operate on files: Instead of dealing with files (or sets of files), differences are shown as @emph{diffs} and you deal with individual @emph{hunks}. Normally, you will prepare the staging area so that it contains changes that you want to commit as a unit. You can leave changes that you are not yet ready to commit safely out of the staging area. To move a hunk from the working tree into the staging area, move point into the hunk and type @kbd{s}. Likewise, to unstage a hunk, move point into it and type @kbd{u}. If point is in a diff header when you type @kbd{s} or @kbd{u}, all hunks belonging to that diff are moved at the same time. To move all hunks of all diffs into the staging area in one go, type @kbd{S}. Once you have a set of changes in the staging area that you want to commit, you should write a short description of them and then commit them. Type @kbd{c} to pop up a buffer where you can write your change description. Once you are happy with the description, type @kbd{C-c C-c} in that buffer to commit the staged changes. Typing @kbd{C} will also pop up the change description buffer, but in addition it will try to insert a ChangeLog-style entry for the change that point is in. If the current branch is associated with a remote repository, the status buffer wil show a fourth section, named @emph{Unpushed commits}. It will briefly list the commits that you have made in your local repository, but have not yet pushed. See @ref{Pushing and Pulling} for more information. @node History @chapter History To browse the repository history, type @kbd{l} or @kbd{L} in the status buffer. Typing @kbd{l} will show the history starting from the current head, while @kbd{L} will ask for a starting point. A new buffer will be shown that displays the history in a terse form. The first paragraph of each commit message is displayed, next to a representation of the relationships between commits. You can move point to a commit and then cause various things to happen with it. Typing @kbd{RET} will pop up more information about the current commit and typing @kbd{l} will use it as the new starting point of the history buffer. Typing @kbd{R} will revert the current commit in your working tree and staging area. Thus, it will apply the changes made by that commit in reverse. This is obviously useful to cleanly undo changes that turned out to be wrong. Typing @kbd{P} will apply the current commit in the normal way. This is useful when you are browsing the history of some other branch and you want to `cherry-pick' some changes from it for your current branch. A typical situation is applying selected bug fixes from the development version of a program to a release branch. Typing @kbd{C} will switch your working tree to the current commit. You can also mark the current commit by typing @kbd{.}. Once you have marked a commit, you can show the differences between it and the current commit by typing @kbd{=}. @node Resetting @chapter Resetting Once you have added a commit to your local repository, you can not change it anymore in any way. But you can reset your current head to an earlier commit and start over. If you have published your history already, rewriting history in this way can be confusing and should be avoided. However, rewriting your local history is fine and it is often cleaner to fix mistakes this way than by reverting commits (with @kbd{R} in the history buffer, for example). Magit gives you two ways to reset your current head: soft and hard. Type @kbd{x} to do a soft reset. This will change the current head to the commit that you specify, but your current working tree and staging area will not be touched. This is useful to redoing the last commit to correct the commit message, for example. Type @kbd{X} to do a hard reset. This will reset the current head to the commit you specify and will check it out so that your working tree and staging area will match it. In other words, a hard reset will throw away the history completely, which can be useful to abort highly experimental changes (like merging a branch just to see what happens). In particular, doing a hard reset to HEAD will have no effect on the current head, but it will reset your working tree and staging area back to the last comitted state. You can do this to abort a manual merge, for example. @node Branching and Merging @chapter Branching and Merging The current branch is indicated in the header of the status buffer. You can check out a different branch by typing @kbd{b}. To create a new branch and it check it out immediately, type @kbd{B}. You can also compare your working tree with some other branch. Type @kbd{d} and then specify the branch to compare with. Magit offers two ways to merge branches: manually and automatic. A manual merge will apply all changes to your working tree and staging area, but will not commit them, while a automatic merge will go ahead and commit them immediately. Type @kbd{m} to initiate a manual merge, and type @kbd{M} for a automatic merge. A manual merge is useful when carefully merging a new feature that you want to review and test before committing it. A automatic merge is appropriate when you are on a feature branch and want to catch up with the master, say. After initiating a manual merge, the header of the status buffer will remind you that the next commit will be a merge commit (with more than one parent). If you want to abort a manual merge, just do a hard reset to HEAD. Merges can fail if the two branches you merge want to introduce conflicting changes. In that case, the automatic merge stops before the commit, essentially falling back to a manual merge. You need to resolve the conflicts and stage the resolved files, for example with @kbd{S}. You can not stage individual hunks one by one as you resolve them, you can only stage whole files once all conflicts in them have been resolved. If you can not easily and immediately resolve the conflicts from a merge, you should abort it. @node Rebasing @chapter Rebasing Typing @kbd{R} in the status buffer will initiate a rebase or, if one is already in progress, ask you how to continue. When a rebase is stopped in the middle because of a conflict, the header of the status buffer will indicate what you are rebasing your current branch onto and how far along you are in the series of commits that are being replayed. Of course, you can initiate a rebase in any number of ways, by configuring @code{git pull} to rebase instead of merge, for example. Such a rebase can be finished with Magit as well. @node Pushing and Pulling @chapter Pushing and Pulling Magit will run @code{git pull} when you type @kbd{U} in the status buffer, and it will you @code{git push} when you type @kbd{P}. That's almost all the support for remote repositories that Magit offers. You can type @kbd{p} to pop up a buffer with the transcript of running these commands. If you have configured a default remote repository for the current branch (by setting the Git config option @code{branch..remote}), Magit will show that repository in the status buffer header. In this case, the status buffer will also have a @emph{Unpushed commits} section that shows the commits on you current head that are not in the branch named @code{/}. @bye