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GIT-INTERPRET-TRAILERS(1) Git Manual GIT-INTERPRET-TRAILERS(1)
NAME
git-interpret-trailers - Add or parse structured information in commit
messages
SYNOPSIS
git interpret-trailers [--in-place] [--trim-empty]
[(--trailer <token>[(=|:)<value>])...]
[--parse] [<file>...]
DESCRIPTION
Add or parse trailer lines that look similar to RFC 822 e-mail headers,
at the end of the otherwise free-form part of a commit message. For
example, in the following commit message
subject
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit.
Signed-off-by: Alice <alice@example.com>
Signed-off-by: Bob <bob@example.com>
the last two lines starting with "Signed-off-by" are trailers.
This command reads commit messages from either the <file> arguments or
the standard input if no <file> is specified. If --parse is specified,
the output consists of the parsed trailers. Otherwise, this command
applies the arguments passed using the --trailer option, if any, to
each input file. The result is emitted on the standard output.
This command can also operate on the output of git-format-patch(1),
which is more elaborate than a plain commit message. Namely, such
output includes a commit message (as above), a "---" divider line, and
a patch part. For these inputs, the divider and patch parts are not
modified by this command and are emitted as is on the output, unless
--no-divider is specified.
Some configuration variables control the way the --trailer arguments
are applied to each input and the way any existing trailer in the input
is changed. They also make it possible to automatically add some
trailers.
By default, a <token>=<value> or <token>:<value> argument given using
--trailer will be appended after the existing trailers only if the last
trailer has a different (<token>, <value>) pair (or if there is no
existing trailer). The <token> and <value> parts will be trimmed to
remove starting and trailing whitespace, and the resulting trimmed
<token> and <value> will appear in the output like this:
token: value
This means that the trimmed <token> and <value> will be separated by ':
' (one colon followed by one space). For convenience, the <token> can
be a shortened string key (e.g., "sign") instead of the full string
which should appear before the separator on the output (e.g.,
Existing trailers are extracted from the input by looking for a group
of one or more lines that (i) is all trailers, or (ii) contains at
least one Git-generated or user-configured trailer and consists of at
least 25% trailers. The group must be preceded by one or more empty (or
whitespace-only) lines. The group must either be at the end of the
input or be the last non-whitespace lines before a line that starts
with --- (followed by a space or the end of the line).
When reading trailers, there can be no whitespace before or inside the
<token>, but any number of regular space and tab characters are allowed
between the <token> and the separator. There can be whitespaces before,
inside or after the <value>. The <value> may be split over multiple
lines with each subsequent line starting with at least one whitespace,
like the "folding" in RFC 822. Example:
token: This is a very long value, with spaces and
newlines in it.
Note that trailers do not follow (nor are they intended to follow) many
of the rules for RFC 822 headers. For example they do not follow the
encoding rule.
OPTIONS
--in-place
Edit the files in place.
--trim-empty
If the <value> part of any trailer contains only whitespace, the
whole trailer will be removed from the output. This applies to
existing trailers as well as new trailers.
--trailer <token>[(=|:)<value>]
Specify a (<token>, <value>) pair that should be applied as a
trailer to the inputs. See the description of this command.
--where <placement>, --no-where
Specify where all new trailers will be added. A setting provided
with --where overrides all configuration variables and applies to
all --trailer options until the next occurrence of --where or
--no-where. Possible values are after, before, end or start.
--if-exists <action>, --no-if-exists
Specify what action will be performed when there is already at
least one trailer with the same <token> in the input. A setting
provided with --if-exists overrides all configuration variables and
applies to all --trailer options until the next occurrence of
--if-exists or --no-if-exists. Possible actions are addIfDifferent,
addIfDifferentNeighbor, add, replace and doNothing.
--if-missing <action>, --no-if-missing
Specify what action will be performed when there is no other
trailer with the same <token> in the input. A setting provided with
--if-missing overrides all configuration variables and applies to
all --trailer options until the next occurrence of --if-missing or
--no-if-missing. Possible actions are doNothing or add.
--only-trailers
Remove any whitespace-continuation in trailers, so that each
trailer appears on a line by itself with its full content.
--parse
A convenience alias for --only-trailers --only-input --unfold.
--no-divider
Do not treat --- as the end of the commit message. Use this when
you know your input contains just the commit message itself (and
not an email or the output of git format-patch).
CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
trailer.separators
This option tells which characters are recognized as trailer
separators. By default only : is recognized as a trailer separator,
except that = is always accepted on the command line for
compatibility with other git commands.
The first character given by this option will be the default
character used when another separator is not specified in the
config for this trailer.
For example, if the value for this option is "%=$", then only lines
using the format <token><sep><value> with <sep> containing %, = or
$ and then spaces will be considered trailers. And % will be the
default separator used, so by default trailers will appear like:
<token>% <value> (one percent sign and one space will appear
between the token and the value).
trailer.where
This option tells where a new trailer will be added.
This can be end, which is the default, start, after or before.
If it is end, then each new trailer will appear at the end of the
existing trailers.
If it is start, then each new trailer will appear at the start,
instead of the end, of the existing trailers.
If it is after, then each new trailer will appear just after the
last trailer with the same <token>.
If it is before, then each new trailer will appear just before the
first trailer with the same <token>.
trailer.ifexists
This option makes it possible to choose what action will be
performed when there is already at least one trailer with the same
<token> in the input.
The valid values for this option are: addIfDifferentNeighbor (this
is the default), addIfDifferent, add, replace or doNothing.
With addIfDifferentNeighbor, a new trailer will be added only if no
trailer with the same (<token>, <value>) pair is above or below the
line where the new trailer will be added.
With addIfDifferent, a new trailer will be added only if no trailer
be the closest one (with the same <token>) to the place where the
new one will be added.
With doNothing, nothing will be done; that is no new trailer will
be added if there is already one with the same <token> in the
input.
trailer.ifmissing
This option makes it possible to choose what action will be
performed when there is not yet any trailer with the same <token>
in the input.
The valid values for this option are: add (this is the default) and
doNothing.
With add, a new trailer will be added.
With doNothing, nothing will be done.
trailer.<token>.key
This key will be used instead of <token> in the trailer. At the end
of this key, a separator can appear and then some space characters.
By default the only valid separator is :, but this can be changed
using the trailer.separators config variable.
If there is a separator, then the key will be used instead of both
the <token> and the default separator when adding the trailer.
trailer.<token>.where
This option takes the same values as the trailer.where
configuration variable and it overrides what is specified by that
option for trailers with the specified <token>.
trailer.<token>.ifexists
This option takes the same values as the trailer.ifexists
configuration variable and it overrides what is specified by that
option for trailers with the specified <token>.
trailer.<token>.ifmissing
This option takes the same values as the trailer.ifmissing
configuration variable and it overrides what is specified by that
option for trailers with the specified <token>.
trailer.<token>.command
Deprecated in favor of trailer.<token>.cmd. This option behaves in
the same way as trailer.<token>.cmd, except that it doesn't pass
anything as argument to the specified command. Instead the first
occurrence of substring $ARG is replaced by the <value> that would
be passed as argument.
Note that $ARG in the user's command is only replaced once and that
the original way of replacing $ARG is not safe.
When both trailer.<token>.cmd and trailer.<token>.command are given
for the same <token>, trailer.<token>.cmd is used and
trailer.<token>.command is ignored.
trailer.<token>.cmd
This option can be used to specify a shell command that will be
<token>=<value> argument was added at the beginning of the "git
interpret-trailers" command, where <value> is taken to be the
standard output of the command with any leading and trailing
whitespace trimmed off.
If some --trailer <token>=<value> arguments are also passed on the
command line, the command is called again once for each of these
arguments with the same <token>. And the <value> part of these
arguments, if any, will be passed to the command as its first
argument. This way the command can produce a <value> computed from
the <value> passed in the --trailer <token>=<value> argument.
EXAMPLES
o Configure a sign trailer with a Signed-off-by key, and then add two
of these trailers to a commit message file:
$ git config trailer.sign.key "Signed-off-by"
$ cat msg.txt
subject
body text
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer 'sign: Alice <alice@example.com>' --trailer 'sign: Bob <bob@example.com>' <msg.txt
subject
body text
Signed-off-by: Alice <alice@example.com>
Signed-off-by: Bob <bob@example.com>
o Use the --in-place option to edit a commit message file in place:
$ cat msg.txt
subject
body text
Signed-off-by: Bob <bob@example.com>
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer 'Acked-by: Alice <alice@example.com>' --in-place msg.txt
$ cat msg.txt
subject
body text
Signed-off-by: Bob <bob@example.com>
Acked-by: Alice <alice@example.com>
o Extract the last commit as a patch, and add a Cc and a Reviewed-by
trailer to it:
$ git format-patch -1
0001-foo.patch
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer 'Cc: Alice <alice@example.com>' --trailer 'Reviewed-by: Bob <bob@example.com>' 0001-foo.patch >0001-bar.patch
o Configure a sign trailer with a command to automatically add a
'Signed-off-by: ' with the author information only if there is no
'Signed-off-by: ' already, and show how it works:
$ git config trailer.sign.ifexists doNothing
$ git config trailer.sign.cmd 'echo "$(git config user.name) <$(git config user.email)>"'
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer sign <msg1.txt
subject
body text
Signed-off-by: Bob <bob@example.com>
$ cat msg2.txt
subject
body text
Signed-off-by: Alice <alice@example.com>
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer sign <msg2.txt
subject
body text
Signed-off-by: Alice <alice@example.com>
o Configure a fix trailer with a key that contains a # and no space
after this character, and show how it works:
$ git config trailer.separators ":#"
$ git config trailer.fix.key "Fix #"
$ echo "subject" | git interpret-trailers --trailer fix=42
subject
Fix #42
o Configure a help trailer with a cmd use a script glog-find-author
which search specified author identity from git log in git
repository and show how it works:
$ cat ~/bin/glog-find-author
#!/bin/sh
test -n "$1" && git log --author="$1" --pretty="%an <%ae>" -1 || true
$ cat msg.txt
subject
body text
$ git config trailer.help.key "Helped-by: "
$ git config trailer.help.ifExists "addIfDifferentNeighbor"
$ git config trailer.help.cmd "~/bin/glog-find-author"
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer="help:Junio" --trailer="help:Couder" <msg.txt
subject
body text
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
o Configure a ref trailer with a cmd use a script glog-grep to grep
last relevant commit from git log in the git repository and show
how it works:
body text
$ git config trailer.ref.key "Reference-to: "
$ git config trailer.ref.ifExists "replace"
$ git config trailer.ref.cmd "~/bin/glog-grep"
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer="ref:Add copyright notices." <msg.txt
subject
body text
Reference-to: 8bc9a0c769 (Add copyright notices., 2005-04-07)
o Configure a see trailer with a command to show the subject of a
commit that is related, and show how it works:
$ cat msg.txt
subject
body text
see: HEAD~2
$ cat ~/bin/glog-ref
#!/bin/sh
git log -1 --oneline --format="%h (%s)" --abbrev-commit --abbrev=14
$ git config trailer.see.key "See-also: "
$ git config trailer.see.ifExists "replace"
$ git config trailer.see.ifMissing "doNothing"
$ git config trailer.see.cmd "glog-ref"
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer=see <msg.txt
subject
body text
See-also: fe3187489d69c4 (subject of related commit)
o Configure a commit template with some trailers with empty values
(using sed to show and keep the trailing spaces at the end of the
trailers), then configure a commit-msg hook that uses git
interpret-trailers to remove trailers with empty values and to add
a git-version trailer:
$ cat temp.txt
***subject***
***message***
Fixes: Z
Cc: Z
Reviewed-by: Z
Signed-off-by: Z
$ sed -e 's/ Z$/ /' temp.txt > commit_template.txt
$ git config commit.template commit_template.txt
$ cat .git/hooks/commit-msg
#!/bin/sh
git interpret-trailers --trim-empty --trailer "git-version: \$(git describe)" "\$1" > "\$1.new"
mv "\$1.new" "\$1"
$ chmod +x .git/hooks/commit-msg
Git 2.42.0 2023-08-21 GIT-INTERPRET-TRAILERS(1)