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1 StGIT Tutorial
2 ##############
3
4
5 StGIT is a Python application that provides functionality similar to
6 quilt (i.e. pushing/popping patches to/from a stack) using GIT instead
7 of 'diff' and 'patch'. StGIT stores its patches in a GIT repository as
8 normal GIT commit objects.
9 StGIT is not an SCM interface on top of GIT. For standard SCM
10 operations, either use GIT's porcelain commands or the Cogito tool.
11 StGIT is available for download at http://www.procode.org/stgit/ .
12 This tutorial assumes you are already familiar with GIT. For more
13 information on GIT, see the GIT_tutorial or git(7) .
14
15
16 Basic Operation
17 ===============
18
19 Help
20 ----
21
22 For a full list of StGIT commands:
23
24 stg help
25
26 For help on individual subcommands:
27
28 stg <cmd> (-h | --help)
29
30
31 Repository initialisation
32 -------------------------
33
34 In stand-alone mode, StGIT is used in conjunction with a GIT repository
35 that is already initialised (using 'git init'). StGIT cannot be used
36 outside of a GIT repository.
37 Any branch in a GIT repository may be managed by StGIT. Each branch
38 managed by StGIT contains an independent series of StGIT patches.
39 To initialise an existing GIT branch to be managed by StGIT, cd into the
40 top of your GIT repository, check out the branch you'd like to manage
41 with StGIT, and type:
42
43 stg init
44
45 Run the 'stg init' command for any pre-existing GIT branches intended to
46 be used with StGIT.
47 You can switch between GIT branches with:
48
49 stg branch [<branch name>]
50
51 This checks out the named branch and places you at the topmost applied
52 StGIT patch in that branch.
53 Alternately, you can create branches using only StGIT commands, which
54 will automatically prepare them for use with StGIT:
55
56 stg branch --create <new branch>
57
58
59 Working with remote repositories
60 --------------------------------
61
62 With a single command, StGIT can create and initialize a GIT repository
63 which mirrors a remote GIT repository. This is known as cloning. All GIT
64 transports are supported.
65 To clone a repository, use:
66
67 stg clone <repository> <local-dir>
68
69 This creates a fresh local repository, initialises a GIT database in it,
70 pulls the latest version of the remote, and creates and initialises a
71 'master' branch for use with StGIT.
72 At any time you can pull the latest changes from the remote repository.
73 By default, StGIT pulls from the location stored in .git/branches/
74 origin, and updates the base of the current branch.
75 To pull the latest changes from a remote repository, use:
76
77 stg pull [<branch> or 'origin']
78
79 This command removes all applied StGIT patches from the current branch,
80 updates the branch's base commit, then attempts to re-apply the patches.
81 Any merge conflicts will halt this process, allowing you to clean up the
82 conflicts and continue (see below).
83 If the maintainer of the remote repository includes one of your patches
84 in the published repository that you pull from, StGIT can usually
85 recognize that an incoming patch from the remote matches one of yours,
86 and it turns your local version into an empty patch.
87 To automatically delete empty patches after a pull, use:
88
89 stg clean
90
91 As a convention, you should avoid working in the 'master' branch and use
92 it only as a reference, since it reflects someone else's work. If you
93 decide to publish your GIT repository, you'll want your own work
94 separated into its own branch to make it convenient for others to pull
95 just your patches.
96
97 Getting started: creating a patch
98 ---------------------------------
99
100 Changes to your working directory are saved in a patch. An StGIT patch
101 is simply a saved set of modifications to your working directory, plus a
102 saved description. To create an empty StGIT patch in the current branch:
103
104 stg new <name>
105
106 To save the changes you've made (that is, to refresh a patch), use:
107
108 stg refresh
109
110 To discard changes in your working directory, use:
111
112 git checkout -f
113
114 This restores your working directory to the state it was in the last
115 time the patch was refreshed.
116 Modified files that haven't been saved via a refresh operation can be
117 viewed with:
118
119 stg status
120
121 You can view modified files that have already been saved into a patch:
122
123 stg files
124
125 The 'stg refresh' command automatically notes changes to files that
126 already exist in the working directory (it also notices if you remove
127 them), but you have to tell StGIT explicitly if you add or rename a
128 file:
129
130 git add new-file
131
132 to add a file, and
133
134 mv old-file new-file
135 git add new-file
136
137 or simply
138
139 git mv old-file new-file
140
141 to move a file.
142
143
144 Stack manipulation: managing multiple patches
145 ---------------------------------------------
146
147 StGIT can manage more than one patch at a time. A series of StGIT
148 patches in a GIT branch are known collectively as a stack. The new patch
149 you created above is now the topmost patch in your stack. You can always
150 see the name of the topmost (current) patch with:
151
152 stg top
153
154 The topmost patch is used as the default patch for most StGIT
155 operations. It is the default target of the 'stg refresh' command, for
156 example.
157 Patches that are pushed onto the stack are referred to as applied, and
158 patches that are popped off the stack are referred to as unapplied.
159 To push/pop a patch to/from a stack:
160
161 stg push [--all | <name>]
162 stg pop [--all]
163
164 The last patch you pushed is the topmost patch. This patch is always in
165 the applied list; StGIT can't operate on an unapplied patch unless you
166 apply it first.
167 You can display the order of patches in a stack with one of these
168 commands:
169
170 stg series
171 stg applied
172 stg unapplied
173
174 By default the 'stg push' command applies the first patch in the
175 unapplied list, but you can push any patch in the unapplied list by
176 giving the name of the patch. This is useful if you want to reorder the
177 patches in a stack.
178 During a push operation, merge conflicts can occur (especially if you
179 are changing the order of the patches in your stack). If the push causes
180 merge conflicts, they need to be fixed and 'stg resolved' run (see
181 below). A 'push' operation can also be reverted with 'stg undo' (you
182 will need to give it the --hard flag, since the conflicting push will
183 have left your work tree dirty).
184 A few more stack basics; to rename a patch:
185
186 stg rename <old-name> <new-name>
187
188 To delete a patch:
189
190 stg delete <name>
191
192 This permanently discards the named patch. In other words, the patch no
193 longer appears in either the applied or unapplied lists, and cannot be
194 reapplied to the series.
195 You may want to make patches in your stack a permanent part of your GIT
196 repository, for example if you are publishing your repository to others.
197 To do this, use:
198
199 stg commit
200
201 This merges all applied patches in your patch series into the GIT
202 repository and removes them from your stack. Use this command only if
203 you want to permanently store the applied patches and no longer manage
204 them with StGIT.
205
206 Converting between StGIT patches and text diffs
207 -----------------------------------------------
208
209 As mentioned in the introduction, StGIT stores modifications to your
210 working tree in the form of GIT commits. This means if you want to apply
211 your changes to a tree not managed by GIT, or send your changes to
212 someone else in e-mail, you need to convert your StGIT patches into
213 normal textual diffs that can be applied with the GNU 'patch' command.
214 The 'stg diff' command is a powerful way to generate and view textual
215 diffs of patches managed by StGIT.
216 To view a diff of the topmost patch:
217
218 stg diff -r /
219
220 Observe that this does not show any changes in the working directory
221 that have not been saved by a 'refresh'. To view just the changes you've
222 made since the last refresh, use:
223
224 stg diff -r /top
225
226 If you want to see the changes made by the patch combined with any
227 unsaved changes in the working directory, try:
228
229 stg diff -r /bottom
230
231 You can also show the changes to any patch in your stack with:
232
233 stg diff -r <patch>/
234
235 Use this command to view all the changes in your stack up through the
236 current patch:
237
238 stg diff -r base
239
240 The 'stg diff' command supports a number of other features that are very
241 useful. Be sure to take a look at the help information for this command.
242 To convert your StGIT patches into patch files:
243
244 stg export [--range=[<patch1>[:<patch2>]]] [<dir-name>]
245
246 The 'export' command supports options to automatically number the
247 patches (-n) or add the '.diff' extension (-d). If you don't tell "stg
248 export" where to put the patches, it will create directory named "patch-
249 branchname" in your current directory, and store the patches there.
250 To e-mail a patch or range of patches:
251
252 stg mail [--to=...] (--all | --range=[<patch1>[:<patch2>]] | <patch>)
253
254 "stg mail" has a lot of options, so read the output of "stg mail -h" for
255 more information.
256 You can also import an existing GNU diff patch file as a new StGIT patch
257 with a single command. "stg import" will automatically parse through the
258 patch file and extract a patch description. Use:
259
260 stg import [<file>]
261
262 This is the equivalent of "stg new" followed by "patch -i <file>", then
263 "stg refresh -e".
264 Sometimes the patch file won't apply cleanly. In that case, "stg import"
265 will leave you with an empty StGIT patch, to which you then apply the
266 patch file by hand using "patch -i" and your favorite editor.
267 To merge a GNU diff file (defaulting to the standard input) into the
268 topmost patch:
269
270 stg fold [<file>]
271
272 This command supports a '--threeway' option which applies the patch onto
273 the bottom of the topmost one and performs a three-way merge.
274
275
276 Advanced Usage
277 ==============
278
279 Handling merge conflicts
280 ------------------------
281
282 Pushing a patch on the stack can fail if the patch cannot be applied
283 cleanly. This usually happens if there are overlapping changes in the
284 tree, the patch depends on another patch which is not applied, or if a
285 patch was not merged upstream in the exact form it was sent.
286 The 'push' operation stops after the first patch with conflicts. The
287 'status' command shows the conflict files by marking them with a 'C'. If
288 the 'keeporig' options is set to 'yes' (the default), the original files
289 involved in the merge operations are left in the tree as <file>.older,
290 <file>.local and <file>.remote for better analysis of the conflict. If
291 'diff3' is used as the merger (the default), markers are added to the
292 conflicted files as well.
293 Run the 'resolved' command to mark the conflicts resolved and remove the
294 temporary merge files from the working tree. Then run the 'refresh'
295 command to update the StGIT patch with the modifications you made to
296 resolve the conflict.
297
298
299 Configuration file
300 ------------------
301
302 StGIT tries to read the configuration options from the following files:
303 /etc/stgitrc, ~/.stgitrc and .git/stgitrc. The latter overrides the
304 options in the former files. If no file is found, the defaults are used.
305 An example configuration file with options description can be found in
306 the examples/ directory. Most users would probably only define the
307 'smtpserver' option used by the 'mail' command.
308 The gitmergeonefile.py script does the three-way merging on individual
309 files using the tool specified by the 'merger' option. The user can
310 specify a smarter tool to be used.
311
312
313 Templates
314 ---------
315
316 The 'export' and 'mail' commands use templates for generating the patch
317 files or e-mails. The default templates are installed under <prefix>/
318 share/stgit/templates/ and, combined with the extra options available
319 for the commands, should be enough for most users. The template format
320 uses the standard Python string formatting rules. The variables
321 available are shown in the the help message for the commands.
322 The 'mail' command can also send an initial e-mail for which there is no
323 default template. The <prefix>/share/stgit/examples/firstmail.tmpl file
324 can be used as an example.
325 A default description for new patches can be defined in the .git/
326 patchdescr.tmpl file. This is useful for things like signed-off-by
327 lines.
328
329
330 Merging two patches into one
331 ----------------------------
332
333 There is no command to do this directly at the moment but one can export
334 the patch to be merged and use the 'stg fold' command on the generated
335 diff file. Assuming that the merged patch was not already applied, the
336 operation will succeed. Pushing the merged patch onto the stack will
337 result in an empty patch (StGIT notifying the user) that can be safely
338 deleted.
339
340
341 Technical Information
342 =====================
343
344 A bit of StGIT patch theory
345 ---------------------------
346
347 We assume that a patch is a diff between two nodes - bottom and top. A
348 node is a commit SHA1 id or tree SHA1 id in the GIT terminology:
349
350 P - patch
351 N - node
352
353 P = diff(Nt, Nb)
354
355 Nb - bottom (start) node
356 Nt - top (end) node
357 Nf - first node (for log generation)
358
359 For an ordered stack of patches:
360
361 P1 = diff(N1, N0)
362 P2 = diff(N2, N1)
363 ...
364
365
366 Ps = P1 + P2 + P3 + ... = diff(Nst, Nsb)
367
368 Ps - the big patch of the whole stack
369 Nsb - bottom stack node (= N0)
370 Nst - top stack node (= Nn)
371
372 Applying (pushing) a patch on the stack (Nst can differ from Nb) is done
373 by diff3 merging. The new patch becomes:
374
375 P' = diff(Nt', Nb')
376 Nb' = Nst
377 Nt' = diff3(Nst, Nb, Nt)
378
379 (note that the diff3 parameters order is: branch1, ancestor, branch2)
380 The above operation allows easy patch re-ordering.
381 Removing (popping) a patch from the stack is done by simply setting the
382 Nst to Nb.
383
384
385 Layout of the .git directory
386 ----------------------------
387
388 HEAD -> refs/heads/<something>
389 objects/
390 ??/
391 ...
392 refs/
393 heads/
394 master - the master commit id
395 ...
396 tags/
397 ...
398 branches/
399 ...
400 patches/
401 master/
402 applied - list of applied patches
403 unapplied - list of not-yet applied patches
404 current - name of the topmost patch
405 patch1/
406 bottom - the bottom id of the patch
407 top - the top id of the patch
408 description - the patch description
409 authname - author's name
410 authemail - author's e-mail
411 commname - committer's name
412 commemail - committer's e-mail
413 patch2/
414 ...
415 ...
416 ...