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NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | COMMANDS | OPTIONS | DEPRECATED MODES | CONFIGURATION | FILES | SCOPES | ENVIRONMENT | EXAMPLES | CONFIGURATION FILE | BUGS | GIT | NOTES | COLOPHON |
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GIT-CONFIG(1) Git Manual GIT-CONFIG(1)
git-config - Get and set repository or global options
git config list [<file-option>] [<display-option>] [--includes]
git config get [<file-option>] [<display-option>] [--includes] [--all] [--regexp] [--value=<pattern>] [--fixed-value] [--default=<default>] [--url=<url>] <name>
git config set [<file-option>] [--type=<type>] [--all] [--value=<pattern>] [--fixed-value] <name> <value>
git config unset [<file-option>] [--all] [--value=<pattern>] [--fixed-value] <name>
git config rename-section [<file-option>] <old-name> <new-name>
git config remove-section [<file-option>] <name>
git config edit [<file-option>]
git config [<file-option>] --get-colorbool <name> [<stdout-is-tty>]
You can query/set/replace/unset options with this command. The
name is actually the section and the key separated by a dot, and
the value will be escaped.
Multiple lines can be added to an option by using the --append
option. If you want to update or unset an option which can occur
on multiple lines, --value=<pattern> (which is an extended regular
expression, unless the --fixed-value option is given) needs to be
given. Only the existing values that match the pattern are updated
or unset. If you want to handle the lines that do not match the
pattern, just prepend a single exclamation mark in front (see also
the section called “EXAMPLES”), but note that this only works when
the --fixed-value option is not in use.
The --type=<type> option instructs git config to ensure that
incoming and outgoing values are canonicalize-able under the given
<type>. If no --type=<type> is given, no canonicalization will be
performed. Callers may unset an existing --type specifier with
--no-type.
When reading, the values are read from the system, global and
repository local configuration files by default, and options
--system, --global, --local, --worktree and --file <filename> can
be used to tell the command to read from only that location (see
the section called “FILES”).
When writing, the new value is written to the repository local
configuration file by default, and options --system, --global,
--worktree, --file <filename> can be used to tell the command to
write to that location (you can say --local but that is the
default).
This command will fail with non-zero status upon error. Some exit
codes are:
• The section or key is invalid (ret=1),
• no section or name was provided (ret=2),
• the config file is invalid (ret=3),
• the config file cannot be written (ret=4),
• you try to unset an option which does not exist (ret=5),
• you try to unset/set an option for which multiple lines match
(ret=5), or
• you try to use an invalid regexp (ret=6).
On success, the command returns the exit code 0.
A list of all available configuration variables can be obtained
using the git help --config command.
list
List all variables set in config file, along with their
values.
get
Emits the value of the specified key. If key is present
multiple times in the configuration, emits the last value. If
--all is specified, emits all values associated with key.
Returns error code 1 if key is not present.
set
Set value for one or more config options. By default, this
command refuses to write multi-valued config options. Passing
--all will replace all multi-valued config options with the
new value, whereas --value= will replace all config options
whose values match the given pattern.
unset
Unset value for one or more config options. By default, this
command refuses to unset multi-valued keys. Passing --all will
unset all multi-valued config options, whereas --value will
unset all config options whose values match the given pattern.
rename-section
Rename the given section to a new name.
remove-section
Remove the given section from the configuration file.
edit
Opens an editor to modify the specified config file; either
--system, --global, --local (default), --worktree, or --file
<config-file>.
--replace-all
Default behavior is to replace at most one line. This replaces
all lines matching the key (and optionally --value=<pattern>).
--append
Adds a new line to the option without altering any existing
values. This is the same as providing --value=^$ in set.
--comment <message>
Append a comment at the end of new or modified lines.
If _<message>_ begins with one or more whitespaces followed
by "#", it is used as-is. If it begins with "#", a space is
prepended before it is used. Otherwise, a string " # " (a
space followed by a hash followed by a space) is prepended
to it. And the resulting string is placed immediately after
the value defined for the variable. The _<message>_ must
not contain linefeed characters (no multi-line comments are
permitted).
--all
With get, return all values for a multi-valued key.
--regexp
With get, interpret the name as a regular expression. Regular
expression matching is currently case-sensitive and done
against a canonicalized version of the key in which section
and variable names are lowercased, but subsection names are
not.
--url=<URL>
When given a two-part <name> as <section>.<key>, the value for
<section>.<URL>.<key> whose <URL> part matches the best to the
given URL is returned (if no such key exists, the value for
<section>.<key> is used as a fallback). When given just the
<section> as name, do so for all the keys in the section and
list them. Returns error code 1 if no value is found.
--global
For writing options: write to global ~/.gitconfig file rather
than the repository .git/config, write to
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config file if this file exists and the
~/.gitconfig file doesn’t.
For reading options: read only from global ~/.gitconfig and
from $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config rather than from all
available files.
See also the section called “FILES”.
--system
For writing options: write to system-wide
$(prefix)/etc/gitconfig rather than the repository
.git/config.
For reading options: read only from system-wide
$(prefix)/etc/gitconfig rather than from all available files.
See also the section called “FILES”.
--local
For writing options: write to the repository .git/config file.
This is the default behavior.
For reading options: read only from the repository .git/config
rather than from all available files.
See also the section called “FILES”.
--worktree
Similar to --local except that $GIT_DIR/config.worktree is
read from or written to if extensions.worktreeConfig is
enabled. If not it’s the same as --local. Note that $GIT_DIR
is equal to $GIT_COMMON_DIR for the main working tree, but is
of the form $GIT_DIR/worktrees/<id>/ for other working trees.
See git-worktree(1) to learn how to enable
extensions.worktreeConfig.
-f <config-file>, --file <config-file>
For writing options: write to the specified file rather than
the repository .git/config.
For reading options: read only from the specified file rather
than from all available files.
See also the section called “FILES”.
--blob <blob>
Similar to --file but use the given blob instead of a file.
E.g. you can use master:.gitmodules to read values from the
file .gitmodules in the master branch. See "SPECIFYING
REVISIONS" section in gitrevisions(7) for a more complete list
of ways to spell blob names.
--value=<pattern>, --no-value
With get, set, and unset, match only against <pattern>. The
pattern is an extended regular expression unless --fixed-value
is given.
Use --no-value to unset <pattern>.
--fixed-value
When used with --value=<pattern>, treat <pattern> as an exact
string instead of a regular expression. This will restrict the
name/value pairs that are matched to only those where the
value is exactly equal to <pattern>.
--type <type>
git config will ensure that any input or output is valid under
the given type constraint(s), and will canonicalize outgoing
values in <type>'s canonical form.
Valid <type>'s include:
• bool: canonicalize values true, yes,on, and positive
numbers as "true", and values false, no, off and 0 as
"false".
• int: canonicalize values as simple decimal numbers. An
optional suffix of k, m, or g will cause the value to be
multiplied by 1024, 1048576, or 1073741824 upon input.
• bool-or-int: canonicalize according to either bool or int,
as described above.
• path: canonicalize by expanding a leading ~ to the value
of $HOME and ~user to the home directory for the specified
user. This specifier has no effect when setting the value
(but you can use git config section.variable ~/ from the
command line to let your shell do the expansion.)
• expiry-date: canonicalize by converting from a fixed or
relative date-string to a timestamp. This specifier has no
effect when setting the value.
• color: When getting a value, canonicalize by converting to
an ANSI color escape sequence. When setting a value, a
sanity-check is performed to ensure that the given value
is canonicalize-able as an ANSI color, but it is written
as-is.
--bool, --int, --bool-or-int, --path, --expiry-date
Historical options for selecting a type specifier. Prefer
instead --type (see above).
--no-type
Un-sets the previously set type specifier (if one was
previously set). This option requests that git config not
canonicalize the retrieved variable. --no-type has no effect
without --type=<type> or --<type>.
-z, --null
For all options that output values and/or keys, always end
values with the null character (instead of a newline). Use
newline instead as a delimiter between key and value. This
allows for secure parsing of the output without getting
confused e.g. by values that contain line breaks.
--name-only
Output only the names of config variables for list or get.
--show-names, --no-show-names
With get, show config keys in addition to their values. The
default is --no-show-names unless --url is given and there are
no subsections in <name>.
--show-origin
Augment the output of all queried config options with the
origin type (file, standard input, blob, command line) and the
actual origin (config file path, ref, or blob id if
applicable).
--show-scope
Similar to --show-origin in that it augments the output of all
queried config options with the scope of that value (worktree,
local, global, system, command).
--get-colorbool <name> [<stdout-is-tty>]
Find the color setting for <name> (e.g. color.diff) and
output "true" or "false". <stdout-is-tty> should be either
"true" or "false", and is taken into account when
configuration says "auto". If <stdout-is-tty> is missing, then
checks the standard output of the command itself, and exits
with status 0 if color is to be used, or exits with status 1
otherwise. When the color setting for name is undefined, the
command uses color.ui as fallback.
--[no-]includes
Respect include.* directives in config files when looking up
values. Defaults to off when a specific file is given (e.g.,
using --file, --global, etc) and on when searching all config
files.
--default <value>
When using get, and the requested variable is not found,
behave as if <value> were the value assigned to that variable.
The following modes have been deprecated in favor of subcommands.
It is recommended to migrate to the new syntax.
git config <name>
Replaced by git config get <name>.
git config <name> <value> [<value-pattern>]
Replaced by git config set [--value=<pattern>] <name> <value>.
-l, --list
Replaced by git config list.
--get <name> [<value-pattern>]
Replaced by git config get [--value=<pattern>] <name>.
--get-all <name> [<value-pattern>]
Replaced by git config get [--value=<pattern>] --all <name>.
--get-regexp <name-regexp>
Replaced by git config get --all --show-names --regexp
<name-regexp>.
--get-urlmatch <name> <URL>
Replaced by git config get --all --show-names --url=<URL>
<name>.
--get-color <name> [<default>]
Replaced by git config get --type=color [--default=<default>]
<name>.
--add <name> <value>
Replaced by git config set --append <name> <value>.
--unset <name> [<value-pattern>]
Replaced by git config unset [--value=<pattern>] <name>.
--unset-all <name> [<value-pattern>]
Replaced by git config unset [--value=<pattern>] --all <name>.
--rename-section <old-name> <new-name>
Replaced by git config rename-section <old-name> <new-name>.
--remove-section <name>
Replaced by git config remove-section <name>.
-e, --edit
Replaced by git config edit.
pager.config is only respected when listing configuration, i.e.,
when using list or get which may return multiple results. The
default is to use a pager.
By default, git config will read configuration options from
multiple files:
$(prefix)/etc/gitconfig
System-wide configuration file.
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config, ~/.gitconfig
User-specific configuration files. When the XDG_CONFIG_HOME
environment variable is not set or empty, $HOME/.config/ is
used as $XDG_CONFIG_HOME.
These are also called "global" configuration files. If both
files exist, both files are read in the order given above.
$GIT_DIR/config
Repository specific configuration file.
$GIT_DIR/config.worktree
This is optional and is only searched when
extensions.worktreeConfig is present in $GIT_DIR/config.
You may also provide additional configuration parameters when
running any git command by using the -c option. See git(1) for
details.
Options will be read from all of these files that are available.
If the global or the system-wide configuration files are missing
or unreadable they will be ignored. If the repository
configuration file is missing or unreadable, git config will exit
with a non-zero error code. An error message is produced if the
file is unreadable, but not if it is missing.
The files are read in the order given above, with last value found
taking precedence over values read earlier. When multiple values
are taken then all values of a key from all files will be used.
By default, options are only written to the repository specific
configuration file. Note that this also affects options like set
and unset. git config will only ever change one file at a time.
You can limit which configuration sources are read from or written
to by specifying the path of a file with the --file option, or by
specifying a configuration scope with --system, --global, --local,
or --worktree. For more, see the section called “OPTIONS” above.
Each configuration source falls within a configuration scope. The
scopes are:
system
$(prefix)/etc/gitconfig
global
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config
~/.gitconfig
local
$GIT_DIR/config
worktree
$GIT_DIR/config.worktree
command
GIT_CONFIG_{COUNT,KEY,VALUE} environment variables (see the
section called “ENVIRONMENT” below)
the -c option
With the exception of command, each scope corresponds to a command
line option: --system, --global, --local, --worktree.
When reading options, specifying a scope will only read options
from the files within that scope. When writing options, specifying
a scope will write to the files within that scope (instead of the
repository specific configuration file). See the section called
“OPTIONS” above for a complete description.
Most configuration options are respected regardless of the scope
it is defined in, but some options are only respected in certain
scopes. See the respective option’s documentation for the full
details.
Protected configuration
Protected configuration refers to the system, global, and command
scopes. For security reasons, certain options are only respected
when they are specified in protected configuration, and ignored
otherwise.
Git treats these scopes as if they are controlled by the user or a
trusted administrator. This is because an attacker who controls
these scopes can do substantial harm without using Git, so it is
assumed that the user’s environment protects these scopes against
attackers.
GIT_CONFIG_GLOBAL, GIT_CONFIG_SYSTEM
Take the configuration from the given files instead from
global or system-level configuration. See git(1) for details.
GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM
Whether to skip reading settings from the system-wide
$(prefix)/etc/gitconfig file. See git(1) for details.
See also the section called “FILES”.
GIT_CONFIG_COUNT, GIT_CONFIG_KEY_<n>, GIT_CONFIG_VALUE_<n>
If GIT_CONFIG_COUNT is set to a positive number, all
environment pairs GIT_CONFIG_KEY_<n> and GIT_CONFIG_VALUE_<n>
up to that number will be added to the process’s runtime
configuration. The config pairs are zero-indexed. Any missing
key or value is treated as an error. An empty GIT_CONFIG_COUNT
is treated the same as GIT_CONFIG_COUNT=0, namely no pairs are
processed. These environment variables will override values in
configuration files, but will be overridden by any explicit
options passed via git -c.
This is useful for cases where you want to spawn multiple git
commands with a common configuration but cannot depend on a
configuration file, for example when writing scripts.
GIT_CONFIG
If no --file option is provided to git config, use the file
given by GIT_CONFIG as if it were provided via --file. This
variable has no effect on other Git commands, and is mostly
for historical compatibility; there is generally no reason to
use it instead of the --file option.
Given a .git/config like this:
#
# This is the config file, and
# a '#' or ';' character indicates
# a comment
#
; core variables
[core]
; Don't trust file modes
filemode = false
; Our diff algorithm
[diff]
external = /usr/local/bin/diff-wrapper
renames = true
; Proxy settings
[core]
gitproxy=proxy-command for kernel.org
gitproxy=default-proxy ; for all the rest
; HTTP
[http]
sslVerify
[http "https://weak.example.com"]
sslVerify = false
cookieFile = /tmp/cookie.txt
you can set the filemode to true with
% git config set core.filemode true
The hypothetical proxy command entries actually have a postfix to
discern what URL they apply to. Here is how to change the entry
for kernel.org to "ssh".
% git config set --value='for kernel.org$' core.gitproxy '"ssh" for kernel.org'
This makes sure that only the key/value pair for kernel.org is
replaced.
To delete the entry for renames, do
% git config unset diff.renames
If you want to delete an entry for a multivar (like core.gitproxy
above), you have to provide a regex matching the value of exactly
one line.
To query the value for a given key, do
% git config get core.filemode
or, to query a multivar:
% git config get --value="for kernel.org$" core.gitproxy
If you want to know all the values for a multivar, do:
% git config get --all --show-names core.gitproxy
If you like to live dangerously, you can replace all core.gitproxy
by a new one with
% git config set --all core.gitproxy ssh
However, if you really only want to replace the line for the
default proxy, i.e. the one without a "for ..." postfix, do
something like this:
% git config set --value='! for ' core.gitproxy ssh
To actually match only values with an exclamation mark, you have
to
% git config set --value='[!]' section.key value
To add a new proxy, without altering any of the existing ones, use
% git config set --append core.gitproxy '"proxy-command" for example.com'
An example to use customized color from the configuration in your
script:
#!/bin/sh
WS=$(git config get --type=color --default="blue reverse" color.diff.whitespace)
RESET=$(git config get --type=color --default="reset" "")
echo "${WS}your whitespace color or blue reverse${RESET}"
For URLs in https://weak.example.com , http.sslVerify is set to
false, while it is set to true for all others:
% git config get --type=bool --url=https://good.example.com http.sslverify
true
% git config get --type=bool --url=https://weak.example.com http.sslverify
false
% git config get --url=https://weak.example.com http
http.cookieFile /tmp/cookie.txt
http.sslverify false
The Git configuration file contains a number of variables that
affect the Git commands' behavior. The files .git/config and
optionally config.worktree (see the "CONFIGURATION FILE" section
of git-worktree(1)) in each repository are used to store the
configuration for that repository, and $HOME/.gitconfig is used to
store a per-user configuration as fallback values for the
.git/config file. The file /etc/gitconfig can be used to store a
system-wide default configuration.
The configuration variables are used by both the Git plumbing and
the porcelain commands. The variables are divided into sections,
wherein the fully qualified variable name of the variable itself
is the last dot-separated segment and the section name is
everything before the last dot. The variable names are
case-insensitive, allow only alphanumeric characters and -, and
must start with an alphabetic character. Some variables may appear
multiple times; we say then that the variable is multivalued.
Syntax
The syntax is fairly flexible and permissive. Whitespace
characters, which in this context are the space character (SP) and
the horizontal tabulation (HT), are mostly ignored. The # and ;
characters begin comments to the end of line. Blank lines are
ignored.
The file consists of sections and variables. A section begins with
the name of the section in square brackets and continues until the
next section begins. Section names are case-insensitive. Only
alphanumeric characters, - and . are allowed in section names.
Each variable must belong to some section, which means that there
must be a section header before the first setting of a variable.
Sections can be further divided into subsections. To begin a
subsection put its name in double quotes, separated by space from
the section name, in the section header, like in the example
below:
[section "subsection"]
Subsection names are case sensitive and can contain any characters
except newline and the null byte. Doublequote " and backslash can
be included by escaping them as \" and \\, respectively.
Backslashes preceding other characters are dropped when reading;
for example, \t is read as t and \0 is read as 0. Section headers
cannot span multiple lines. Variables may belong directly to a
section or to a given subsection. You can have [section] if you
have [section "subsection"], but you don’t need to.
There is also a deprecated [section.subsection] syntax. With this
syntax, the subsection name is converted to lower-case and is also
compared case sensitively. These subsection names follow the same
restrictions as section names.
All the other lines (and the remainder of the line after the
section header) are recognized as setting variables, in the form
name = value (or just name, which is a short-hand to say that the
variable is the boolean "true"). The variable names are
case-insensitive, allow only alphanumeric characters and -, and
must start with an alphabetic character.
Whitespace characters surrounding name, = and value are discarded.
Internal whitespace characters within value are retained verbatim.
Comments starting with either # or ; and extending to the end of
line are discarded. A line that defines a value can be continued
to the next line by ending it with a backslash (\); the backslash
and the end-of-line characters are discarded.
If value needs to contain leading or trailing whitespace
characters, it must be enclosed in double quotation marks (").
Inside double quotation marks, double quote (") and backslash (\)
characters must be escaped: use \" for " and \\ for \.
The following escape sequences (beside \" and \\) are recognized:
\n for newline character (NL), \t for horizontal tabulation (HT,
TAB) and \b for backspace (BS). Other char escape sequences
(including octal escape sequences) are invalid.
Includes
The include and includeIf sections allow you to include config
directives from another source. These sections behave identically
to each other with the exception that includeIf sections may be
ignored if their condition does not evaluate to true; see
"Conditional includes" below.
You can include a config file from another by setting the special
include.path (or includeIf.*.path) variable to the name of the
file to be included. The variable takes a pathname as its value,
and is subject to tilde expansion. These variables can be given
multiple times.
The contents of the included file are inserted immediately, as if
they had been found at the location of the include directive. If
the value of the variable is a relative path, the path is
considered to be relative to the configuration file in which the
include directive was found. See below for examples.
Conditional includes
You can conditionally include a config file from another by
setting an includeIf.<condition>.path variable to the name of the
file to be included.
The condition starts with a keyword followed by a colon and some
data whose format and meaning depends on the keyword. Supported
keywords are:
gitdir
The data that follows the keyword gitdir: is used as a glob
pattern. If the location of the .git directory matches the
pattern, the include condition is met.
The .git location may be auto-discovered, or come from
$GIT_DIR environment variable. If the repository is
auto-discovered via a .git file (e.g. from submodules, or a
linked worktree), the .git location would be the final
location where the .git directory is, not where the .git file
is.
The pattern can contain standard globbing wildcards and two
additional ones, **/ and /**, that can match multiple path
components. Please refer to gitignore(5) for details. For
convenience:
• If the pattern starts with ~/, ~ will be substituted with
the content of the environment variable HOME.
• If the pattern starts with ./, it is replaced with the
directory containing the current config file.
• If the pattern does not start with either ~/, ./ or /, **/
will be automatically prepended. For example, the pattern
foo/bar becomes **/foo/bar and would match
/any/path/to/foo/bar.
• If the pattern ends with /, ** will be automatically
added. For example, the pattern foo/ becomes foo/**. In
other words, it matches "foo" and everything inside,
recursively.
gitdir/i
This is the same as gitdir except that matching is done
case-insensitively (e.g. on case-insensitive file systems)
onbranch
The data that follows the keyword onbranch: is taken to be a
pattern with standard globbing wildcards and two additional
ones, **/ and /**, that can match multiple path components. If
we are in a worktree where the name of the branch that is
currently checked out matches the pattern, the include
condition is met.
If the pattern ends with /, ** will be automatically added.
For example, the pattern foo/ becomes foo/**. In other words,
it matches all branches that begin with foo/. This is useful
if your branches are organized hierarchically and you would
like to apply a configuration to all the branches in that
hierarchy.
hasconfig:remote.*.url:
The data that follows this keyword is taken to be a pattern
with standard globbing wildcards and two additional ones, **/
and /**, that can match multiple components. The first time
this keyword is seen, the rest of the config files will be
scanned for remote URLs (without applying any values). If
there exists at least one remote URL that matches this
pattern, the include condition is met.
Files included by this option (directly or indirectly) are not
allowed to contain remote URLs.
Note that unlike other includeIf conditions, resolving this
condition relies on information that is not yet known at the
point of reading the condition. A typical use case is this
option being present as a system-level or global-level config,
and the remote URL being in a local-level config; hence the
need to scan ahead when resolving this condition. In order to
avoid the chicken-and-egg problem in which
potentially-included files can affect whether such files are
potentially included, Git breaks the cycle by prohibiting
these files from affecting the resolution of these conditions
(thus, prohibiting them from declaring remote URLs).
As for the naming of this keyword, it is for forwards
compatibility with a naming scheme that supports more
variable-based include conditions, but currently Git only
supports the exact keyword described above.
A few more notes on matching via gitdir and gitdir/i:
• Symlinks in $GIT_DIR are not resolved before matching.
• Both the symlink & realpath versions of paths will be matched
outside of $GIT_DIR. E.g. if ~/git is a symlink to
/mnt/storage/git, both gitdir:~/git and
gitdir:/mnt/storage/git will match.
This was not the case in the initial release of this feature
in v2.13.0, which only matched the realpath version.
Configuration that wants to be compatible with the initial
release of this feature needs to either specify only the
realpath version, or both versions.
• Note that "../" is not special and will match literally, which
is unlikely what you want.
Example
# Core variables
[core]
; Don't trust file modes
filemode = false
# Our diff algorithm
[diff]
external = /usr/local/bin/diff-wrapper
renames = true
[branch "devel"]
remote = origin
merge = refs/heads/devel
# Proxy settings
[core]
gitProxy="ssh" for "kernel.org"
gitProxy=default-proxy ; for the rest
[include]
path = /path/to/foo.inc ; include by absolute path
path = foo.inc ; find "foo.inc" relative to the current file
path = ~/foo.inc ; find "foo.inc" in your `$HOME` directory
; include if $GIT_DIR is /path/to/foo/.git
[includeIf "gitdir:/path/to/foo/.git"]
path = /path/to/foo.inc
; include for all repositories inside /path/to/group
[includeIf "gitdir:/path/to/group/"]
path = /path/to/foo.inc
; include for all repositories inside $HOME/to/group
[includeIf "gitdir:~/to/group/"]
path = /path/to/foo.inc
; relative paths are always relative to the including
; file (if the condition is true); their location is not
; affected by the condition
[includeIf "gitdir:/path/to/group/"]
path = foo.inc
; include only if we are in a worktree where foo-branch is
; currently checked out
[includeIf "onbranch:foo-branch"]
path = foo.inc
; include only if a remote with the given URL exists (note
; that such a URL may be provided later in a file or in a
; file read after this file is read, as seen in this example)
[includeIf "hasconfig:remote.*.url:https://example.com/**"]
path = foo.inc
[remote "origin"]
url = https://example.com/git
Values
Values of many variables are treated as a simple string, but there
are variables that take values of specific types and there are
rules as to how to spell them.
boolean
When a variable is said to take a boolean value, many synonyms
are accepted for true and false; these are all
case-insensitive.
true
Boolean true literals are yes, on, true, and 1. Also, a
variable defined without = <value> is taken as true.
false
Boolean false literals are no, off, false, 0 and the empty
string.
When converting a value to its canonical form using the
--type=bool type specifier, git config will ensure that
the output is "true" or "false" (spelled in lowercase).
integer
The value for many variables that specify various sizes can be
suffixed with k, M,... to mean "scale the number by 1024", "by
1024x1024", etc.
color
The value for a variable that takes a color is a list of
colors (at most two, one for foreground and one for
background) and attributes (as many as you want), separated by
spaces.
The basic colors accepted are normal, black, red, green,
yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, white and default. The first
color given is the foreground; the second is the background.
All the basic colors except normal and default have a bright
variant that can be specified by prefixing the color with
bright, like brightred.
The color normal makes no change to the color. It is the same
as an empty string, but can be used as the foreground color
when specifying a background color alone (for example, "normal
red").
The color default explicitly resets the color to the terminal
default, for example to specify a cleared background. Although
it varies between terminals, this is usually not the same as
setting to "white black".
Colors may also be given as numbers between 0 and 255; these
use ANSI 256-color mode (but note that not all terminals may
support this). If your terminal supports it, you may also
specify 24-bit RGB values as hex, like #ff0ab3, or 12-bit RGB
values like #f1b, which is equivalent to the 24-bit color
#ff11bb.
The accepted attributes are bold, dim, ul, blink, reverse,
italic, and strike (for crossed-out or "strikethrough"
letters). The position of any attributes with respect to the
colors (before, after, or in between), doesn’t matter.
Specific attributes may be turned off by prefixing them with
no or no- (e.g., noreverse, no-ul, etc).
The pseudo-attribute reset resets all colors and attributes
before applying the specified coloring. For example, reset
green will result in a green foreground and default background
without any active attributes.
An empty color string produces no color effect at all. This
can be used to avoid coloring specific elements without
disabling color entirely.
For git’s pre-defined color slots, the attributes are meant to
be reset at the beginning of each item in the colored output.
So setting color.decorate.branch to black will paint that
branch name in a plain black, even if the previous thing on
the same output line (e.g. opening parenthesis before the list
of branch names in log --decorate output) is set to be painted
with bold or some other attribute. However, custom log formats
may do more complicated and layered coloring, and the negated
forms may be useful there.
pathname
A variable that takes a pathname value can be given a string
that begins with "~/" or "~user/", and the usual tilde
expansion happens to such a string: ~/ is expanded to the
value of $HOME, and ~user/ to the specified user’s home
directory.
If a path starts with %(prefix)/, the remainder is interpreted
as a path relative to Git’s "runtime prefix", i.e. relative to
the location where Git itself was installed. For example,
%(prefix)/bin/ refers to the directory in which the Git
executable itself lives. If Git was compiled without runtime
prefix support, the compiled-in prefix will be substituted
instead. In the unlikely event that a literal path needs to be
specified that should not be expanded, it needs to be prefixed
by ./, like so: ./%(prefix)/bin.
Variables
Note that this list is non-comprehensive and not necessarily
complete. For command-specific variables, you will find a more
detailed description in the appropriate manual page.
Other git-related tools may and do use their own variables. When
inventing new variables for use in your own tool, make sure their
names do not conflict with those that are used by Git itself and
other popular tools, and describe them in your documentation.
add.ignoreErrors, add.ignore-errors (deprecated)
Tells git add to continue adding files when some files cannot
be added due to indexing errors. Equivalent to the
--ignore-errors option of git-add(1). add.ignore-errors is
deprecated, as it does not follow the usual naming convention
for configuration variables.
advice.*
These variables control various optional help messages
designed to aid new users. When left unconfigured, Git will
give the message alongside instructions on how to squelch it.
You can tell Git that you have understood the issue and no
longer need a specific help message by setting the
corresponding variable to false.
As they are intended to help human users, these messages are
output to the standard error. When tools that run Git as a
subprocess find them disruptive, they can set GIT_ADVICE=0 in
the environment to squelch all advice messages.
addEmbeddedRepo
Shown when the user accidentally adds one git repo inside
of another.
addEmptyPathspec
Shown when the user runs git add without providing the
pathspec parameter.
addIgnoredFile
Shown when the user attempts to add an ignored file to the
index.
amWorkDir
Shown when git-am(1) fails to apply a patch file, to tell
the user the location of the file.
ambiguousFetchRefspec
Shown when a fetch refspec for multiple remotes maps to
the same remote-tracking branch namespace and causes
branch tracking set-up to fail.
checkoutAmbiguousRemoteBranchName
Shown when the argument to git-checkout(1) and
git-switch(1) ambiguously resolves to a remote tracking
branch on more than one remote in situations where an
unambiguous argument would have otherwise caused a
remote-tracking branch to be checked out. See the
checkout.defaultRemote configuration variable for how to
set a given remote to be used by default in some
situations where this advice would be printed.
commitBeforeMerge
Shown when git-merge(1) refuses to merge to avoid
overwriting local changes.
detachedHead
Shown when the user uses git-switch(1) or git-checkout(1)
to move to the detached HEAD state, to tell the user how
to create a local branch after the fact.
diverging
Shown when a fast-forward is not possible.
fetchShowForcedUpdates
Shown when git-fetch(1) takes a long time to calculate
forced updates after ref updates, or to warn that the
check is disabled.
forceDeleteBranch
Shown when the user tries to delete a not fully merged
branch without the force option set.
ignoredHook
Shown when a hook is ignored because the hook is not set
as executable.
implicitIdentity
Shown when the user’s information is guessed from the
system username and domain name, to tell the user how to
set their identity configuration.
mergeConflict
Shown when various commands stop because of conflicts.
nestedTag
Shown when a user attempts to recursively tag a tag
object.
pushAlreadyExists
Shown when git-push(1) rejects an update that does not
qualify for fast-forwarding (e.g., a tag.)
pushFetchFirst
Shown when git-push(1) rejects an update that tries to
overwrite a remote ref that points at an object we do not
have.
pushNeedsForce
Shown when git-push(1) rejects an update that tries to
overwrite a remote ref that points at an object that is
not a commit-ish, or make the remote ref point at an
object that is not a commit-ish.
pushNonFFCurrent
Shown when git-push(1) fails due to a non-fast-forward
update to the current branch.
pushNonFFMatching
Shown when the user ran git-push(1) and pushed "matching
refs" explicitly (i.e. used :, or specified a refspec that
isn’t the current branch) and it resulted in a
non-fast-forward error.
pushRefNeedsUpdate
Shown when git-push(1) rejects a forced update of a branch
when its remote-tracking ref has updates that we do not
have locally.
pushUnqualifiedRefname
Shown when git-push(1) gives up trying to guess based on
the source and destination refs what remote ref namespace
the source belongs in, but where we can still suggest that
the user push to either refs/heads/* or refs/tags/* based
on the type of the source object.
pushUpdateRejected
Set this variable to false if you want to disable
pushNonFFCurrent, pushNonFFMatching, pushAlreadyExists,
pushFetchFirst, pushNeedsForce, and pushRefNeedsUpdate
simultaneously.
rebaseTodoError
Shown when there is an error after editing the rebase todo
list.
refSyntax
Shown when the user provides an illegal ref name, to tell
the user about the ref syntax documentation.
resetNoRefresh
Shown when git-reset(1) takes more than 2 seconds to
refresh the index after reset, to tell the user that they
can use the --no-refresh option.
resolveConflict
Shown by various commands when conflicts prevent the
operation from being performed.
rmHints
Shown on failure in the output of git-rm(1), to give
directions on how to proceed from the current state.
sequencerInUse
Shown when a sequencer command is already in progress.
skippedCherryPicks
Shown when git-rebase(1) skips a commit that has already
been cherry-picked onto the upstream branch.
sparseIndexExpanded
Shown when a sparse index is expanded to a full index,
which is likely due to an unexpected set of files existing
outside of the sparse-checkout.
statusAheadBehind
Shown when git-status(1) computes the ahead/behind counts
for a local ref compared to its remote tracking ref, and
that calculation takes longer than expected. Will not
appear if status.aheadBehind is false or the option
--no-ahead-behind is given.
statusHints
Show directions on how to proceed from the current state
in the output of git-status(1), in the template shown when
writing commit messages in git-commit(1), and in the help
message shown by git-switch(1) or git-checkout(1) when
switching branches.
statusUoption
Shown when git-status(1) takes more than 2 seconds to
enumerate untracked files, to tell the user that they can
use the -u option.
submoduleAlternateErrorStrategyDie
Shown when a submodule.alternateErrorStrategy option
configured to "die" causes a fatal error.
submoduleMergeConflict
Advice shown when a non-trivial submodule merge conflict
is encountered.
submodulesNotUpdated
Shown when a user runs a submodule command that fails
because git submodule update --init was not run.
suggestDetachingHead
Shown when git-switch(1) refuses to detach HEAD without
the explicit --detach option.
updateSparsePath
Shown when either git-add(1) or git-rm(1) is asked to
update index entries outside the current sparse checkout.
waitingForEditor
Shown when Git is waiting for editor input. Relevant when
e.g. the editor is not launched inside the terminal.
worktreeAddOrphan
Shown when the user tries to create a worktree from an
invalid reference, to tell the user how to create a new
unborn branch instead.
alias.*
Command aliases for the git(1) command wrapper - e.g. after
defining alias.last = cat-file commit HEAD, the invocation git
last is equivalent to git cat-file commit HEAD. To avoid
confusion and troubles with script usage, aliases that hide
existing Git commands are ignored. Arguments are split by
spaces, the usual shell quoting and escaping are supported. A
quote pair or a backslash can be used to quote them.
Note that the first word of an alias does not necessarily have
to be a command. It can be a command-line option that will be
passed into the invocation of git. In particular, this is
useful when used with -c to pass in one-time configurations or
-p to force pagination. For example, loud-rebase = -c
commit.verbose=true rebase can be defined such that running
git loud-rebase would be equivalent to git -c
commit.verbose=true rebase. Also, ps = -p status would be a
helpful alias since git ps would paginate the output of git
status where the original command does not.
If the alias expansion is prefixed with an exclamation point,
it will be treated as a shell command. For example, defining
alias.new = !gitk --all --not ORIG_HEAD, the invocation git
new is equivalent to running the shell command gitk --all
--not ORIG_HEAD. Note:
• Shell commands will be executed from the top-level
directory of a repository, which may not necessarily be
the current directory.
• GIT_PREFIX is set as returned by running git rev-parse
--show-prefix from the original current directory. See
git-rev-parse(1).
• Shell command aliases always receive any extra arguments
provided to the Git command-line as positional arguments.
• Care should be taken if your shell alias is a
"one-liner" script with multiple commands (e.g. in a
pipeline), references multiple arguments, or is
otherwise not able to handle positional arguments
added at the end. For example: alias.cmd = "!echo $1 |
grep $2" called as git cmd 1 2 will be executed as
echo $1 | grep $2 1 2, which is not what you want.
• A convenient way to deal with this is to write your
script operations in an inline function that is then
called with any arguments from the command-line. For
example `alias.cmd = "!c() { echo $1 | grep $2 ; }; c"
will correctly execute the prior example.
• Setting GIT_TRACE=1 can help you debug the command
being run for your alias.
am.keepcr
If true, git-am will call git-mailsplit for patches in mbox
format with parameter --keep-cr. In this case git-mailsplit
will not remove \r from lines ending with \r\n. Can be
overridden by giving --no-keep-cr from the command line. See
git-am(1), git-mailsplit(1).
am.threeWay
By default, git am will fail if the patch does not apply
cleanly. When set to true, this setting tells git am to fall
back on 3-way merge if the patch records the identity of blobs
it is supposed to apply to and we have those blobs available
locally (equivalent to giving the --3way option from the
command line). Defaults to false. See git-am(1).
apply.ignoreWhitespace
When set to change, tells git apply to ignore changes in
whitespace, in the same way as the --ignore-space-change
option. When set to one of: no, none, never, false, it tells
git apply to respect all whitespace differences. See
git-apply(1).
apply.whitespace
Tells git apply how to handle whitespace, in the same way as
the --whitespace option. See git-apply(1).
attr.tree
A reference to a tree in the repository from which to read
attributes, instead of the .gitattributes file in the working
tree. If the value does not resolve to a valid tree object, an
empty tree is used instead. When the GIT_ATTR_SOURCE
environment variable or --attr-source command line option are
used, this configuration variable has no effect.
Note
The configuration options in bitmapPseudoMerge.* are
considered EXPERIMENTAL and may be subject to change or be
removed entirely in the future. For more information about the
pseudo-merge bitmap feature, see the "Pseudo-merge bitmaps"
section of gitpacking(7).
bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.pattern
Regular expression used to match reference names. Commits
pointed to by references matching this pattern (and meeting
the below criteria, like bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.sampleRate
and bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.threshold) will be considered for
inclusion in a pseudo-merge bitmap.
Commits are grouped into pseudo-merge groups based on whether
or not any reference(s) that point at a given commit match the
pattern, which is an extended regular expression.
Within a pseudo-merge group, commits may be further grouped
into sub-groups based on the capture groups in the pattern.
These sub-groupings are formed from the regular expressions by
concatenating any capture groups from the regular expression,
with a - dash in between.
For example, if the pattern is refs/tags/, then all tags
(provided they meet the below criteria) will be considered
candidates for the same pseudo-merge group. However, if the
pattern is instead refs/remotes/([0-9])+/tags/, then tags from
different remotes will be grouped into separate pseudo-merge
groups, based on the remote number.
bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.decay
Determines the rate at which consecutive pseudo-merge bitmap
groups decrease in size. Must be non-negative. This parameter
can be thought of as k in the function f(n) = C * n^-k, where
f(n) is the size of the `n`th group.
Setting the decay rate equal to 0 will cause all groups to be
the same size. Setting the decay rate equal to 1 will cause
the n`th group to be `1/n the size of the initial group.
Higher values of the decay rate cause consecutive groups to
shrink at an increasing rate. The default is 1.
If all groups are the same size, it is possible that groups
containing newer commits will be able to be used less often
than earlier groups, since it is more likely that the
references pointing at newer commits will be updated more
often than a reference pointing at an old commit.
bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.sampleRate
Determines the proportion of non-bitmapped commits (among
reference tips) which are selected for inclusion in an
unstable pseudo-merge bitmap. Must be between 0 and 1
(inclusive). The default is 1.
bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.threshold
Determines the minimum age of non-bitmapped commits (among
reference tips, as above) which are candidates for inclusion
in an unstable pseudo-merge bitmap. The default is 1.week.ago.
bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.maxMerges
Determines the maximum number of pseudo-merge commits among
which commits may be distributed.
For pseudo-merge groups whose pattern does not contain any
capture groups, this setting is applied for all commits
matching the regular expression. For patterns that have one or
more capture groups, this setting is applied for each distinct
capture group.
For example, if your capture group is refs/tags/, then this
setting will distribute all tags into a maximum of maxMerges
pseudo-merge commits. However, if your capture group is, say,
refs/remotes/([0-9]+)/tags/, then this setting will be applied
to each remote’s set of tags individually.
Must be non-negative. The default value is 64.
bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.stableThreshold
Determines the minimum age of commits (among reference tips,
as above, however stable commits are still considered
candidates even when they have been covered by a bitmap) which
are candidates for a stable a pseudo-merge bitmap. The default
is 1.month.ago.
Setting this threshold to a smaller value (e.g., 1.week.ago)
will cause more stable groups to be generated (which impose a
one-time generation cost) but those groups will likely become
stale over time. Using a larger value incurs the opposite
penalty (fewer stable groups which are more useful).
bitmapPseudoMerge.<name>.stableSize
Determines the size (in number of commits) of a stable
psuedo-merge bitmap. The default is 512.
blame.blankBoundary
Show blank commit object name for boundary commits in
git-blame(1). This option defaults to false.
blame.coloring
This determines the coloring scheme to be applied to blame
output. It can be repeatedLines, highlightRecent, or none
which is the default.
blame.date
Specifies the format used to output dates in git-blame(1). If
unset the iso format is used. For supported values, see the
discussion of the --date option at git-log(1).
blame.showEmail
Show the author email instead of author name in git-blame(1).
This option defaults to false.
blame.showRoot
Do not treat root commits as boundaries in git-blame(1). This
option defaults to false.
blame.ignoreRevsFile
Ignore revisions listed in the file, one unabbreviated object
name per line, in git-blame(1). Whitespace and comments
beginning with # are ignored. This option may be repeated
multiple times. Empty file names will reset the list of
ignored revisions. This option will be handled before the
command line option --ignore-revs-file.
blame.markUnblamableLines
Mark lines that were changed by an ignored revision that we
could not attribute to another commit with a * in the output
of git-blame(1).
blame.markIgnoredLines
Mark lines that were changed by an ignored revision that we
attributed to another commit with a ? in the output of
git-blame(1).
branch.autoSetupMerge
Tells git branch, git switch and git checkout to set up new
branches so that git-pull(1) will appropriately merge from the
starting point branch. Note that even if this option is not
set, this behavior can be chosen per-branch using the --track
and --no-track options. This option defaults to true. The
valid settings are:
false
no automatic setup is done
true
automatic setup is done when the starting point is a
remote-tracking branch
always
automatic setup is done when the starting point is either
a local branch or remote-tracking branch
inherit
if the starting point has a tracking configuration, it is
copied to the new branch
simple
automatic setup is done only when the starting point is a
remote-tracking branch and the new branch has the same
name as the remote branch.
branch.autoSetupRebase
When a new branch is created with git branch, git switch or
git checkout that tracks another branch, this variable tells
Git to set up pull to rebase instead of merge (see
branch.<name>.rebase). The valid settings are:
never
rebase is never automatically set to true.
local
rebase is set to true for tracked branches of other local
branches.
remote
rebase is set to true for tracked branches of
remote-tracking branches.
always
rebase will be set to true for all tracking branches.
See branch.autoSetupMerge for details on how to set up a
branch to track another branch. This option defaults to never.
branch.sort
This variable controls the sort ordering of branches when
displayed by git-branch(1). Without the --sort=<value> option
provided, the value of this variable will be used as the
default. See git-for-each-ref(1) field names for valid values.
branch.<name>.remote
When on branch <name>, it tells git fetch and git push which
remote to fetch from or push to. The remote to push to may be
overridden with remote.pushDefault (for all branches). The
remote to push to, for the current branch, may be further
overridden by branch.<name>.pushRemote. If no remote is
configured, or if you are not on any branch and there is more
than one remote defined in the repository, it defaults to
origin for fetching and remote.pushDefault for pushing.
Additionally, . (a period) is the current local repository (a
dot-repository), see branch.<name>.merge's final note below.
branch.<name>.pushRemote
When on branch <name>, it overrides branch.<name>.remote for
pushing. It also overrides remote.pushDefault for pushing from
branch <name>. When you pull from one place (e.g. your
upstream) and push to another place (e.g. your own publishing
repository), you would want to set remote.pushDefault to
specify the remote to push to for all branches, and use this
option to override it for a specific branch.
branch.<name>.merge
Defines, together with branch.<name>.remote, the upstream
branch for the given branch. It tells git fetch/git pull/git
rebase which branch to merge and can also affect git push (see
push.default). When in branch <name>, it tells git fetch the
default refspec to be marked for merging in FETCH_HEAD. The
value is handled like the remote part of a refspec, and must
match a ref which is fetched from the remote given by
branch.<name>.remote. The merge information is used by git
pull (which first calls git fetch) to lookup the default
branch for merging. Without this option, git pull defaults to
merge the first refspec fetched. Specify multiple values to
get an octopus merge. If you wish to setup git pull so that it
merges into <name> from another branch in the local
repository, you can point branch.<name>.merge to the desired
branch, and use the relative path setting . (a period) for
branch.<name>.remote.
branch.<name>.mergeOptions
Sets default options for merging into branch <name>. The
syntax and supported options are the same as those of
git-merge(1), but option values containing whitespace
characters are currently not supported.
branch.<name>.rebase
When true, rebase the branch <name> on top of the fetched
branch, instead of merging the default branch from the default
remote when git pull is run. See pull.rebase for doing this in
a non branch-specific manner.
When merges (or just m), pass the --rebase-merges option to
git rebase so that the local merge commits are included in the
rebase (see git-rebase(1) for details).
When the value is interactive (or just i), the rebase is run
in interactive mode.
NOTE: this is a possibly dangerous operation; do not use it
unless you understand the implications (see git-rebase(1) for
details).
branch.<name>.description
Branch description, can be edited with git branch
--edit-description. Branch description is automatically added
to the format-patch cover letter or request-pull summary.
browser.<tool>.cmd
Specify the command to invoke the specified browser. The
specified command is evaluated in shell with the URLs passed
as arguments. (See git-web--browse(1).)
browser.<tool>.path
Override the path for the given tool that may be used to
browse HTML help (see -w option in git-help(1)) or a working
repository in gitweb (see git-instaweb(1)).
bundle.*
The bundle.* keys may appear in a bundle list file found via
the git clone --bundle-uri option. These keys currently have
no effect if placed in a repository config file, though this
will change in the future. See the bundle URI design
document[1] for more details.
bundle.version
This integer value advertises the version of the bundle list
format used by the bundle list. Currently, the only accepted
value is 1.
bundle.mode
This string value should be either all or any. This value
describes whether all of the advertised bundles are required
to unbundle a complete understanding of the bundled
information (all) or if any one of the listed bundle URIs is
sufficient (any).
bundle.heuristic
If this string-valued key exists, then the bundle list is
designed to work well with incremental git fetch commands. The
heuristic signals that there are additional keys available for
each bundle that help determine which subset of bundles the
client should download. The only value currently understood is
creationToken.
bundle.<id>.*
The bundle.<id>.* keys are used to describe a single item in
the bundle list, grouped under <id> for identification
purposes.
bundle.<id>.uri
This string value defines the URI by which Git can reach the
contents of this <id>. This URI may be a bundle file or
another bundle list.
checkout.defaultRemote
When you run git checkout <something> or git switch
<something> and only have one remote, it may implicitly fall
back on checking out and tracking e.g. origin/<something>.
This stops working as soon as you have more than one remote
with a <something> reference. This setting allows for setting
the name of a preferred remote that should always win when it
comes to disambiguation. The typical use-case is to set this
to origin.
Currently this is used by git-switch(1) and git-checkout(1)
when git checkout <something> or git switch <something> will
checkout the <something> branch on another remote, and by
git-worktree(1) when git worktree add refers to a remote
branch. This setting might be used for other checkout-like
commands or functionality in the future.
checkout.guess
Provides the default value for the --guess or --no-guess
option in git checkout and git switch. See git-switch(1) and
git-checkout(1).
checkout.workers
The number of parallel workers to use when updating the
working tree. The default is one, i.e. sequential execution.
If set to a value less than one, Git will use as many workers
as the number of logical cores available. This setting and
checkout.thresholdForParallelism affect all commands that
perform checkout. E.g. checkout, clone, reset,
sparse-checkout, etc.
Note
Parallel checkout usually delivers better performance for
repositories located on SSDs or over NFS. For repositories
on spinning disks and/or machines with a small number of
cores, the default sequential checkout often performs
better. The size and compression level of a repository
might also influence how well the parallel version
performs.
checkout.thresholdForParallelism
When running parallel checkout with a small number of files,
the cost of subprocess spawning and inter-process
communication might outweigh the parallelization gains. This
setting allows you to define the minimum number of files for
which parallel checkout should be attempted. The default is
100.
clean.requireForce
A boolean to make git-clean refuse to delete files unless -f
is given. Defaults to true.
clone.defaultRemoteName
The name of the remote to create when cloning a repository.
Defaults to origin. It can be overridden by passing the
--origin command-line option to git-clone(1).
clone.rejectShallow
Reject cloning a repository if it is a shallow one; this can
be overridden by passing the --reject-shallow option on the
command line. See git-clone(1).
clone.filterSubmodules
If a partial clone filter is provided (see --filter in
git-rev-list(1)) and --recurse-submodules is used, also apply
the filter to submodules.
color.advice
A boolean to enable/disable color in hints (e.g. when a push
failed, see advice.* for a list). May be set to always, false
(or never) or auto (or true), in which case colors are used
only when the error output goes to a terminal. If unset, then
the value of color.ui is used (auto by default).
color.advice.hint
Use customized color for hints.
color.blame.highlightRecent
Specify the line annotation color for git blame --color-by-age
depending upon the age of the line.
This setting should be set to a comma-separated list of color
and date settings, starting and ending with a color, the dates
should be set from oldest to newest. The metadata will be
colored with the specified colors if the line was introduced
before the given timestamp, overwriting older timestamped
colors.
Instead of an absolute timestamp relative timestamps work as
well, e.g. 2.weeks.ago is valid to address anything older
than 2 weeks.
It defaults to blue,12 month ago,white,1 month ago,red, which
colors everything older than one year blue, recent changes
between one month and one year old are kept white, and lines
introduced within the last month are colored red.
color.blame.repeatedLines
Use the specified color to colorize line annotations for git
blame --color-lines, if they come from the same commit as the
preceding line. Defaults to cyan.
color.branch
A boolean to enable/disable color in the output of
git-branch(1). May be set to always, false (or never) or auto
(or true), in which case colors are used only when the output
is to a terminal. If unset, then the value of color.ui is used
(auto by default).
color.branch.<slot>
Use customized color for branch coloration. <slot> is one of
current (the current branch), local (a local branch), remote
(a remote-tracking branch in refs/remotes/), upstream
(upstream tracking branch), plain (other refs).
color.diff
Whether to use ANSI escape sequences to add color to patches.
If this is set to always, git-diff(1), git-log(1), and
git-show(1) will use color for all patches. If it is set to
true or auto, those commands will only use color when output
is to the terminal. If unset, then the value of color.ui is
used (auto by default).
This does not affect git-format-patch(1) or the git-diff-*
plumbing commands. Can be overridden on the command line with
the --color[=<when>] option.
color.diff.<slot>
Use customized color for diff colorization. <slot> specifies
which part of the patch to use the specified color, and is one
of context (context text - plain is a historical synonym),
meta (metainformation), frag (hunk header), func (function in
hunk header), old (removed lines), new (added lines), commit
(commit headers), whitespace (highlighting whitespace errors),
oldMoved (deleted lines), newMoved (added lines),
oldMovedDimmed, oldMovedAlternative,
oldMovedAlternativeDimmed, newMovedDimmed, newMovedAlternative
newMovedAlternativeDimmed (See the <mode> setting of
--color-moved in git-diff(1) for details), contextDimmed,
oldDimmed, newDimmed, contextBold, oldBold, and newBold (see
git-range-diff(1) for details).
color.decorate.<slot>
Use customized color for git log --decorate output. <slot> is
one of branch, remoteBranch, tag, stash or HEAD for local
branches, remote-tracking branches, tags, stash and HEAD,
respectively and grafted for grafted commits.
color.grep
When set to always, always highlight matches. When false (or
never), never. When set to true or auto, use color only when
the output is written to the terminal. If unset, then the
value of color.ui is used (auto by default).
color.grep.<slot>
Use customized color for grep colorization. <slot> specifies
which part of the line to use the specified color, and is one
of
context
non-matching text in context lines (when using -A, -B, or
-C)
filename
filename prefix (when not using -h)
function
function name lines (when using -p)
lineNumber
line number prefix (when using -n)
column
column number prefix (when using --column)
match
matching text (same as setting matchContext and
matchSelected)
matchContext
matching text in context lines
matchSelected
matching text in selected lines. Also, used to customize
the following git-log(1) subcommands: --grep, --author,
and --committer.
selected
non-matching text in selected lines. Also, used to
customize the following git-log(1) subcommands: --grep,
--author and --committer.
separator
separators between fields on a line (:, -, and =) and
between hunks (--)
color.interactive
When set to always, always use colors for interactive prompts
and displays (such as those used by "git-add --interactive"
and "git-clean --interactive"). When false (or never), never.
When set to true or auto, use colors only when the output is
to the terminal. If unset, then the value of color.ui is used
(auto by default).
color.interactive.<slot>
Use customized color for git add --interactive and git clean
--interactive output. <slot> may be prompt, header, help or
error, for four distinct types of normal output from
interactive commands.
color.pager
A boolean to specify whether auto color modes should colorize
output going to the pager. Defaults to true; set this to false
if your pager does not understand ANSI color codes.
color.push
A boolean to enable/disable color in push errors. May be set
to always, false (or never) or auto (or true), in which case
colors are used only when the error output goes to a terminal.
If unset, then the value of color.ui is used (auto by
default).
color.push.error
Use customized color for push errors.
color.remote
If set, keywords at the start of the line are highlighted. The
keywords are "error", "warning", "hint" and "success", and are
matched case-insensitively. May be set to always, false (or
never) or auto (or true). If unset, then the value of color.ui
is used (auto by default).
color.remote.<slot>
Use customized color for each remote keyword. <slot> may be
hint, warning, success or error which match the corresponding
keyword.
color.showBranch
A boolean to enable/disable color in the output of
git-show-branch(1). May be set to always, false (or never) or
auto (or true), in which case colors are used only when the
output is to a terminal. If unset, then the value of color.ui
is used (auto by default).
color.status
A boolean to enable/disable color in the output of
git-status(1). May be set to always, false (or never) or auto
(or true), in which case colors are used only when the output
is to a terminal. If unset, then the value of color.ui is used
(auto by default).
color.status.<slot>
Use customized color for status colorization. <slot> is one
of header (the header text of the status message), added or
updated (files which are added but not committed), changed
(files which are changed but not added in the index),
untracked (files which are not tracked by Git), branch (the
current branch), nobranch (the color the no branch warning is
shown in, defaulting to red), localBranch or remoteBranch (the
local and remote branch names, respectively, when branch and
tracking information is displayed in the status short-format),
or unmerged (files which have unmerged changes).
color.transport
A boolean to enable/disable color when pushes are rejected.
May be set to always, false (or never) or auto (or true), in
which case colors are used only when the error output goes to
a terminal. If unset, then the value of color.ui is used (auto
by default).
color.transport.rejected
Use customized color when a push was rejected.
color.ui
This variable determines the default value for variables such
as color.diff and color.grep that control the use of color per
command family. Its scope will expand as more commands learn
configuration to set a default for the --color option. Set it
to false or never if you prefer Git commands not to use color
unless enabled explicitly with some other configuration or the
--color option. Set it to always if you want all output not
intended for machine consumption to use color, to true or auto
(this is the default since Git 1.8.4) if you want such output
to use color when written to the terminal.
column.ui
Specify whether supported commands should output in columns.
This variable consists of a list of tokens separated by spaces
or commas:
These options control when the feature should be enabled
(defaults to never):
always
always show in columns
never
never show in columns
auto
show in columns if the output is to the terminal
These options control layout (defaults to column). Setting any
of these implies always if none of always, never, or auto are
specified.
column
fill columns before rows
row
fill rows before columns
plain
show in one column
Finally, these options can be combined with a layout option
(defaults to nodense):
dense
make unequal size columns to utilize more space
nodense
make equal size columns
column.branch
Specify whether to output branch listing in git branch in
columns. See column.ui for details.
column.clean
Specify the layout when listing items in git clean -i, which
always shows files and directories in columns. See column.ui
for details.
column.status
Specify whether to output untracked files in git status in
columns. See column.ui for details.
column.tag
Specify whether to output tag listings in git tag in columns.
See column.ui for details.
commit.cleanup
This setting overrides the default of the --cleanup option in
git commit. See git-commit(1) for details. Changing the
default can be useful when you always want to keep lines that
begin with the comment character (core.commentChar, default #)
in your log message, in which case you would do git config
commit.cleanup whitespace (note that you will have to remove
the help lines that begin with the comment character in the
commit log template yourself, if you do this).
commit.gpgSign
A boolean to specify whether all commits should be GPG signed.
Use of this option when doing operations such as rebase can
result in a large number of commits being signed. It may be
convenient to use an agent to avoid typing your GPG passphrase
several times.
commit.status
A boolean to enable/disable inclusion of status information in
the commit message template when using an editor to prepare
the commit message. Defaults to true.
commit.template
Specify the pathname of a file to use as the template for new
commit messages.
commit.verbose
A boolean or int to specify the level of verbosity with git
commit. See git-commit(1) for details.
commitGraph.generationVersion
Specifies the type of generation number version to use when
writing or reading the commit-graph file. If version 1 is
specified, then the corrected commit dates will not be written
or read. Defaults to 2.
commitGraph.maxNewFilters
Specifies the default value for the --max-new-filters option
of git commit-graph write (c.f., git-commit-graph(1)).
commitGraph.readChangedPaths
Deprecated. Equivalent to commitGraph.changedPathsVersion=-1
if true, and commitGraph.changedPathsVersion=0 if false. (If
commitGraph.changedPathVersion is also set,
commitGraph.changedPathsVersion takes precedence.)
commitGraph.changedPathsVersion
Specifies the version of the changed-path Bloom filters that
Git will read and write. May be -1, 0, 1, or 2. Note that
values greater than 1 may be incompatible with older versions
of Git which do not yet understand those versions. Use caution
when operating in a mixed-version environment.
Defaults to -1.
If -1, Git will use the version of the changed-path Bloom
filters in the repository, defaulting to 1 if there are none.
If 0, Git will not read any Bloom filters, and will write
version 1 Bloom filters when instructed to write.
If 1, Git will only read version 1 Bloom filters, and will
write version 1 Bloom filters.
If 2, Git will only read version 2 Bloom filters, and will
write version 2 Bloom filters.
See git-commit-graph(1) for more information.
completion.commands
This is only used by git-completion.bash to add or remove
commands from the list of completed commands. Normally only
porcelain commands and a few select others are completed. You
can add more commands, separated by space, in this variable.
Prefixing the command with - will remove it from the existing
list.
core.fileMode
Tells Git if the executable bit of files in the working tree
is to be honored.
Some filesystems lose the executable bit when a file that is
marked as executable is checked out, or checks out a
non-executable file with executable bit on. git-clone(1) or
git-init(1) probe the filesystem to see if it handles the
executable bit correctly and this variable is automatically
set as necessary.
A repository, however, may be on a filesystem that handles the
filemode correctly, and this variable is set to true when
created, but later may be made accessible from another
environment that loses the filemode (e.g. exporting ext4 via
CIFS mount, visiting a Cygwin created repository with Git for
Windows or Eclipse). In such a case it may be necessary to set
this variable to false. See git-update-index(1).
The default is true (when core.filemode is not specified in
the config file).
core.hideDotFiles
(Windows-only) If true, mark newly-created directories and
files whose name starts with a dot as hidden. If dotGitOnly,
only the .git/ directory is hidden, but no other files
starting with a dot. The default mode is dotGitOnly.
core.ignoreCase
Internal variable which enables various workarounds to enable
Git to work better on filesystems that are not case sensitive,
like APFS, HFS+, FAT, NTFS, etc. For example, if a directory
listing finds "makefile" when Git expects "Makefile", Git will
assume it is really the same file, and continue to remember it
as "Makefile".
The default is false, except git-clone(1) or git-init(1) will
probe and set core.ignoreCase true if appropriate when the
repository is created.
Git relies on the proper configuration of this variable for
your operating and file system. Modifying this value may
result in unexpected behavior.
core.precomposeUnicode
This option is only used by Mac OS implementation of Git. When
core.precomposeUnicode=true, Git reverts the unicode
decomposition of filenames done by Mac OS. This is useful when
sharing a repository between Mac OS and Linux or Windows. (Git
for Windows 1.7.10 or higher is needed, or Git under cygwin
1.7). When false, file names are handled fully transparent by
Git, which is backward compatible with older versions of Git.
core.protectHFS
If set to true, do not allow checkout of paths that would be
considered equivalent to .git on an HFS+ filesystem. Defaults
to true on Mac OS, and false elsewhere.
core.protectNTFS
If set to true, do not allow checkout of paths that would
cause problems with the NTFS filesystem, e.g. conflict with
8.3 "short" names. Defaults to true on Windows, and false
elsewhere.
core.fsmonitor
If set to true, enable the built-in file system monitor daemon
for this working directory (git-fsmonitor--daemon(1)).
Like hook-based file system monitors, the built-in file system
monitor can speed up Git commands that need to refresh the Git
index (e.g. git status) in a working directory with many
files. The built-in monitor eliminates the need to install and
maintain an external third-party tool.
The built-in file system monitor is currently available only
on a limited set of supported platforms. Currently, this
includes Windows and MacOS.
Otherwise, this variable contains the pathname of the "fsmonitor"
hook command.
This hook command is used to identify all files that may have
changed since the requested date/time. This information is
used to speed up git by avoiding unnecessary scanning of files
that have not changed.
See the "fsmonitor-watchman" section of githooks(5).
Note that if you concurrently use multiple versions of Git,
such as one version on the command line and another version in
an IDE tool, that the definition of core.fsmonitor was
extended to allow boolean values in addition to hook
pathnames. Git versions 2.35.1 and prior will not understand
the boolean values and will consider the "true" or "false"
values as hook pathnames to be invoked. Git versions 2.26 thru
2.35.1 default to hook protocol V2 and will fall back to no
fsmonitor (full scan). Git versions prior to 2.26 default to
hook protocol V1 and will silently assume there were no
changes to report (no scan), so status commands may report
incomplete results. For this reason, it is best to upgrade all
of your Git versions before using the built-in file system
monitor.
core.fsmonitorHookVersion
Sets the protocol version to be used when invoking the
"fsmonitor" hook.
There are currently versions 1 and 2. When this is not set,
version 2 will be tried first and if it fails then version 1
will be tried. Version 1 uses a timestamp as input to
determine which files have changes since that time but some
monitors like Watchman have race conditions when used with a
timestamp. Version 2 uses an opaque string so that the monitor
can return something that can be used to determine what files
have changed without race conditions.
core.trustctime
If false, the ctime differences between the index and the
working tree are ignored; useful when the inode change time is
regularly modified by something outside Git (file system
crawlers and some backup systems). See git-update-index(1).
True by default.
core.splitIndex
If true, the split-index feature of the index will be used.
See git-update-index(1). False by default.
core.untrackedCache
Determines what to do about the untracked cache feature of the
index. It will be kept, if this variable is unset or set to
keep. It will automatically be added if set to true. And it
will automatically be removed, if set to false. Before setting
it to true, you should check that mtime is working properly on
your system. See git-update-index(1). keep by default, unless
feature.manyFiles is enabled which sets this setting to true
by default.
core.checkStat
When missing or is set to default, many fields in the stat
structure are checked to detect if a file has been modified
since Git looked at it. When this configuration variable is
set to minimal, sub-second part of mtime and ctime, the uid
and gid of the owner of the file, the inode number (and the
device number, if Git was compiled to use it), are excluded
from the check among these fields, leaving only the
whole-second part of mtime (and ctime, if core.trustCtime is
set) and the filesize to be checked.
There are implementations of Git that do not leave usable
values in some fields (e.g. JGit); by excluding these fields
from the comparison, the minimal mode may help
interoperability when the same repository is used by these
other systems at the same time.
core.quotePath
Commands that output paths (e.g. ls-files, diff), will quote
"unusual" characters in the pathname by enclosing the pathname
in double-quotes and escaping those characters with
backslashes in the same way C escapes control characters (e.g.
\t for TAB, \n for LF, \\ for backslash) or bytes with values
larger than 0x80 (e.g. octal \302\265 for "micro" in UTF-8).
If this variable is set to false, bytes higher than 0x80 are
not considered "unusual" any more. Double-quotes, backslash
and control characters are always escaped regardless of the
setting of this variable. A simple space character is not
considered "unusual". Many commands can output pathnames
completely verbatim using the -z option. The default value is
true.
core.eol
Sets the line ending type to use in the working directory for
files that are marked as text (either by having the text
attribute set, or by having text=auto and Git auto-detecting
the contents as text). Alternatives are lf, crlf and native,
which uses the platform’s native line ending. The default
value is native. See gitattributes(5) for more information on
end-of-line conversion. Note that this value is ignored if
core.autocrlf is set to true or input.
core.safecrlf
If true, makes Git check if converting CRLF is reversible when
end-of-line conversion is active. Git will verify if a command
modifies a file in the work tree either directly or
indirectly. For example, committing a file followed by
checking out the same file should yield the original file in
the work tree. If this is not the case for the current setting
of core.autocrlf, Git will reject the file. The variable can
be set to "warn", in which case Git will only warn about an
irreversible conversion but continue the operation.
CRLF conversion bears a slight chance of corrupting data. When
it is enabled, Git will convert CRLF to LF during commit and
LF to CRLF during checkout. A file that contains a mixture of
LF and CRLF before the commit cannot be recreated by Git. For
text files this is the right thing to do: it corrects line
endings such that we have only LF line endings in the
repository. But for binary files that are accidentally
classified as text the conversion can corrupt data.
If you recognize such corruption early you can easily fix it
by setting the conversion type explicitly in .gitattributes.
Right after committing you still have the original file in
your work tree and this file is not yet corrupted. You can
explicitly tell Git that this file is binary and Git will
handle the file appropriately.
Unfortunately, the desired effect of cleaning up text files
with mixed line endings and the undesired effect of corrupting
binary files cannot be distinguished. In both cases CRLFs are
removed in an irreversible way. For text files this is the
right thing to do because CRLFs are line endings, while for
binary files converting CRLFs corrupts data.
Note, this safety check does not mean that a checkout will
generate a file identical to the original file for a different
setting of core.eol and core.autocrlf, but only for the
current one. For example, a text file with LF would be
accepted with core.eol=lf and could later be checked out with
core.eol=crlf, in which case the resulting file would contain
CRLF, although the original file contained LF. However, in
both work trees the line endings would be consistent, that is
either all LF or all CRLF, but never mixed. A file with mixed
line endings would be reported by the core.safecrlf mechanism.
core.autocrlf
Setting this variable to "true" is the same as setting the
text attribute to "auto" on all files and core.eol to "crlf".
Set to true if you want to have CRLF line endings in your
working directory and the repository has LF line endings. This
variable can be set to input, in which case no output
conversion is performed.
core.checkRoundtripEncoding
A comma and/or whitespace separated list of encodings that Git
performs UTF-8 round trip checks on if they are used in an
working-tree-encoding attribute (see gitattributes(5)). The
default value is SHIFT-JIS.
core.symlinks
If false, symbolic links are checked out as small plain files
that contain the link text. git-update-index(1) and
git-add(1) will not change the recorded type to regular file.
Useful on filesystems like FAT that do not support symbolic
links.
The default is true, except git-clone(1) or git-init(1) will
probe and set core.symlinks false if appropriate when the
repository is created.
core.gitProxy
A "proxy command" to execute (as command host port) instead of
establishing direct connection to the remote server when using
the Git protocol for fetching. If the variable value is in the
"COMMAND for DOMAIN" format, the command is applied only on
hostnames ending with the specified domain string. This
variable may be set multiple times and is matched in the given
order; the first match wins.
Can be overridden by the GIT_PROXY_COMMAND environment
variable (which always applies universally, without the
special "for" handling).
The special string none can be used as the proxy command to
specify that no proxy be used for a given domain pattern. This
is useful for excluding servers inside a firewall from proxy
use, while defaulting to a common proxy for external domains.
core.sshCommand
If this variable is set, git fetch and git push will use the
specified command instead of ssh when they need to connect to
a remote system. The command is in the same form as the
GIT_SSH_COMMAND environment variable and is overridden when
the environment variable is set.
core.ignoreStat
If true, Git will avoid using lstat() calls to detect if files
have changed by setting the "assume-unchanged" bit for those
tracked files which it has updated identically in both the
index and working tree.
When files are modified outside of Git, the user will need to
stage the modified files explicitly (e.g. see Examples section
in git-update-index(1)). Git will not normally detect changes
to those files.
This is useful on systems where lstat() calls are very slow,
such as CIFS/Microsoft Windows.
False by default.
core.preferSymlinkRefs
Instead of the default "symref" format for HEAD and other
symbolic reference files, use symbolic links. This is
sometimes needed to work with old scripts that expect HEAD to
be a symbolic link.
core.alternateRefsCommand
When advertising tips of available history from an alternate,
use the shell to execute the specified command instead of
git-for-each-ref(1). The first argument is the absolute path
of the alternate. Output must contain one hex object id per
line (i.e., the same as produced by git for-each-ref
--format='%(objectname)').
Note that you cannot generally put git for-each-ref directly
into the config value, as it does not take a repository path
as an argument (but you can wrap the command above in a shell
script).
core.alternateRefsPrefixes
When listing references from an alternate, list only
references that begin with the given prefix. Prefixes match as
if they were given as arguments to git-for-each-ref(1). To
list multiple prefixes, separate them with whitespace. If
core.alternateRefsCommand is set, setting
core.alternateRefsPrefixes has no effect.
core.bare
If true this repository is assumed to be bare and has no
working directory associated with it. If this is the case a
number of commands that require a working directory will be
disabled, such as git-add(1) or git-merge(1).
This setting is automatically guessed by git-clone(1) or
git-init(1) when the repository was created. By default a
repository that ends in "/.git" is assumed to be not bare
(bare = false), while all other repositories are assumed to be
bare (bare = true).
core.worktree
Set the path to the root of the working tree. If
GIT_COMMON_DIR environment variable is set, core.worktree is
ignored and not used for determining the root of working tree.
This can be overridden by the GIT_WORK_TREE environment
variable and the --work-tree command-line option. The value
can be an absolute path or relative to the path to the .git
directory, which is either specified by --git-dir or GIT_DIR,
or automatically discovered. If --git-dir or GIT_DIR is
specified but none of --work-tree, GIT_WORK_TREE and
core.worktree is specified, the current working directory is
regarded as the top level of your working tree.
Note that this variable is honored even when set in a
configuration file in a ".git" subdirectory of a directory and
its value differs from the latter directory (e.g.
"/path/to/.git/config" has core.worktree set to
"/different/path"), which is most likely a misconfiguration.
Running Git commands in the "/path/to" directory will still
use "/different/path" as the root of the work tree and can
cause confusion unless you know what you are doing (e.g. you
are creating a read-only snapshot of the same index to a
location different from the repository’s usual working tree).
core.logAllRefUpdates
Enable the reflog. Updates to a ref <ref> is logged to the
file "$GIT_DIR/logs/<ref>", by appending the new and old
SHA-1, the date/time and the reason of the update, but only
when the file exists. If this configuration variable is set to
true, missing "$GIT_DIR/logs/<ref>" file is automatically
created for branch heads (i.e. under refs/heads/), remote refs
(i.e. under refs/remotes/), note refs (i.e. under
refs/notes/), and the symbolic ref HEAD. If it is set to
always, then a missing reflog is automatically created for any
ref under refs/.
This information can be used to determine what commit was the
tip of a branch "2 days ago".
This value is true by default in a repository that has a
working directory associated with it, and false by default in
a bare repository.
core.repositoryFormatVersion
Internal variable identifying the repository format and layout
version. See gitrepository-layout(5).
core.sharedRepository
When group (or true), the repository is made shareable between
several users in a group (making sure all the files and
objects are group-writable). When all (or world or everybody),
the repository will be readable by all users, additionally to
being group-shareable. When umask (or false), Git will use
permissions reported by umask(2). When 0xxx, where 0xxx is an
octal number, files in the repository will have this mode
value. 0xxx will override user’s umask value (whereas the
other options will only override requested parts of the user’s
umask value). Examples: 0660 will make the repo
read/write-able for the owner and group, but inaccessible to
others (equivalent to group unless umask is e.g. 0022). 0640
is a repository that is group-readable but not group-writable.
See git-init(1). False by default.
core.warnAmbiguousRefs
If true, Git will warn you if the ref name you passed it is
ambiguous and might match multiple refs in the repository.
True by default.
core.compression
An integer -1..9, indicating a default compression level. -1
is the zlib default. 0 means no compression, and 1..9 are
various speed/size tradeoffs, 9 being slowest. If set, this
provides a default to other compression variables, such as
core.looseCompression and pack.compression.
core.looseCompression
An integer -1..9, indicating the compression level for objects
that are not in a pack file. -1 is the zlib default. 0 means
no compression, and 1..9 are various speed/size tradeoffs, 9
being slowest. If not set, defaults to core.compression. If
that is not set, defaults to 1 (best speed).
core.packedGitWindowSize
Number of bytes of a pack file to map into memory in a single
mapping operation. Larger window sizes may allow your system
to process a smaller number of large pack files more quickly.
Smaller window sizes will negatively affect performance due to
increased calls to the operating system’s memory manager, but
may improve performance when accessing a large number of large
pack files.
Default is 1 MiB if NO_MMAP was set at compile time, otherwise
32 MiB on 32 bit platforms and 1 GiB on 64 bit platforms. This
should be reasonable for all users/operating systems. You
probably do not need to adjust this value.
Common unit suffixes of k, m, or g are supported.
core.packedGitLimit
Maximum number of bytes to map simultaneously into memory from
pack files. If Git needs to access more than this many bytes
at once to complete an operation it will unmap existing
regions to reclaim virtual address space within the process.
Default is 256 MiB on 32 bit platforms and 32 TiB (effectively
unlimited) on 64 bit platforms. This should be reasonable for
all users/operating systems, except on the largest projects.
You probably do not need to adjust this value.
Common unit suffixes of k, m, or g are supported.
core.deltaBaseCacheLimit
Maximum number of bytes per thread to reserve for caching base
objects that may be referenced by multiple deltified objects.
By storing the entire decompressed base objects in a cache Git
is able to avoid unpacking and decompressing frequently used
base objects multiple times.
Default is 96 MiB on all platforms. This should be reasonable
for all users/operating systems, except on the largest
projects. You probably do not need to adjust this value.
Common unit suffixes of k, m, or g are supported.
core.bigFileThreshold
The size of files considered "big", which as discussed below
changes the behavior of numerous git commands, as well as how
such files are stored within the repository. The default is
512 MiB. Common unit suffixes of k, m, or g are supported.
Files above the configured limit will be:
• Stored deflated in packfiles, without attempting delta
compression.
The default limit is primarily set with this use-case in
mind. With it, most projects will have their source code
and other text files delta compressed, but not larger
binary media files.
Storing large files without delta compression avoids
excessive memory usage, at the slight expense of increased
disk usage.
• Will be treated as if they were labeled "binary" (see
gitattributes(5)). e.g. git-log(1) and git-diff(1) will
not compute diffs for files above this limit.
• Will generally be streamed when written, which avoids
excessive memory usage, at the cost of some fixed
overhead. Commands that make use of this include
git-archive(1), git-fast-import(1), git-index-pack(1),
git-unpack-objects(1) and git-fsck(1).
core.excludesFile
Specifies the pathname to the file that contains patterns to
describe paths that are not meant to be tracked, in addition
to .gitignore (per-directory) and .git/info/exclude. Defaults
to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/ignore. If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is either
not set or empty, $HOME/.config/git/ignore is used instead.
See gitignore(5).
core.askPass
Some commands (e.g. svn and http interfaces) that
interactively ask for a password can be told to use an
external program given via the value of this variable. Can be
overridden by the GIT_ASKPASS environment variable. If not
set, fall back to the value of the SSH_ASKPASS environment
variable or, failing that, a simple password prompt. The
external program shall be given a suitable prompt as
command-line argument and write the password on its STDOUT.
core.attributesFile
In addition to .gitattributes (per-directory) and
.git/info/attributes, Git looks into this file for attributes
(see gitattributes(5)). Path expansions are made the same way
as for core.excludesFile. Its default value is
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/attributes. If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is either
not set or empty, $HOME/.config/git/attributes is used
instead.
core.hooksPath
By default Git will look for your hooks in the $GIT_DIR/hooks
directory. Set this to different path, e.g. /etc/git/hooks,
and Git will try to find your hooks in that directory, e.g.
/etc/git/hooks/pre-receive instead of in
$GIT_DIR/hooks/pre-receive.
The path can be either absolute or relative. A relative path
is taken as relative to the directory where the hooks are run
(see the "DESCRIPTION" section of githooks(5)).
This configuration variable is useful in cases where you’d
like to centrally configure your Git hooks instead of
configuring them on a per-repository basis, or as a more
flexible and centralized alternative to having an
init.templateDir where you’ve changed default hooks.
You can also disable all hooks entirely by setting
core.hooksPath to /dev/null. This is usually only advisable
for expert users and on a per-command basis using
configuration parameters of the form git -c
core.hooksPath=/dev/null ....
core.editor
Commands such as commit and tag that let you edit messages by
launching an editor use the value of this variable when it is
set, and the environment variable GIT_EDITOR is not set. See
git-var(1).
core.commentChar, core.commentString
Commands such as commit and tag that let you edit messages
consider a line that begins with this character commented, and
removes them after the editor returns (default #).
If set to "auto", git-commit would select a character that is
not the beginning character of any line in existing commit
messages.
Note that these two variables are aliases of each other, and
in modern versions of Git you are free to use a string (e.g.,
// or ⁑⁕⁑) with commentChar. Versions of Git prior to v2.45.0
will ignore commentString but will reject a value of
commentChar that consists of more than a single ASCII byte. If
you plan to use your config with older and newer versions of
Git, you may want to specify both:
[core]
# single character for older versions
commentChar = "#"
# string for newer versions (which will override commentChar
# because it comes later in the file)
commentString = "//"
core.filesRefLockTimeout
The length of time, in milliseconds, to retry when trying to
lock an individual reference. Value 0 means not to retry at
all; -1 means to try indefinitely. Default is 100 (i.e., retry
for 100ms).
core.packedRefsTimeout
The length of time, in milliseconds, to retry when trying to
lock the packed-refs file. Value 0 means not to retry at all;
-1 means to try indefinitely. Default is 1000 (i.e., retry for
1 second).
core.pager
Text viewer for use by Git commands (e.g., less). The value is
meant to be interpreted by the shell. The order of preference
is the $GIT_PAGER environment variable, then core.pager
configuration, then $PAGER, and then the default chosen at
compile time (usually less).
When the LESS environment variable is unset, Git sets it to
FRX (if LESS environment variable is set, Git does not change
it at all). If you want to selectively override Git’s default
setting for LESS, you can set core.pager to e.g. less -S.
This will be passed to the shell by Git, which will translate
the final command to LESS=FRX less -S. The environment does
not set the S option but the command line does, instructing
less to truncate long lines. Similarly, setting core.pager to
less -+F will deactivate the F option specified by the
environment from the command-line, deactivating the "quit if
one screen" behavior of less. One can specifically activate
some flags for particular commands: for example, setting
pager.blame to less -S enables line truncation only for git
blame.
Likewise, when the LV environment variable is unset, Git sets
it to -c. You can override this setting by exporting LV with
another value or setting core.pager to lv +c.
core.whitespace
A comma separated list of common whitespace problems to
notice. git diff will use color.diff.whitespace to highlight
them, and git apply --whitespace=error will consider them as
errors. You can prefix - to disable any of them (e.g.
-trailing-space):
• blank-at-eol treats trailing whitespaces at the end of the
line as an error (enabled by default).
• space-before-tab treats a space character that appears
immediately before a tab character in the initial indent
part of the line as an error (enabled by default).
• indent-with-non-tab treats a line that is indented with
space characters instead of the equivalent tabs as an
error (not enabled by default).
• tab-in-indent treats a tab character in the initial indent
part of the line as an error (not enabled by default).
• blank-at-eof treats blank lines added at the end of file
as an error (enabled by default).
• trailing-space is a short-hand to cover both blank-at-eol
and blank-at-eof.
• cr-at-eol treats a carriage-return at the end of line as
part of the line terminator, i.e. with it, trailing-space
does not trigger if the character before such a
carriage-return is not a whitespace (not enabled by
default).
• tabwidth=<n> tells how many character positions a tab
occupies; this is relevant for indent-with-non-tab and
when Git fixes tab-in-indent errors. The default tab width
is 8. Allowed values are 1 to 63.
core.fsync
A comma-separated list of components of the repository that
should be hardened via the core.fsyncMethod when created or
modified. You can disable hardening of any component by
prefixing it with a -. Items that are not hardened may be lost
in the event of an unclean system shutdown. Unless you have
special requirements, it is recommended that you leave this
option empty or pick one of committed, added, or all.
When this configuration is encountered, the set of components
starts with the platform default value, disabled components
are removed, and additional components are added. none resets
the state so that the platform default is ignored.
The empty string resets the fsync configuration to the
platform default. The default on most platforms is equivalent
to core.fsync=committed,-loose-object, which has good
performance, but risks losing recent work in the event of an
unclean system shutdown.
• none clears the set of fsynced components.
• loose-object hardens objects added to the repo in
loose-object form.
• pack hardens objects added to the repo in packfile form.
• pack-metadata hardens packfile bitmaps and indexes.
• commit-graph hardens the commit-graph file.
• index hardens the index when it is modified.
• objects is an aggregate option that is equivalent to
loose-object,pack.
• reference hardens references modified in the repo.
• derived-metadata is an aggregate option that is equivalent
to pack-metadata,commit-graph.
• committed is an aggregate option that is currently
equivalent to objects. This mode sacrifices some
performance to ensure that work that is committed to the
repository with git commit or similar commands is
hardened.
• added is an aggregate option that is currently equivalent
to committed,index. This mode sacrifices additional
performance to ensure that the results of commands like
git add and similar operations are hardened.
• all is an aggregate option that syncs all individual
components above.
core.fsyncMethod
A value indicating the strategy Git will use to harden
repository data using fsync and related primitives.
• fsync uses the fsync() system call or platform
equivalents.
• writeout-only issues pagecache writeback requests, but
depending on the filesystem and storage hardware, data
added to the repository may not be durable in the event of
a system crash. This is the default mode on macOS.
• batch enables a mode that uses writeout-only flushes to
stage multiple updates in the disk writeback cache and
then does a single full fsync of a dummy file to trigger
the disk cache flush at the end of the operation.
Currently batch mode only applies to loose-object files.
Other repository data is made durable as if fsync was
specified. This mode is expected to be as safe as fsync on
macOS for repos stored on HFS+ or APFS filesystems and on
Windows for repos stored on NTFS or ReFS filesystems.
core.fsyncObjectFiles
This boolean will enable fsync() when writing object files.
This setting is deprecated. Use core.fsync instead.
This setting affects data added to the Git repository in
loose-object form. When set to true, Git will issue an fsync
or similar system call to flush caches so that loose-objects
remain consistent in the face of a unclean system shutdown.
core.preloadIndex
Enable parallel index preload for operations like git diff
This can speed up operations like git diff and git status
especially on filesystems like NFS that have weak caching
semantics and thus relatively high IO latencies. When enabled,
Git will do the index comparison to the filesystem data in
parallel, allowing overlapping IO’s. Defaults to true.
core.unsetenvvars
Windows-only: comma-separated list of environment variables'
names that need to be unset before spawning any other process.
Defaults to PERL5LIB to account for the fact that Git for
Windows insists on using its own Perl interpreter.
core.createObject
You can set this to link, in which case a hardlink followed by
a delete of the source are used to make sure that object
creation will not overwrite existing objects.
On some file system/operating system combinations, this is
unreliable. Set this config setting to rename there; however,
this will remove the check that makes sure that existing
object files will not get overwritten.
core.notesRef
When showing commit messages, also show notes which are stored
in the given ref. The ref must be fully qualified. If the
given ref does not exist, it is not an error but means that no
notes should be printed.
This setting defaults to "refs/notes/commits", and it can be
overridden by the GIT_NOTES_REF environment variable. See
git-notes(1).
core.commitGraph
If true, then git will read the commit-graph file (if it
exists) to parse the graph structure of commits. Defaults to
true. See git-commit-graph(1) for more information.
core.useReplaceRefs
If set to false, behave as if the --no-replace-objects option
was given on the command line. See git(1) and git-replace(1)
for more information.
core.multiPackIndex
Use the multi-pack-index file to track multiple packfiles
using a single index. See git-multi-pack-index(1) for more
information. Defaults to true.
core.sparseCheckout
Enable "sparse checkout" feature. See git-sparse-checkout(1)
for more information.
core.sparseCheckoutCone
Enables the "cone mode" of the sparse checkout feature. When
the sparse-checkout file contains a limited set of patterns,
this mode provides significant performance advantages. The
"non-cone mode" can be requested to allow specifying more
flexible patterns by setting this variable to false. See
git-sparse-checkout(1) for more information.
core.abbrev
Set the length object names are abbreviated to. If unspecified
or set to "auto", an appropriate value is computed based on
the approximate number of packed objects in your repository,
which hopefully is enough for abbreviated object names to stay
unique for some time. If set to "no", no abbreviation is made
and the object names are shown in their full length. The
minimum length is 4.
core.maxTreeDepth
The maximum depth Git is willing to recurse while traversing a
tree (e.g., "a/b/cde/f" has a depth of 4). This is a fail-safe
to allow Git to abort cleanly, and should not generally need
to be adjusted. When Git is compiled with MSVC, the default is
512. Otherwise, the default is 2048.
credential.helper
Specify an external helper to be called when a username or
password credential is needed; the helper may consult external
storage to avoid prompting the user for the credentials. This
is normally the name of a credential helper with possible
arguments, but may also be an absolute path with arguments or,
if preceded by !, shell commands.
Note that multiple helpers may be defined. See
gitcredentials(7) for details and examples.
credential.interactive
By default, Git and any configured credential helpers will ask
for user input when new credentials are required. Many of
these helpers will succeed based on stored credentials if
those credentials are still valid. To avoid the possibility of
user interactivity from Git, set credential.interactive=false.
Some credential helpers respect this option as well.
credential.useHttpPath
When acquiring credentials, consider the "path" component of
an http or https URL to be important. Defaults to false. See
gitcredentials(7) for more information.
credential.sanitizePrompt
By default, user names and hosts that are shown as part of the
password prompt are not allowed to contain control characters
(they will be URL-encoded by default). Configure this setting
to false to override that behavior.
credential.protectProtocol
By default, Carriage Return characters are not allowed in the
protocol that is used when Git talks to a credential helper.
This setting allows users to override this default.
credential.username
If no username is set for a network authentication, use this
username by default. See credential.<context>.* below, and
gitcredentials(7).
credential.<url>.*
Any of the credential.* options above can be applied
selectively to some credentials. For example,
"credential.https://example.com.username" would set the
default username only for https connections to example.com.
See gitcredentials(7) for details on how URLs are matched.
credentialCache.ignoreSIGHUP
Tell git-credential-cache—daemon to ignore SIGHUP, instead of
quitting.
credentialStore.lockTimeoutMS
The length of time, in milliseconds, for git-credential-store
to retry when trying to lock the credentials file. A value of
0 means not to retry at all; -1 means to try indefinitely.
Default is 1000 (i.e., retry for 1s).
diff.autoRefreshIndex
When using git diff to compare with work tree files, do not
consider stat-only changes as changed. Instead, silently run
git update-index --refresh to update the cached stat
information for paths whose contents in the work tree match
the contents in the index. This option defaults to true. Note
that this affects only git diff Porcelain, and not lower level
diff commands such as git diff-files.
diff.dirstat
A comma separated list of --dirstat parameters specifying the
default behavior of the --dirstat option to git-diff(1) and
friends. The defaults can be overridden on the command line
(using --dirstat=<param>,...). The fallback defaults (when not
changed by diff.dirstat) are changes,noncumulative,3. The
following parameters are available:
changes
Compute the dirstat numbers by counting the lines that
have been removed from the source, or added to the
destination. This ignores the amount of pure code
movements within a file. In other words, rearranging lines
in a file is not counted as much as other changes. This is
the default behavior when no parameter is given.
lines
Compute the dirstat numbers by doing the regular
line-based diff analysis, and summing the removed/added
line counts. (For binary files, count 64-byte chunks
instead, since binary files have no natural concept of
lines). This is a more expensive --dirstat behavior than
the changes behavior, but it does count rearranged lines
within a file as much as other changes. The resulting
output is consistent with what you get from the other
--*stat options.
files
Compute the dirstat numbers by counting the number of
files changed. Each changed file counts equally in the
dirstat analysis. This is the computationally cheapest
--dirstat behavior, since it does not have to look at the
file contents at all.
cumulative
Count changes in a child directory for the parent
directory as well. Note that when using cumulative, the
sum of the percentages reported may exceed 100%. The
default (non-cumulative) behavior can be specified with
the noncumulative parameter.
<limit>
An integer parameter specifies a cut-off percent (3% by
default). Directories contributing less than this
percentage of the changes are not shown in the output.
Example: The following will count changed files, while
ignoring directories with less than 10% of the total amount of
changed files, and accumulating child directory counts in the
parent directories: files,10,cumulative.
diff.statNameWidth
Limit the width of the filename part in --stat output. If set,
applies to all commands generating --stat output except
format-patch.
diff.statGraphWidth
Limit the width of the graph part in --stat output. If set,
applies to all commands generating --stat output except
format-patch.
diff.context
Generate diffs with <n> lines of context instead of the
default of 3. This value is overridden by the -U option.
diff.interHunkContext
Show the context between diff hunks, up to the specified
number of lines, thereby fusing the hunks that are close to
each other. This value serves as the default for the
--inter-hunk-context command line option.
diff.external
If this config variable is set, diff generation is not
performed using the internal diff machinery, but using the
given command. Can be overridden with the GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF
environment variable. The command is called with parameters as
described under "git Diffs" in git(1). Note: if you want to
use an external diff program only on a subset of your files,
you might want to use gitattributes(5) instead.
diff.trustExitCode
If this boolean value is set to true then the diff.external
command is expected to return exit code 0 if it considers the
input files to be equal or 1 if it considers them to be
different, like diff(1). If it is set to false, which is the
default, then the command is expected to return exit code 0
regardless of equality. Any other exit code causes Git to
report a fatal error.
diff.ignoreSubmodules
Sets the default value of --ignore-submodules. Note that this
affects only git diff Porcelain, and not lower level diff
commands such as git diff-files. git checkout and git switch
also honor this setting when reporting uncommitted changes.
Setting it to all disables the submodule summary normally
shown by git commit and git status when
status.submoduleSummary is set unless it is overridden by
using the --ignore-submodules command-line option. The git
submodule commands are not affected by this setting. By
default this is set to untracked so that any untracked
submodules are ignored.
diff.mnemonicPrefix
If set, git diff uses a prefix pair that is different from the
standard a/ and b/ depending on what is being compared. When
this configuration is in effect, reverse diff output also
swaps the order of the prefixes:
git diff
compares the (i)ndex and the (w)ork tree;
git diff HEAD
compares a (c)ommit and the (w)ork tree;
git diff --cached
compares a (c)ommit and the (i)ndex;
git diff HEAD:<file1> <file2>
compares an (o)bject and a (w)ork tree entity;
git diff --no-index <a> <b>
compares two non-git things <a> and <b>.
diff.noPrefix
If set, git diff does not show any source or destination
prefix.
diff.srcPrefix
If set, git diff uses this source prefix. Defaults to a/.
diff.dstPrefix
If set, git diff uses this destination prefix. Defaults to b/.
diff.relative
If set to true, git diff does not show changes outside of the
directory and show pathnames relative to the current
directory.
diff.orderFile
File indicating how to order files within a diff. See the -O
option to git-diff(1) for details. If diff.orderFile is a
relative pathname, it is treated as relative to the top of the
working tree.
diff.renameLimit
The number of files to consider in the exhaustive portion of
copy/rename detection; equivalent to the git diff option -l.
If not set, the default value is currently 1000. This setting
has no effect if rename detection is turned off.
diff.renames
Whether and how Git detects renames. If set to false, rename
detection is disabled. If set to true, basic rename detection
is enabled. If set to copies or copy, Git will detect copies,
as well. Defaults to true. Note that this affects only git
diff Porcelain like git-diff(1) and git-log(1), and not lower
level commands such as git-diff-files(1).
diff.suppressBlankEmpty
A boolean to inhibit the standard behavior of printing a space
before each empty output line. Defaults to false.
diff.submodule
Specify the format in which differences in submodules are
shown. The short format just shows the names of the commits at
the beginning and end of the range. The log format lists the
commits in the range like git-submodule(1) summary does. The
diff format shows an inline diff of the changed contents of
the submodule. Defaults to short.
diff.wordRegex
A POSIX Extended Regular Expression used to determine what is
a "word" when performing word-by-word difference calculations.
Character sequences that match the regular expression are
"words", all other characters are ignorable whitespace.
diff.<driver>.command
The custom diff driver command. See gitattributes(5) for
details.
diff.<driver>.trustExitCode
If this boolean value is set to true then the
diff.<driver>.command command is expected to return exit code
0 if it considers the input files to be equal or 1 if it
considers them to be different, like diff(1). If it is set to
false, which is the default, then the command is expected to
return exit code 0 regardless of equality. Any other exit code
causes Git to report a fatal error.
diff.<driver>.xfuncname
The regular expression that the diff driver should use to
recognize the hunk header. A built-in pattern may also be
used. See gitattributes(5) for details.
diff.<driver>.binary
Set this option to true to make the diff driver treat files as
binary. See gitattributes(5) for details.
diff.<driver>.textconv
The command that the diff driver should call to generate the
text-converted version of a file. The result of the conversion
is used to generate a human-readable diff. See
gitattributes(5) for details.
diff.<driver>.wordRegex
The regular expression that the diff driver should use to
split words in a line. See gitattributes(5) for details.
diff.<driver>.cachetextconv
Set this option to true to make the diff driver cache the text
conversion outputs. See gitattributes(5) for details.
diff.indentHeuristic
Set this option to false to disable the default heuristics
that shift diff hunk boundaries to make patches easier to
read.
diff.algorithm
Choose a diff algorithm. The variants are as follows:
default, myers
The basic greedy diff algorithm. Currently, this is the
default.
minimal
Spend extra time to make sure the smallest possible diff
is produced.
patience
Use "patience diff" algorithm when generating patches.
histogram
This algorithm extends the patience algorithm to "support
low-occurrence common elements".
diff.wsErrorHighlight
Highlight whitespace errors in the context, old or new lines
of the diff. Multiple values are separated by comma, none
resets previous values, default reset the list to new and all
is a shorthand for old,new,context. The whitespace errors are
colored with color.diff.whitespace. The command line option
--ws-error-highlight=<kind> overrides this setting.
diff.colorMoved
If set to either a valid <mode> or a true value, moved lines
in a diff are colored differently. For details of valid modes
see --color-moved in git-diff(1). If simply set to true the
default color mode will be used. When set to false, moved
lines are not colored.
diff.colorMovedWS
When moved lines are colored using e.g. the diff.colorMoved
setting, this option controls the mode how spaces are treated.
For details of valid modes see --color-moved-ws in
git-diff(1).
diff.tool
Controls which diff tool is used by git-difftool(1). This
variable overrides the value configured in merge.tool. The
list below shows the valid built-in values. Any other value is
treated as a custom diff tool and requires that a
corresponding difftool.<tool>.cmd variable is defined.
diff.guitool
Controls which diff tool is used by git-difftool(1) when the
-g/--gui flag is specified. This variable overrides the value
configured in merge.guitool. The list below shows the valid
built-in values. Any other value is treated as a custom diff
tool and requires that a corresponding difftool.<guitool>.cmd
variable is defined.
araxis
Use Araxis Merge (requires a graphical session)
bc
Use Beyond Compare (requires a graphical session)
bc3
Use Beyond Compare (requires a graphical session)
bc4
Use Beyond Compare (requires a graphical session)
codecompare
Use Code Compare (requires a graphical session)
deltawalker
Use DeltaWalker (requires a graphical session)
diffmerge
Use DiffMerge (requires a graphical session)
diffuse
Use Diffuse (requires a graphical session)
ecmerge
Use ECMerge (requires a graphical session)
emerge
Use Emacs' Emerge
examdiff
Use ExamDiff Pro (requires a graphical session)
guiffy
Use Guiffy’s Diff Tool (requires a graphical session)
gvimdiff
Use gVim (requires a graphical session)
kdiff3
Use KDiff3 (requires a graphical session)
kompare
Use Kompare (requires a graphical session)
meld
Use Meld (requires a graphical session)
nvimdiff
Use Neovim
opendiff
Use FileMerge (requires a graphical session)
p4merge
Use HelixCore P4Merge (requires a graphical session)
smerge
Use Sublime Merge (requires a graphical session)
tkdiff
Use TkDiff (requires a graphical session)
vimdiff
Use Vim
vscode
Use Visual Studio Code (requires a graphical session)
winmerge
Use WinMerge (requires a graphical session)
xxdiff
Use xxdiff (requires a graphical session)
difftool.<tool>.cmd
Specify the command to invoke the specified diff tool. The
specified command is evaluated in shell with the following
variables available: LOCAL is set to the name of the temporary
file containing the contents of the diff pre-image and REMOTE
is set to the name of the temporary file containing the
contents of the diff post-image.
See the --tool=<tool> option in git-difftool(1) for more
details.
difftool.<tool>.path
Override the path for the given tool. This is useful in case
your tool is not in the PATH.
difftool.trustExitCode
Exit difftool if the invoked diff tool returns a non-zero exit
status.
See the --trust-exit-code option in git-difftool(1) for more
details.
difftool.prompt
Prompt before each invocation of the diff tool.
difftool.guiDefault
Set true to use the diff.guitool by default (equivalent to
specifying the --gui argument), or auto to select diff.guitool
or diff.tool depending on the presence of a DISPLAY
environment variable value. The default is false, where the
--gui argument must be provided explicitly for the
diff.guitool to be used.
extensions.*
Unless otherwise stated, is an error to specify an extension
if core.repositoryFormatVersion is not 1. See
gitrepository-layout(5).
compatObjectFormat
Specify a compatibility hash algorithm to use. The
acceptable values are sha1 and sha256. The value specified
must be different from the value of
extensions.objectFormat. This allows client level
interoperability between git repositories whose
objectFormat matches this compatObjectFormat. In
particular when fully implemented the pushes and pulls
from a repository in whose objectFormat matches
compatObjectFormat. As well as being able to use oids
encoded in compatObjectFormat in addition to oids encoded
with objectFormat to locally specify objects.
noop
This extension does not change git’s behavior at all. It
is useful only for testing format-1 compatibility.
For historical reasons, this extension is respected
regardless of the core.repositoryFormatVersion setting.
noop-v1
This extension does not change git’s behavior at all. It
is useful only for testing format-1 compatibility.
objectFormat
Specify the hash algorithm to use. The acceptable values
are sha1 and sha256. If not specified, sha1 is assumed.
Note that this setting should only be set by git-init(1)
or git-clone(1). Trying to change it after initialization
will not work and will produce hard-to-diagnose issues.
partialClone
When enabled, indicates that the repo was created with a
partial clone (or later performed a partial fetch) and
that the remote may have omitted sending certain unwanted
objects. Such a remote is called a "promisor remote" and
it promises that all such omitted objects can be fetched
from it in the future.
The value of this key is the name of the promisor remote.
For historical reasons, this extension is respected
regardless of the core.repositoryFormatVersion setting.
preciousObjects
If enabled, indicates that objects in the repository MUST
NOT be deleted (e.g., by git-prune or git repack -d).
For historical reasons, this extension is respected
regardless of the core.repositoryFormatVersion setting.
refStorage
Specify the ref storage format to use. The acceptable
values are:
• files for loose files with packed-refs. This is the
default.
• reftable for the reftable format. This format is
experimental and its internals are subject to change.
Note that this setting should only be set by git-init(1)
or git-clone(1). Trying to change it after initialization
will not work and will produce hard-to-diagnose issues.
relativeWorktrees
If enabled, indicates at least one worktree has been
linked with relative paths. Automatically set if a
worktree has been created or repaired with either the
--relative-paths option or with the
worktree.useRelativePaths config set to true.
worktreeConfig
If enabled, then worktrees will load config settings from
the $GIT_DIR/config.worktree file in addition to the
$GIT_COMMON_DIR/config file. Note that $GIT_COMMON_DIR and
$GIT_DIR are the same for the main working tree, while
other working trees have $GIT_DIR equal to
$GIT_COMMON_DIR/worktrees/<id>/. The settings in the
config.worktree file will override settings from any other
config files.
When enabling this extension, you must be careful to move
certain values from the common config file to the main
working tree’s config.worktree file, if present:
• core.worktree must be moved from
$GIT_COMMON_DIR/config to
$GIT_COMMON_DIR/config.worktree.
• If core.bare is true, then it must be moved from
$GIT_COMMON_DIR/config to
$GIT_COMMON_DIR/config.worktree.
It may also be beneficial to adjust the locations of
core.sparseCheckout and core.sparseCheckoutCone depending
on your desire for customizable sparse-checkout settings
for each worktree. By default, the git sparse-checkout
builtin enables this extension, assigns these config
values on a per-worktree basis, and uses the
$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout file to specify the sparsity
for each worktree independently. See
git-sparse-checkout(1) for more details.
For historical reasons, this extension is respected
regardless of the core.repositoryFormatVersion setting.
fastimport.unpackLimit
If the number of objects imported by git-fast-import(1) is
below this limit, then the objects will be unpacked into loose
object files. However, if the number of imported objects
equals or exceeds this limit, then the pack will be stored as
a pack. Storing the pack from a fast-import can make the
import operation complete faster, especially on slow
filesystems. If not set, the value of transfer.unpackLimit is
used instead.
feature.*
The config settings that start with feature. modify the
defaults of a group of other config settings. These groups are
created by the Git developer community as recommended defaults
and are subject to change. In particular, new config options
may be added with different defaults.
feature.experimental
Enable config options that are new to Git, and are being
considered for future defaults. Config settings included here
may be added or removed with each release, including minor
version updates. These settings may have unintended
interactions since they are so new. Please enable this setting
if you are interested in providing feedback on experimental
features. The new default values are:
• fetch.negotiationAlgorithm=skipping may improve fetch
negotiation times by skipping more commits at a time,
reducing the number of round trips.
• pack.useBitmapBoundaryTraversal=true may improve bitmap
traversal times by walking fewer objects.
• pack.allowPackReuse=multi may improve the time it takes to
create a pack by reusing objects from multiple packs
instead of just one.
• pack.usePathWalk may speed up packfile creation and make
the packfiles be significantly smaller in the presence of
certain filename collisions with Git’s default name-hash.
• init.defaultRefFormat=reftable causes newly initialized
repositories to use the reftable format for storing
references. This new format solves issues with
case-insensitive filesystems, compresses better and
performs significantly better with many use cases. Refer
to Documentation/technical/reftable.adoc for more
information on this new storage format.
feature.manyFiles
Enable config options that optimize for repos with many files
in the working directory. With many files, commands such as
git status and git checkout may be slow and these new defaults
improve performance:
• index.skipHash=true speeds up index writes by not
computing a trailing checksum. Note that this will cause
Git versions earlier than 2.13.0 to refuse to parse the
index and Git versions earlier than 2.40.0 will report a
corrupted index during git fsck.
• index.version=4 enables path-prefix compression in the
index.
• core.untrackedCache=true enables the untracked cache. This
setting assumes that mtime is working on your machine.
fetch.recurseSubmodules
This option controls whether git fetch (and the underlying
fetch in git pull) will recursively fetch into populated
submodules. This option can be set either to a boolean value
or to on-demand. Setting it to a boolean changes the behavior
of fetch and pull to recurse unconditionally into submodules
when set to true or to not recurse at all when set to false.
When set to on-demand, fetch and pull will only recurse into a
populated submodule when its superproject retrieves a commit
that updates the submodule’s reference. Defaults to on-demand,
or to the value of submodule.recurse if set.
fetch.fsckObjects
If it is set to true, git-fetch-pack will check all fetched
objects. See transfer.fsckObjects for what’s checked. Defaults
to false. If not set, the value of transfer.fsckObjects is
used instead.
fetch.fsck.<msg-id>
Acts like fsck.<msg-id>, but is used by git-fetch-pack(1)
instead of git-fsck(1). See the fsck.<msg-id> documentation
for details.
fetch.fsck.skipList
Acts like fsck.skipList, but is used by git-fetch-pack(1)
instead of git-fsck(1). See the fsck.skipList documentation
for details.
fetch.unpackLimit
If the number of objects fetched over the Git native transfer
is below this limit, then the objects will be unpacked into
loose object files. However if the number of received objects
equals or exceeds this limit then the received pack will be
stored as a pack, after adding any missing delta bases.
Storing the pack from a push can make the push operation
complete faster, especially on slow filesystems. If not set,
the value of transfer.unpackLimit is used instead.
fetch.prune
If true, fetch will automatically behave as if the --prune
option was given on the command line. See also
remote.<name>.prune and the PRUNING section of git-fetch(1).
fetch.pruneTags
If true, fetch will automatically behave as if the
refs/tags/*:refs/tags/* refspec was provided when pruning, if
not set already. This allows for setting both this option and
fetch.prune to maintain a 1=1 mapping to upstream refs. See
also remote.<name>.pruneTags and the PRUNING section of
git-fetch(1).
fetch.all
If true, fetch will attempt to update all available remotes.
This behavior can be overridden by passing --no-all or by
explicitly specifying one or more remote(s) to fetch from.
Defaults to false.
fetch.output
Control how ref update status is printed. Valid values are
full and compact. Default value is full. See the OUTPUT
section in git-fetch(1) for details.
fetch.negotiationAlgorithm
Control how information about the commits in the local
repository is sent when negotiating the contents of the
packfile to be sent by the server. Set to "consecutive" to use
an algorithm that walks over consecutive commits checking each
one. Set to "skipping" to use an algorithm that skips commits
in an effort to converge faster, but may result in a
larger-than-necessary packfile; or set to "noop" to not send
any information at all, which will almost certainly result in
a larger-than-necessary packfile, but will skip the
negotiation step. Set to "default" to override settings made
previously and use the default behaviour. The default is
normally "consecutive", but if feature.experimental is true,
then the default is "skipping". Unknown values will cause git
fetch to error out.
See also the --negotiate-only and --negotiation-tip options to
git-fetch(1).
fetch.showForcedUpdates
Set to false to enable --no-show-forced-updates in
git-fetch(1) and git-pull(1) commands. Defaults to true.
fetch.parallel
Specifies the maximal number of fetch operations to be run in
parallel at a time (submodules, or remotes when the --multiple
option of git-fetch(1) is in effect).
A value of 0 will give some reasonable default. If unset, it
defaults to 1.
For submodules, this setting can be overridden using the
submodule.fetchJobs config setting.
fetch.writeCommitGraph
Set to true to write a commit-graph after every git fetch
command that downloads a pack-file from a remote. Using the
--split option, most executions will create a very small
commit-graph file on top of the existing commit-graph file(s).
Occasionally, these files will merge and the write may take
longer. Having an updated commit-graph file helps performance
of many Git commands, including git merge-base, git push -f,
and git log --graph. Defaults to false.
fetch.bundleURI
This value stores a URI for downloading Git object data from a
bundle URI before performing an incremental fetch from the
origin Git server. This is similar to how the --bundle-uri
option behaves in git-clone(1). git clone --bundle-uri will
set the fetch.bundleURI value if the supplied bundle URI
contains a bundle list that is organized for incremental
fetches.
If you modify this value and your repository has a
fetch.bundleCreationToken value, then remove that
fetch.bundleCreationToken value before fetching from the new
bundle URI.
fetch.bundleCreationToken
When using fetch.bundleURI to fetch incrementally from a
bundle list that uses the "creationToken" heuristic, this
config value stores the maximum creationToken value of the
downloaded bundles. This value is used to prevent downloading
bundles in the future if the advertised creationToken is not
strictly larger than this value.
The creation token values are chosen by the provider serving
the specific bundle URI. If you modify the URI at
fetch.bundleURI, then be sure to remove the value for the
fetch.bundleCreationToken value before fetching.
filter.<driver>.clean
The command which is used to convert the content of a worktree
file to a blob upon checkin. See gitattributes(5) for details.
filter.<driver>.smudge
The command which is used to convert the content of a blob
object to a worktree file upon checkout. See gitattributes(5)
for details.
format.attach
Enable multipart/mixed attachments as the default for
format-patch. The value can also be a double quoted string
which will enable attachments as the default and set the value
as the boundary. See the --attach option in
git-format-patch(1). To countermand an earlier value, set it
to an empty string.
format.from
Provides the default value for the --from option to
format-patch. Accepts a boolean value, or a name and email
address. If false, format-patch defaults to --no-from, using
commit authors directly in the "From:" field of patch mails.
If true, format-patch defaults to --from, using your committer
identity in the "From:" field of patch mails and including a
"From:" field in the body of the patch mail if different. If
set to a non-boolean value, format-patch uses that value
instead of your committer identity. Defaults to false.
format.forceInBodyFrom
Provides the default value for the --[no-]force-in-body-from
option to format-patch. Defaults to false.
format.numbered
A boolean which can enable or disable sequence numbers in
patch subjects. It defaults to "auto" which enables it only if
there is more than one patch. It can be enabled or disabled
for all messages by setting it to "true" or "false". See
--numbered option in git-format-patch(1).
format.headers
Additional email headers to include in a patch to be submitted
by mail. See git-format-patch(1).
format.to, format.cc
Additional recipients to include in a patch to be submitted by
mail. See the --to and --cc options in git-format-patch(1).
format.subjectPrefix
The default for format-patch is to output files with the
[PATCH] subject prefix. Use this variable to change that
prefix.
format.coverFromDescription
The default mode for format-patch to determine which parts of
the cover letter will be populated using the branch’s
description. See the --cover-from-description option in
git-format-patch(1).
format.signature
The default for format-patch is to output a signature
containing the Git version number. Use this variable to change
that default. Set this variable to the empty string ("") to
suppress signature generation.
format.signatureFile
Works just like format.signature except the contents of the
file specified by this variable will be used as the signature.
format.suffix
The default for format-patch is to output files with the
suffix .patch. Use this variable to change that suffix (make
sure to include the dot if you want it).
format.encodeEmailHeaders
Encode email headers that have non-ASCII characters with
"Q-encoding" (described in RFC 2047) for email transmission.
Defaults to true.
format.pretty
The default pretty format for log/show/whatchanged command.
See git-log(1), git-show(1), git-whatchanged(1).
format.thread
The default threading style for git format-patch. Can be a
boolean value, or shallow or deep. shallow threading makes
every mail a reply to the head of the series, where the head
is chosen from the cover letter, the --in-reply-to, and the
first patch mail, in this order. deep threading makes every
mail a reply to the previous one. A true boolean value is the
same as shallow, and a false value disables threading.
format.signOff
A boolean value which lets you enable the -s/--signoff option
of format-patch by default. Note: Adding the Signed-off-by
trailer to a patch should be a conscious act and means that
you certify you have the rights to submit this work under the
same open source license. Please see the SubmittingPatches
document for further discussion.
format.coverLetter
A boolean that controls whether to generate a cover-letter
when format-patch is invoked, but in addition can be set to
"auto", to generate a cover-letter only when there’s more than
one patch. Default is false.
format.outputDirectory
Set a custom directory to store the resulting files instead of
the current working directory. All directory components will
be created.
format.filenameMaxLength
The maximum length of the output filenames generated by the
format-patch command; defaults to 64. Can be overridden by the
--filename-max-length=<n> command line option.
format.useAutoBase
A boolean value which lets you enable the --base=auto option
of format-patch by default. Can also be set to "whenAble" to
allow enabling --base=auto if a suitable base is available,
but to skip adding base info otherwise without the format
dying.
format.notes
Provides the default value for the --notes option to
format-patch. Accepts a boolean value, or a ref which
specifies where to get notes. If false, format-patch defaults
to --no-notes. If true, format-patch defaults to --notes. If
set to a non-boolean value, format-patch defaults to
--notes=<ref>, where ref is the non-boolean value. Defaults to
false.
If one wishes to use the ref refs/notes/true, please use that
literal instead.
This configuration can be specified multiple times in order to
allow multiple notes refs to be included. In that case, it
will behave similarly to multiple --[no-]notes[=] options
passed in. That is, a value of true will show the default
notes, a value of <ref> will also show notes from that notes
ref and a value of false will negate previous configurations
and not show notes.
For example,
[format]
notes = true
notes = foo
notes = false
notes = bar
will only show notes from refs/notes/bar.
format.mboxrd
A boolean value which enables the robust "mboxrd" format when
--stdout is in use to escape "^>+From " lines.
format.noprefix
If set, do not show any source or destination prefix in
patches. This is equivalent to the diff.noprefix option used
by git diff (but which is not respected by format-patch). Note
that by setting this, the receiver of any patches you generate
will have to apply them using the -p0 option.
fsck.<msg-id>
During fsck git may find issues with legacy data which
wouldn’t be generated by current versions of git, and which
wouldn’t be sent over the wire if transfer.fsckObjects was
set. This feature is intended to support working with legacy
repositories containing such data.
Setting fsck.<msg-id> will be picked up by git-fsck(1), but to
accept pushes of such data set receive.fsck.<msg-id> instead,
or to clone or fetch it set fetch.fsck.<msg-id>.
The rest of the documentation discusses fsck.* for brevity,
but the same applies for the corresponding receive.fsck.* and
fetch.fsck.*. variables.
Unlike variables like color.ui and core.editor, the
receive.fsck.<msg-id> and fetch.fsck.<msg-id> variables will
not fall back on the fsck.<msg-id> configuration if they
aren’t set. To uniformly configure the same fsck settings in
different circumstances, all three of them must be set to the
same values.
When fsck.<msg-id> is set, errors can be switched to warnings
and vice versa by configuring the fsck.<msg-id> setting where
the <msg-id> is the fsck message ID and the value is one of
error, warn or ignore. For convenience, fsck prefixes the
error/warning with the message ID, e.g. "missingEmail: invalid
author/committer line - missing email" means that setting
fsck.missingEmail = ignore will hide that issue.
In general, it is better to enumerate existing objects with
problems with fsck.skipList, instead of listing the kind of
breakages these problematic objects share to be ignored, as
doing the latter will allow new instances of the same
breakages go unnoticed.
Setting an unknown fsck.<msg-id> value will cause fsck to die,
but doing the same for receive.fsck.<msg-id> and
fetch.fsck.<msg-id> will only cause git to warn.
See the Fsck Messages section of git-fsck(1) for supported
values of <msg-id>.
fsck.skipList
The path to a list of object names (i.e. one unabbreviated
SHA-1 per line) that are known to be broken in a non-fatal way
and should be ignored. On versions of Git 2.20 and later,
comments (#), empty lines, and any leading and trailing
whitespace are ignored. Everything but a SHA-1 per line will
error out on older versions.
This feature is useful when an established project should be
accepted despite early commits containing errors that can be
safely ignored, such as invalid committer email addresses.
Note: corrupt objects cannot be skipped with this setting.
Like fsck.<msg-id> this variable has corresponding
receive.fsck.skipList and fetch.fsck.skipList variants.
Unlike variables like color.ui and core.editor the
receive.fsck.skipList and fetch.fsck.skipList variables will
not fall back on the fsck.skipList configuration if they
aren’t set. To uniformly configure the same fsck settings in
different circumstances, all three of them must be set to the
same values.
Older versions of Git (before 2.20) documented that the object
names list should be sorted. This was never a requirement; the
object names could appear in any order, but when reading the
list we tracked whether the list was sorted for the purposes
of an internal binary search implementation, which could save
itself some work with an already sorted list. Unless you had a
humongous list there was no reason to go out of your way to
pre-sort the list. After Git version 2.20 a hash
implementation is used instead, so there’s now no reason to
pre-sort the list.
fsmonitor.allowRemote
By default, the fsmonitor daemon refuses to work with
network-mounted repositories. Setting fsmonitor.allowRemote to
true overrides this behavior. Only respected when
core.fsmonitor is set to true.
fsmonitor.socketDir
This Mac OS-specific option, if set, specifies the directory
in which to create the Unix domain socket used for
communication between the fsmonitor daemon and various Git
commands. The directory must reside on a native Mac OS
filesystem. Only respected when core.fsmonitor is set to true.
gc.aggressiveDepth
The depth parameter used in the delta compression algorithm
used by git gc --aggressive. This defaults to 50, which is the
default for the --depth option when --aggressive isn’t in use.
See the documentation for the --depth option in git-repack(1)
for more details.
gc.aggressiveWindow
The window size parameter used in the delta compression
algorithm used by git gc --aggressive. This defaults to 250,
which is a much more aggressive window size than the default
--window of 10.
See the documentation for the --window option in git-repack(1)
for more details.
gc.auto
When there are approximately more than this many loose objects
in the repository, git gc --auto will pack them. Some
Porcelain commands use this command to perform a light-weight
garbage collection from time to time. The default value is
6700.
Setting this to 0 disables not only automatic packing based on
the number of loose objects, but also any other heuristic git
gc --auto will otherwise use to determine if there’s work to
do, such as gc.autoPackLimit.
gc.autoPackLimit
When there are more than this many packs that are not marked
with *.keep file in the repository, git gc --auto consolidates
them into one larger pack. The default value is 50. Setting
this to 0 disables it. Setting gc.auto to 0 will also disable
this.
See the gc.bigPackThreshold configuration variable below. When
in use, it’ll affect how the auto pack limit works.
gc.autoDetach
Make git gc --auto return immediately and run in the
background if the system supports it. Default is true. This
config variable acts as a fallback in case
maintenance.autoDetach is not set.
gc.bigPackThreshold
If non-zero, all non-cruft packs larger than this limit are
kept when git gc is run. This is very similar to
--keep-largest-pack except that all non-cruft packs that meet
the threshold are kept, not just the largest pack. Defaults to
zero. Common unit suffixes of k, m, or g are supported.
Note that if the number of kept packs is more than
gc.autoPackLimit, this configuration variable is ignored, all
packs except the base pack will be repacked. After this the
number of packs should go below gc.autoPackLimit and
gc.bigPackThreshold should be respected again.
If the amount of memory estimated for git repack to run
smoothly is not available and gc.bigPackThreshold is not set,
the largest pack will also be excluded (this is the equivalent
of running git gc with --keep-largest-pack).
gc.writeCommitGraph
If true, then gc will rewrite the commit-graph file when
git-gc(1) is run. When using git gc --auto the commit-graph
will be updated if housekeeping is required. Default is true.
See git-commit-graph(1) for details.
gc.logExpiry
If the file gc.log exists, then git gc --auto will print its
content and exit with status zero instead of running unless
that file is more than gc.logExpiry old. Default is "1.day".
See gc.pruneExpire for more ways to specify its value.
gc.packRefs
Running git pack-refs in a repository renders it unclonable by
Git versions prior to 1.5.1.2 over dumb transports such as
HTTP. This variable determines whether git gc runs git
pack-refs. This can be set to notbare to enable it within all
non-bare repos or it can be set to a boolean value. The
default is true.
gc.cruftPacks
Store unreachable objects in a cruft pack (see git-repack(1))
instead of as loose objects. The default is true.
gc.maxCruftSize
Limit the size of new cruft packs when repacking. When
specified in addition to --max-cruft-size, the command line
option takes priority. See the --max-cruft-size option of
git-repack(1).
gc.pruneExpire
When git gc is run, it will call prune --expire 2.weeks.ago
(and repack --cruft --cruft-expiration 2.weeks.ago if using
cruft packs via gc.cruftPacks or --cruft). Override the grace
period with this config variable. The value "now" may be used
to disable this grace period and always prune unreachable
objects immediately, or "never" may be used to suppress
pruning. This feature helps prevent corruption when git gc
runs concurrently with another process writing to the
repository; see the "NOTES" section of git-gc(1).
gc.worktreePruneExpire
When git gc is run, it calls git worktree prune --expire
3.months.ago. This config variable can be used to set a
different grace period. The value "now" may be used to disable
the grace period and prune $GIT_DIR/worktrees immediately, or
"never" may be used to suppress pruning.
gc.reflogExpire, gc.<pattern>.reflogExpire
git reflog expire removes reflog entries older than this time;
defaults to 90 days. The value "now" expires all entries
immediately, and "never" suppresses expiration altogether.
With "<pattern>" (e.g. "refs/stash") in the middle the setting
applies only to the refs that match the <pattern>.
gc.reflogExpireUnreachable, gc.<pattern>.reflogExpireUnreachable
git reflog expire removes reflog entries older than this time
and are not reachable from the current tip; defaults to 30
days. The value "now" expires all entries immediately, and
"never" suppresses expiration altogether. With "<pattern>"
(e.g. "refs/stash") in the middle, the setting applies only to
the refs that match the <pattern>.
These types of entries are generally created as a result of
using git commit --amend or git rebase and are the commits
prior to the amend or rebase occurring. Since these changes
are not part of the current project most users will want to
expire them sooner, which is why the default is more
aggressive than gc.reflogExpire.
gc.recentObjectsHook
When considering whether or not to remove an object (either
when generating a cruft pack or storing unreachable objects as
loose), use the shell to execute the specified command(s).
Interpret their output as object IDs which Git will consider
as "recent", regardless of their age. By treating their mtimes
as "now", any objects (and their descendants) mentioned in the
output will be kept regardless of their true age.
Output must contain exactly one hex object ID per line, and
nothing else. Objects which cannot be found in the repository
are ignored. Multiple hooks are supported, but all must exit
successfully, else the operation (either generating a cruft
pack or unpacking unreachable objects) will be halted.
gc.repackFilter
When repacking, use the specified filter to move certain
objects into a separate packfile. See the
--filter=<filter-spec> option of git-repack(1).
gc.repackFilterTo
When repacking and using a filter, see gc.repackFilter, the
specified location will be used to create the packfile
containing the filtered out objects. WARNING: The specified
location should be accessible, using for example the Git
alternates mechanism, otherwise the repo could be considered
corrupt by Git as it might not be able to access the objects
in that packfile. See the --filter-to=<dir> option of
git-repack(1) and the objects/info/alternates section of
gitrepository-layout(5).
gc.rerereResolved
Records of conflicted merge you resolved earlier are kept for
this many days when git rerere gc is run. You can also use
more human-readable "1.month.ago", etc. The default is 60
days. See git-rerere(1).
gc.rerereUnresolved
Records of conflicted merge you have not resolved are kept for
this many days when git rerere gc is run. You can also use
more human-readable "1.month.ago", etc. The default is 15
days. See git-rerere(1).
gitcvs.commitMsgAnnotation
Append this string to each commit message. Set to empty string
to disable this feature. Defaults to "via git-CVS emulator".
gitcvs.enabled
Whether the CVS server interface is enabled for this
repository. See git-cvsserver(1).
gitcvs.logFile
Path to a log file where the CVS server interface well... logs
various stuff. See git-cvsserver(1).
gitcvs.usecrlfattr
If true, the server will look up the end-of-line conversion
attributes for files to determine the -k modes to use. If the
attributes force Git to treat a file as text, the -k mode will
be left blank so CVS clients will treat it as text. If they
suppress text conversion, the file will be set with -kb mode,
which suppresses any newline munging the client might
otherwise do. If the attributes do not allow the file type to
be determined, then gitcvs.allBinary is used. See
gitattributes(5).
gitcvs.allBinary
This is used if gitcvs.usecrlfattr does not resolve the
correct -kb mode to use. If true, all unresolved files are
sent to the client in mode -kb. This causes the client to
treat them as binary files, which suppresses any newline
munging it otherwise might do. Alternatively, if it is set to
"guess", then the contents of the file are examined to decide
if it is binary, similar to core.autocrlf.
gitcvs.dbName
Database used by git-cvsserver to cache revision information
derived from the Git repository. The exact meaning depends on
the used database driver, for SQLite (which is the default
driver) this is a filename. Supports variable substitution
(see git-cvsserver(1) for details). May not contain semicolons
(;). Default: %Ggitcvs.%m.sqlite
gitcvs.dbDriver
Used Perl DBI driver. You can specify any available driver for
this here, but it might not work. git-cvsserver is tested with
DBD::SQLite, reported to work with DBD::Pg, and reported not
to work with DBD::mysql. Experimental feature. May not contain
double colons (:). Default: SQLite. See git-cvsserver(1).
gitcvs.dbUser, gitcvs.dbPass
Database user and password. Only useful if setting
gitcvs.dbDriver, since SQLite has no concept of database users
and/or passwords. gitcvs.dbUser supports variable
substitution (see git-cvsserver(1) for details).
gitcvs.dbTableNamePrefix
Database table name prefix. Prepended to the names of any
database tables used, allowing a single database to be used
for several repositories. Supports variable substitution (see
git-cvsserver(1) for details). Any non-alphabetic characters
will be replaced with underscores.
All gitcvs variables except for gitcvs.usecrlfattr and
gitcvs.allBinary can also be specified as
gitcvs.<access_method>.<varname> (where access_method is one of
"ext" and "pserver") to make them apply only for the given access
method.
gitweb.category, gitweb.description, gitweb.owner, gitweb.url
See gitweb(1) for description.
gitweb.avatar, gitweb.blame, gitweb.grep, gitweb.highlight,
gitweb.patches, gitweb.pickaxe, gitweb.remote_heads,
gitweb.showSizes, gitweb.snapshot
See gitweb.conf(5) for description.
gpg.program
Pathname of the program to use instead of "gpg" when making or
verifying a PGP signature. The program must support the same
command-line interface as GPG, namely, to verify a detached
signature, "gpg --verify $signature - <$file" is run, and the
program is expected to signal a good signature by exiting with
code 0. To generate an ASCII-armored detached signature, the
standard input of "gpg -bsau $key" is fed with the contents to
be signed, and the program is expected to send the result to
its standard output.
gpg.format
Specifies which key format to use when signing with
--gpg-sign. Default is "openpgp". Other possible values are
"x509", "ssh".
See gitformat-signature(5) for the signature format, which
differs based on the selected gpg.format.
gpg.<format>.program
Use this to customize the program used for the signing format
you chose. (see gpg.program and gpg.format) gpg.program can
still be used as a legacy synonym for gpg.openpgp.program. The
default value for gpg.x509.program is "gpgsm" and
gpg.ssh.program is "ssh-keygen".
gpg.minTrustLevel
Specifies a minimum trust level for signature verification. If
this option is unset, then signature verification for merge
operations requires a key with at least marginal trust. Other
operations that perform signature verification require a key
with at least undefined trust. Setting this option overrides
the required trust-level for all operations. Supported values,
in increasing order of significance:
• undefined
• never
• marginal
• fully
• ultimate
gpg.ssh.defaultKeyCommand
This command will be run when user.signingkey is not set and a
ssh signature is requested. On successful exit a valid ssh
public key prefixed with key:: is expected in the first line
of its output. This allows for a script doing a dynamic lookup
of the correct public key when it is impractical to statically
configure user.signingKey. For example when keys or SSH
Certificates are rotated frequently or selection of the right
key depends on external factors unknown to git.
gpg.ssh.allowedSignersFile
A file containing ssh public keys which you are willing to
trust. The file consists of one or more lines of principals
followed by an ssh public key. e.g.:
[email protected],[email protected] ssh-rsa AAAAX1... See
ssh-keygen(1) "ALLOWED SIGNERS" for details. The principal is
only used to identify the key and is available when verifying
a signature.
SSH has no concept of trust levels like gpg does. To be able
to differentiate between valid signatures and trusted
signatures the trust level of a signature verification is set
to fully when the public key is present in the
allowedSignersFile. Otherwise the trust level is undefined and
git verify-commit/tag will fail.
This file can be set to a location outside of the repository
and every developer maintains their own trust store. A central
repository server could generate this file automatically from
ssh keys with push access to verify the code against. In a
corporate setting this file is probably generated at a global
location from automation that already handles developer ssh
keys.
A repository that only allows signed commits can store the
file in the repository itself using a path relative to the
top-level of the working tree. This way only committers with
an already valid key can add or change keys in the keyring.
Since OpensSSH 8.8 this file allows specifying a key lifetime
using valid-after & valid-before options. Git will mark
signatures as valid if the signing key was valid at the time
of the signature’s creation. This allows users to change a
signing key without invalidating all previously made
signatures.
Using a SSH CA key with the cert-authority option (see
ssh-keygen(1) "CERTIFICATES") is also valid.
gpg.ssh.revocationFile
Either a SSH KRL or a list of revoked public keys (without the
principal prefix). See ssh-keygen(1) for details. If a public
key is found in this file then it will always be treated as
having trust level "never" and signatures will show as
invalid.
grep.lineNumber
If set to true, enable -n option by default.
grep.column
If set to true, enable the --column option by default.
grep.patternType
Set the default matching behavior. Using a value of basic,
extended, fixed, or perl will enable the --basic-regexp,
--extended-regexp, --fixed-strings, or --perl-regexp option
accordingly, while the value default will use the
grep.extendedRegexp option to choose between basic and
extended.
grep.extendedRegexp
If set to true, enable --extended-regexp option by default.
This option is ignored when the grep.patternType option is set
to a value other than default.
grep.threads
Number of grep worker threads to use. If unset (or set to 0),
Git will use as many threads as the number of logical cores
available.
grep.fullName
If set to true, enable --full-name option by default.
grep.fallbackToNoIndex
If set to true, fall back to git grep --no-index if git grep
is executed outside of a git repository. Defaults to false.
gui.commitMsgWidth
Defines how wide the commit message window is in the
git-gui(1). "75" is the default.
gui.diffContext
Specifies how many context lines should be used in calls to
diff made by the git-gui(1). The default is "5".
gui.displayUntracked
Determines if git-gui(1) shows untracked files in the file
list. The default is "true".
gui.encoding
Specifies the default character encoding to use for displaying
of file contents in git-gui(1) and gitk(1). It can be
overridden by setting the encoding attribute for relevant
files (see gitattributes(5)). If this option is not set, the
tools default to the locale encoding.
gui.matchTrackingBranch
Determines if new branches created with git-gui(1) should
default to tracking remote branches with matching names or
not. Default: "false".
gui.newBranchTemplate
Is used as a suggested name when creating new branches using
the git-gui(1).
gui.pruneDuringFetch
"true" if git-gui(1) should prune remote-tracking branches
when performing a fetch. The default value is "false".
gui.trustmtime
Determines if git-gui(1) should trust the file modification
timestamp or not. By default the timestamps are not trusted.
gui.spellingDictionary
Specifies the dictionary used for spell checking commit
messages in the git-gui(1). When set to "none" spell checking
is turned off.
gui.fastCopyBlame
If true, git gui blame uses -C instead of -C -C for original
location detection. It makes blame significantly faster on
huge repositories at the expense of less thorough copy
detection.
gui.copyBlameThreshold
Specifies the threshold to use in git gui blame original
location detection, measured in alphanumeric characters. See
the git-blame(1) manual for more information on copy
detection.
gui.blamehistoryctx
Specifies the radius of history context in days to show in
gitk(1) for the selected commit, when the Show History Context
menu item is invoked from git gui blame. If this variable is
set to zero, the whole history is shown.
guitool.<name>.cmd
Specifies the shell command line to execute when the
corresponding item of the git-gui(1) Tools menu is invoked.
This option is mandatory for every tool. The command is
executed from the root of the working directory, and in the
environment it receives the name of the tool as GIT_GUITOOL,
the name of the currently selected file as FILENAME, and the
name of the current branch as CUR_BRANCH (if the head is
detached, CUR_BRANCH is empty).
guitool.<name>.needsFile
Run the tool only if a diff is selected in the GUI. It
guarantees that FILENAME is not empty.
guitool.<name>.noConsole
Run the command silently, without creating a window to display
its output.
guitool.<name>.noRescan
Don’t rescan the working directory for changes after the tool
finishes execution.
guitool.<name>.confirm
Show a confirmation dialog before actually running the tool.
guitool.<name>.argPrompt
Request a string argument from the user, and pass it to the
tool through the ARGS environment variable. Since requesting
an argument implies confirmation, the confirm option has no
effect if this is enabled. If the option is set to true, yes,
or 1, the dialog uses a built-in generic prompt; otherwise the
exact value of the variable is used.
guitool.<name>.revPrompt
Request a single valid revision from the user, and set the
REVISION environment variable. In other aspects this option is
similar to argPrompt, and can be used together with it.
guitool.<name>.revUnmerged
Show only unmerged branches in the revPrompt subdialog. This
is useful for tools similar to merge or rebase, but not for
things like checkout or reset.
guitool.<name>.title
Specifies the title to use for the prompt dialog. The default
is the tool name.
guitool.<name>.prompt
Specifies the general prompt string to display at the top of
the dialog, before subsections for argPrompt and revPrompt.
The default value includes the actual command.
help.browser
Specify the browser that will be used to display help in the
web format. See git-help(1).
help.format
Override the default help format used by git-help(1). Values
man, info, web and html are supported. man is the default.
web and html are the same.
help.autoCorrect
If git detects typos and can identify exactly one valid
command similar to the error, git will try to suggest the
correct command or even run the suggestion automatically.
Possible config values are:
• 0, "false", "off", "no", "show": show the suggested
command (default).
• 1, "true", "on", "yes", "immediate": run the suggested
command immediately.
• positive number > 1: run the suggested command after
specified deciseconds (0.1 sec).
• "never": don’t run or show any suggested command.
• "prompt": show the suggestion and prompt for confirmation
to run the command.
help.htmlPath
Specify the path where the HTML documentation resides. File
system paths and URLs are supported. HTML pages will be
prefixed with this path when help is displayed in the web
format. This defaults to the documentation path of your Git
installation.
http.proxy
Override the HTTP proxy, normally configured using the
http_proxy, https_proxy, and all_proxy environment variables
(see curl(1)). In addition to the syntax understood by curl,
it is possible to specify a proxy string with a user name but
no password, in which case git will attempt to acquire one in
the same way it does for other credentials. See
gitcredentials(7) for more information. The syntax thus is
[protocol://][user[:password]@]proxyhost[:port][/path]. This
can be overridden on a per-remote basis; see
remote.<name>.proxy
Any proxy, however configured, must be completely transparent
and must not modify, transform, or buffer the request or
response in any way. Proxies which are not completely
transparent are known to cause various forms of breakage with
Git.
http.proxyAuthMethod
Set the method with which to authenticate against the HTTP
proxy. This only takes effect if the configured proxy string
contains a user name part (i.e. is of the form user@host or
user@host:port). This can be overridden on a per-remote basis;
see remote.<name>.proxyAuthMethod. Both can be overridden by
the GIT_HTTP_PROXY_AUTHMETHOD environment variable. Possible
values are:
• anyauth - Automatically pick a suitable authentication
method. It is assumed that the proxy answers an
unauthenticated request with a 407 status code and one or
more Proxy-authenticate headers with supported
authentication methods. This is the default.
• basic - HTTP Basic authentication
• digest - HTTP Digest authentication; this prevents the
password from being transmitted to the proxy in clear text
• negotiate - GSS-Negotiate authentication (compare the
--negotiate option of curl(1))
• ntlm - NTLM authentication (compare the --ntlm option of
curl(1))
http.proxySSLCert
The pathname of a file that stores a client certificate to use
to authenticate with an HTTPS proxy. Can be overridden by the
GIT_PROXY_SSL_CERT environment variable.
http.proxySSLKey
The pathname of a file that stores a private key to use to
authenticate with an HTTPS proxy. Can be overridden by the
GIT_PROXY_SSL_KEY environment variable.
http.proxySSLCertPasswordProtected
Enable Git’s password prompt for the proxy SSL certificate.
Otherwise OpenSSL will prompt the user, possibly many times,
if the certificate or private key is encrypted. Can be
overridden by the GIT_PROXY_SSL_CERT_PASSWORD_PROTECTED
environment variable.
http.proxySSLCAInfo
Pathname to the file containing the certificate bundle that
should be used to verify the proxy with when using an HTTPS
proxy. Can be overridden by the GIT_PROXY_SSL_CAINFO
environment variable.
http.emptyAuth
Attempt authentication without seeking a username or password.
This can be used to attempt GSS-Negotiate authentication
without specifying a username in the URL, as libcurl normally
requires a username for authentication.
http.proactiveAuth
Attempt authentication without first making an unauthenticated
attempt and receiving a 401 response. This can be used to
ensure that all requests are authenticated. If http.emptyAuth
is set to true, this value has no effect.
If the credential helper used specifies an authentication
scheme (i.e., via the authtype field), that value will be
used; if a username and password is provided without a scheme,
then Basic authentication is used. The value of the option
determines the scheme requested from the helper. Possible
values are:
• basic - Request Basic authentication from the helper.
• auto - Allow the helper to pick an appropriate scheme.
• none - Disable proactive authentication.
Note that TLS should always be used with this configuration,
since otherwise it is easy to accidentally expose plaintext
credentials if Basic authentication is selected.
http.delegation
Control GSSAPI credential delegation. The delegation is
disabled by default in libcurl since version 7.21.7. Set
parameter to tell the server what it is allowed to delegate
when it comes to user credentials. Used with GSS/kerberos.
Possible values are:
• none - Don’t allow any delegation.
• policy - Delegates if and only if the OK-AS-DELEGATE flag
is set in the Kerberos service ticket, which is a matter
of realm policy.
• always - Unconditionally allow the server to delegate.
http.extraHeader
Pass an additional HTTP header when communicating with a
server. If more than one such entry exists, all of them are
added as extra headers. To allow overriding the settings
inherited from the system config, an empty value will reset
the extra headers to the empty list.
http.cookieFile
The pathname of a file containing previously stored cookie
lines, which should be used in the Git http session, if they
match the server. The file format of the file to read cookies
from should be plain HTTP headers or the Netscape/Mozilla
cookie file format (see curl(1)). Set it to an empty string,
to accept only new cookies from the server and send them back
in successive requests within same connection. NOTE that the
file specified with http.cookieFile is used only as input
unless http.saveCookies is set.
http.saveCookies
If set, store cookies received during requests to the file
specified by http.cookieFile. Has no effect if http.cookieFile
is unset, or set to an empty string.
http.version
Use the specified HTTP protocol version when communicating
with a server. If you want to force the default. The available
and default version depend on libcurl. Currently the possible
values of this option are:
• HTTP/2
• HTTP/1.1
http.curloptResolve
Hostname resolution information that will be used first by
libcurl when sending HTTP requests. This information should be
in one of the following formats:
• [+]HOST:PORT:ADDRESS[,ADDRESS]
• -HOST:PORT
The first format redirects all requests to the given HOST:PORT
to the provided ADDRESS(s). The second format clears all
previous config values for that HOST:PORT combination. To
allow easy overriding of all the settings inherited from the
system config, an empty value will reset all resolution
information to the empty list.
http.sslVersion
The SSL version to use when negotiating an SSL connection, if
you want to force the default. The available and default
version depend on whether libcurl was built against NSS or
OpenSSL and the particular configuration of the crypto library
in use. Internally this sets the CURLOPT_SSL_VERSION option;
see the libcurl documentation for more details on the format
of this option and for the ssl version supported. Currently
the possible values of this option are:
• sslv2
• sslv3
• tlsv1
• tlsv1.0
• tlsv1.1
• tlsv1.2
• tlsv1.3
Can be overridden by the GIT_SSL_VERSION environment variable.
To force git to use libcurl’s default ssl version and ignore
any explicit http.sslversion option, set GIT_SSL_VERSION to
the empty string.
http.sslCipherList
A list of SSL ciphers to use when negotiating an SSL
connection. The available ciphers depend on whether libcurl
was built against NSS or OpenSSL and the particular
configuration of the crypto library in use. Internally this
sets the CURLOPT_SSL_CIPHER_LIST option; see the libcurl
documentation for more details on the format of this list.
Can be overridden by the GIT_SSL_CIPHER_LIST environment
variable. To force git to use libcurl’s default cipher list
and ignore any explicit http.sslCipherList option, set
GIT_SSL_CIPHER_LIST to the empty string.
http.sslVerify
Whether to verify the SSL certificate when fetching or pushing
over HTTPS. Defaults to true. Can be overridden by the
GIT_SSL_NO_VERIFY environment variable.
http.sslCert
File containing the SSL certificate when fetching or pushing
over HTTPS. Can be overridden by the GIT_SSL_CERT environment
variable.
http.sslKey
File containing the SSL private key when fetching or pushing
over HTTPS. Can be overridden by the GIT_SSL_KEY environment
variable.
http.sslCertPasswordProtected
Enable Git’s password prompt for the SSL certificate.
Otherwise OpenSSL will prompt the user, possibly many times,
if the certificate or private key is encrypted. Can be
overridden by the GIT_SSL_CERT_PASSWORD_PROTECTED environment
variable.
http.sslCAInfo
File containing the certificates to verify the peer with when
fetching or pushing over HTTPS. Can be overridden by the
GIT_SSL_CAINFO environment variable.
http.sslCAPath
Path containing files with the CA certificates to verify the
peer with when fetching or pushing over HTTPS. Can be
overridden by the GIT_SSL_CAPATH environment variable.
http.sslBackend
Name of the SSL backend to use (e.g. "openssl" or "schannel").
This option is ignored if cURL lacks support for choosing the
SSL backend at runtime.
http.sslCertType
Type of client certificate used when fetching or pushing over
HTTPS. "PEM", "DER" are supported when using openssl or gnutls
backends. "P12" is supported on "openssl", "schannel",
"securetransport", and gnutls 8.11+. See also libcurl
CURLOPT_SSLCERTTYPE. Can be overridden by the
GIT_SSL_CERT_TYPE environment variable.
http.sslKeyType
Type of client private key used when fetching or pushing over
HTTPS. (e.g. "PEM", "DER", or "ENG"). Only applicable when
using "openssl" backend. "DER" is not supported with openssl.
Particularly useful when set to "ENG" for authenticating with
PKCS#11 tokens, with a PKCS#11 URL in sslCert option. See also
libcurl CURLOPT_SSLKEYTYPE. Can be overridden by the
GIT_SSL_KEY_TYPE environment variable.
http.schannelCheckRevoke
Used to enforce or disable certificate revocation checks in
cURL when http.sslBackend is set to "schannel". Defaults to
true if unset. Only necessary to disable this if Git
consistently errors and the message is about checking the
revocation status of a certificate. This option is ignored if
cURL lacks support for setting the relevant SSL option at
runtime.
http.schannelUseSSLCAInfo
As of cURL v7.60.0, the Secure Channel backend can use the
certificate bundle provided via http.sslCAInfo, but that would
override the Windows Certificate Store. Since this is not
desirable by default, Git will tell cURL not to use that
bundle by default when the schannel backend was configured via
http.sslBackend, unless http.schannelUseSSLCAInfo overrides
this behavior.
http.pinnedPubkey
Public key of the https service. It may either be the filename
of a PEM or DER encoded public key file or a string starting
with sha256// followed by the base64 encoded sha256 hash of
the public key. See also libcurl CURLOPT_PINNEDPUBLICKEY. git
will exit with an error if this option is set but not
supported by cURL.
http.sslTry
Attempt to use AUTH SSL/TLS and encrypted data transfers when
connecting via regular FTP protocol. This might be needed if
the FTP server requires it for security reasons or you wish to
connect securely whenever remote FTP server supports it.
Default is false since it might trigger certificate
verification errors on misconfigured servers.
http.maxRequests
How many HTTP requests to launch in parallel. Can be
overridden by the GIT_HTTP_MAX_REQUESTS environment variable.
Default is 5.
http.minSessions
The number of curl sessions (counted across slots) to be kept
across requests. They will not be ended with
curl_easy_cleanup() until http_cleanup() is invoked. If
USE_CURL_MULTI is not defined, this value will be capped at 1.
Defaults to 1.
http.postBuffer
Maximum size in bytes of the buffer used by smart HTTP
transports when POSTing data to the remote system. For
requests larger than this buffer size, HTTP/1.1 and
Transfer-Encoding: chunked is used to avoid creating a massive
pack file locally. Default is 1 MiB, which is sufficient for
most requests.
Note that raising this limit is only effective for disabling
chunked transfer encoding and therefore should be used only
where the remote server or a proxy only supports HTTP/1.0 or
is noncompliant with the HTTP standard. Raising this is not,
in general, an effective solution for most push problems, but
can increase memory consumption significantly since the entire
buffer is allocated even for small pushes.
http.lowSpeedLimit, http.lowSpeedTime
If the HTTP transfer speed, in bytes per second, is less than
http.lowSpeedLimit for longer than http.lowSpeedTime seconds,
the transfer is aborted. Can be overridden by the
GIT_HTTP_LOW_SPEED_LIMIT and GIT_HTTP_LOW_SPEED_TIME
environment variables.
http.keepAliveIdle
Specifies how long in seconds to wait on an idle connection
before sending TCP keepalive probes (if supported by the OS).
If unset, curl’s default value is used. Can be overridden by
the GIT_HTTP_KEEPALIVE_IDLE environment variable.
http.keepAliveInterval
Specifies how long in seconds to wait between TCP keepalive
probes (if supported by the OS). If unset, curl’s default
value is used. Can be overridden by the
GIT_HTTP_KEEPALIVE_INTERVAL environment variable.
http.keepAliveCount
Specifies how many TCP keepalive probes to send before giving
up and terminating the connection (if supported by the OS). If
unset, curl’s default value is used. Can be overridden by the
GIT_HTTP_KEEPALIVE_COUNT environment variable.
http.noEPSV
A boolean which disables using of EPSV ftp command by curl.
This can be helpful with some "poor" ftp servers which don’t
support EPSV mode. Can be overridden by the
GIT_CURL_FTP_NO_EPSV environment variable. Default is false
(curl will use EPSV).
http.userAgent
The HTTP USER_AGENT string presented to an HTTP server. The
default value represents the version of the Git client such as
git/1.7.1. This option allows you to override this value to a
more common value such as Mozilla/4.0. This may be necessary,
for instance, if connecting through a firewall that restricts
HTTP connections to a set of common USER_AGENT strings (but
not including those like git/1.7.1). Can be overridden by the
GIT_HTTP_USER_AGENT environment variable.
http.followRedirects
Whether git should follow HTTP redirects. If set to true, git
will transparently follow any redirect issued by a server it
encounters. If set to false, git will treat all redirects as
errors. If set to initial, git will follow redirects only for
the initial request to a remote, but not for subsequent
follow-up HTTP requests. Since git uses the redirected URL as
the base for the follow-up requests, this is generally
sufficient. The default is initial.
http.<url>.*
Any of the http.* options above can be applied selectively to
some URLs. For a config key to match a URL, each element of
the config key is compared to that of the URL, in the
following order:
1. Scheme (e.g., https in https://example.com/ ). This field
must match exactly between the config key and the URL.
2. Host/domain name (e.g., example.com in
https://example.com/ ). This field must match between the
config key and the URL. It is possible to specify a * as
part of the host name to match all subdomains at this
level. https://*.example.com/ for example would match
https://foo.example.com/ , but not
https://foo.bar.example.com/ .
3. Port number (e.g., 8080 in http://example.com:8080/ ). This
field must match exactly between the config key and the
URL. Omitted port numbers are automatically converted to
the correct default for the scheme before matching.
4. Path (e.g., repo.git in https://example.com/repo.git ). The
path field of the config key must match the path field of
the URL either exactly or as a prefix of slash-delimited
path elements. This means a config key with path foo/
matches URL path foo/bar. A prefix can only match on a
slash (/) boundary. Longer matches take precedence (so a
config key with path foo/bar is a better match to URL path
foo/bar than a config key with just path foo/).
5. User name (e.g., user in
https://[email protected]/repo.git). If the config key has
a user name it must match the user name in the URL
exactly. If the config key does not have a user name, that
config key will match a URL with any user name (including
none), but at a lower precedence than a config key with a
user name.
The list above is ordered by decreasing precedence; a URL that
matches a config key’s path is preferred to one that matches
its user name. For example, if the URL is
https://[email protected]/foo/bar a config key match of
https://example.com/foo will be preferred over a config key
match of https://[email protected].
All URLs are normalized before attempting any matching (the
password part, if embedded in the URL, is always ignored for
matching purposes) so that equivalent URLs that are simply
spelled differently will match properly. Environment variable
settings always override any matches. The URLs that are
matched against are those given directly to Git commands. This
means any URLs visited as a result of a redirection do not
participate in matching.
i18n.commitEncoding
Character encoding the commit messages are stored in; Git
itself does not care per se, but this information is necessary
e.g. when importing commits from emails or in the gitk
graphical history browser (and possibly in other places in the
future or in other porcelains). See e.g. git-mailinfo(1).
Defaults to utf-8.
i18n.logOutputEncoding
Character encoding the commit messages are converted to when
running git log and friends.
imap.folder
The folder to drop the mails into, which is typically the
Drafts folder. For example: INBOX.Drafts, INBOX/Drafts or
[Gmail]/Drafts. The IMAP folder to interact with MUST be
specified; the value of this configuration variable is used as
the fallback default value when the --folder option is not
given.
imap.tunnel
Command used to set up a tunnel to the IMAP server through
which commands will be piped instead of using a direct network
connection to the server. Required when imap.host is not set.
imap.host
A URL identifying the server. Use an imap:// prefix for
non-secure connections and an imaps:// prefix for secure
connections. Ignored when imap.tunnel is set, but required
otherwise.
imap.user
The username to use when logging in to the server.
imap.pass
The password to use when logging in to the server.
imap.port
An integer port number to connect to on the server. Defaults
to 143 for imap:// hosts and 993 for imaps:// hosts. Ignored
when imap.tunnel is set.
imap.sslverify
A boolean to enable/disable verification of the server
certificate used by the SSL/TLS connection. Default is true.
Ignored when imap.tunnel is set.
imap.preformattedHTML
A boolean to enable/disable the use of html encoding when
sending a patch. An html encoded patch will be bracketed with
<pre> and have a content type of text/html. Ironically,
enabling this option causes Thunderbird to send the patch as a
plain/text, format=fixed email. Default is false.
imap.authMethod
Specify the authentication method for authenticating with the
IMAP server. If Git was built with the NO_CURL option, or if
your curl version is older than 7.34.0, or if you’re running
git-imap-send with the --no-curl option, the only supported
methods are PLAIN, CRAM-MD5, OAUTHBEARER and XOAUTH2. If this
is not set then git imap-send uses the basic IMAP plaintext
LOGIN command.
include.path, includeIf.<condition>.path
Special variables to include other configuration files. See
the "CONFIGURATION FILE" section in the main git-config(1)
documentation, specifically the "Includes" and "Conditional
Includes" subsections.
index.recordEndOfIndexEntries
Specifies whether the index file should include an "End Of
Index Entry" section. This reduces index load time on
multiprocessor machines but produces a message "ignoring EOIE
extension" when reading the index using Git versions before
2.20. Defaults to true if index.threads has been explicitly
enabled, false otherwise.
index.recordOffsetTable
Specifies whether the index file should include an "Index
Entry Offset Table" section. This reduces index load time on
multiprocessor machines but produces a message "ignoring IEOT
extension" when reading the index using Git versions before
2.20. Defaults to true if index.threads has been explicitly
enabled, false otherwise.
index.sparse
When enabled, write the index using sparse-directory entries.
This has no effect unless core.sparseCheckout and
core.sparseCheckoutCone are both enabled. Defaults to false.
index.threads
Specifies the number of threads to spawn when loading the
index. This is meant to reduce index load time on
multiprocessor machines. Specifying 0 or true will cause Git
to auto-detect the number of CPUs and set the number of
threads accordingly. Specifying 1 or false will disable
multithreading. Defaults to true.
index.version
Specify the version with which new index files should be
initialized. This does not affect existing repositories. If
feature.manyFiles is enabled, then the default is 4.
index.skipHash
When enabled, do not compute the trailing hash for the index
file. This accelerates Git commands that manipulate the index,
such as git add, git commit, or git status. Instead of storing
the checksum, write a trailing set of bytes with value zero,
indicating that the computation was skipped.
If you enable index.skipHash, then Git clients older than
2.13.0 will refuse to parse the index and Git clients older
than 2.40.0 will report an error during git fsck.
init.templateDir
Specify the directory from which templates will be copied.
(See the "TEMPLATE DIRECTORY" section of git-init(1).)
init.defaultBranch
Allows overriding the default branch name e.g. when
initializing a new repository.
init.defaultObjectFormat
Allows overriding the default object format for new
repositories. See --object-format= in git-init(1). Both the
command line option and the GIT_DEFAULT_HASH environment
variable take precedence over this config.
init.defaultRefFormat
Allows overriding the default ref storage format for new
repositories. See --ref-format= in git-init(1). Both the
command line option and the GIT_DEFAULT_REF_FORMAT environment
variable take precedence over this config.
instaweb.browser
Specify the program that will be used to browse your working
repository in gitweb. See git-instaweb(1).
instaweb.httpd
The HTTP daemon command-line to start gitweb on your working
repository. See git-instaweb(1).
instaweb.local
If true the web server started by git-instaweb(1) will be
bound to the local IP (127.0.0.1).
instaweb.modulePath
The default module path for git-instaweb(1) to use instead of
/usr/lib/apache2/modules. Only used if httpd is Apache.
instaweb.port
The port number to bind the gitweb httpd to. See
git-instaweb(1).
interactive.singleKey
When set to true, allow the user to provide one-letter input
with a single key (i.e., without hitting the Enter key) in
interactive commands. This is currently used by the --patch
mode of git-add(1), git-checkout(1), git-restore(1),
git-commit(1), git-reset(1), and git-stash(1).
interactive.diffFilter
When an interactive command (such as git add --patch) shows a
colorized diff, git will pipe the diff through the shell
command defined by this configuration variable. The command
may mark up the diff further for human consumption, provided
that it retains a one-to-one correspondence with the lines in
the original diff. Defaults to disabled (no filtering).
log.abbrevCommit
If true, make git-log(1), git-show(1), and git-whatchanged(1)
assume --abbrev-commit. You may override this option with
--no-abbrev-commit.
log.date
Set the default date-time mode for the log command. Setting a
value for log.date is similar to using git log's --date
option. See git-log(1) for details.
If the format is set to "auto:foo" and the pager is in use,
format "foo" will be used for the date format. Otherwise,
"default" will be used.
log.decorate
Print out the ref names of any commits that are shown by the
log command. Possible values are:
`short`;; the ref name prefixes `refs/heads/`, `refs/tags/` and
`refs/remotes/` are not printed.
`full`;; the full ref name (including prefix) are printed.
`auto`;; if the output is going to a terminal,
the ref names are shown as if `short` were given, otherwise no ref
names are shown.
This is the same as the --decorate option of the git log.
log.initialDecorationSet
By default, git log only shows decorations for certain known
ref namespaces. If all is specified, then show all refs as
decorations.
log.excludeDecoration
Exclude the specified patterns from the log decorations. This
is similar to the --decorate-refs-exclude command-line option,
but the config option can be overridden by the --decorate-refs
option.
log.diffMerges
Set diff format to be used when --diff-merges=on is specified,
see --diff-merges in git-log(1) for details. Defaults to
separate.
log.follow
If true, git log will act as if the --follow option was used
when a single <path> is given. This has the same limitations
as --follow, i.e. it cannot be used to follow multiple files
and does not work well on non-linear history.
log.graphColors
A list of colors, separated by commas, that can be used to
draw history lines in git log --graph.
log.showRoot
If true, the initial commit will be shown as a big creation
event. This is equivalent to a diff against an empty tree.
Tools like git-log(1) or git-whatchanged(1), which normally
hide the root commit will now show it. True by default.
log.showSignature
If true, makes git-log(1), git-show(1), and git-whatchanged(1)
assume --show-signature.
log.mailmap
If true, makes git-log(1), git-show(1), and git-whatchanged(1)
assume --use-mailmap, otherwise assume --no-use-mailmap. True
by default.
lsrefs.unborn
May be "advertise" (the default), "allow", or "ignore". If
"advertise", the server will respond to the client sending
"unborn" (as described in gitprotocol-v2(5)) and will
advertise support for this feature during the protocol v2
capability advertisement. "allow" is the same as "advertise"
except that the server will not advertise support for this
feature; this is useful for load-balanced servers that cannot
be updated atomically (for example), since the administrator
could configure "allow", then after a delay, configure
"advertise".
mailinfo.scissors
If true, makes git-mailinfo(1) (and therefore git-am(1)) act
by default as if the --scissors option was provided on the
command-line. When active, this feature removes everything
from the message body before a scissors line (i.e. consisting
mainly of ">8", "8<" and "-").
mailmap.file
The location of an augmenting mailmap file. The default
mailmap, located in the root of the repository, is loaded
first, then the mailmap file pointed to by this variable. The
location of the mailmap file may be in a repository
subdirectory, or somewhere outside of the repository itself.
See git-shortlog(1) and git-blame(1).
mailmap.blob
Like mailmap.file, but consider the value as a reference to a
blob in the repository. If both mailmap.file and mailmap.blob
are given, both are parsed, with entries from mailmap.file
taking precedence. In a bare repository, this defaults to
HEAD:.mailmap. In a non-bare repository, it defaults to empty.
maintenance.auto
This boolean config option controls whether some commands run
git maintenance run --auto after doing their normal work.
Defaults to true.
maintenance.autoDetach
Many Git commands trigger automatic maintenance after they
have written data into the repository. This boolean config
option controls whether this automatic maintenance shall
happen in the foreground or whether the maintenance process
shall detach and continue to run in the background.
If unset, the value of gc.autoDetach is used as a fallback.
Defaults to true if both are unset, meaning that the
maintenance process will detach.
maintenance.strategy
This string config option provides a way to specify one of a
few recommended schedules for background maintenance. This
only affects which tasks are run during git maintenance run
--schedule=X commands, provided no --task=<task> arguments are
provided. Further, if a maintenance.<task>.schedule config
value is set, then that value is used instead of the one
provided by maintenance.strategy. The possible strategy
strings are:
• none: This default setting implies no tasks are run at any
schedule.
• incremental: This setting optimizes for performing small
maintenance activities that do not delete any data. This
does not schedule the gc task, but runs the prefetch and
commit-graph tasks hourly, the loose-objects and
incremental-repack tasks daily, and the pack-refs task
weekly.
maintenance.<task>.enabled
This boolean config option controls whether the maintenance
task with name <task> is run when no --task option is
specified to git maintenance run. These config values are
ignored if a --task option exists. By default, only
maintenance.gc.enabled is true.
maintenance.<task>.schedule
This config option controls whether or not the given <task>
runs during a git maintenance run --schedule=<frequency>
command. The value must be one of "hourly", "daily", or
"weekly".
maintenance.commit-graph.auto
This integer config option controls how often the commit-graph
task should be run as part of git maintenance run --auto. If
zero, then the commit-graph task will not run with the --auto
option. A negative value will force the task to run every
time. Otherwise, a positive value implies the command should
run when the number of reachable commits that are not in the
commit-graph file is at least the value of
maintenance.commit-graph.auto. The default value is 100.
maintenance.loose-objects.auto
This integer config option controls how often the
loose-objects task should be run as part of git maintenance
run --auto. If zero, then the loose-objects task will not run
with the --auto option. A negative value will force the task
to run every time. Otherwise, a positive value implies the
command should run when the number of loose objects is at
least the value of maintenance.loose-objects.auto. The default
value is 100.
maintenance.loose-objects.batchSize
This integer config option controls the maximum number of
loose objects written into a packfile during the loose-objects
task. The default is fifty thousand. Use value 0 to indicate
no limit.
maintenance.incremental-repack.auto
This integer config option controls how often the
incremental-repack task should be run as part of git
maintenance run --auto. If zero, then the incremental-repack
task will not run with the --auto option. A negative value
will force the task to run every time. Otherwise, a positive
value implies the command should run when the number of
pack-files not in the multi-pack-index is at least the value
of maintenance.incremental-repack.auto. The default value is
10.
maintenance.reflog-expire.auto
This integer config option controls how often the
reflog-expire task should be run as part of git maintenance
run --auto. If zero, then the reflog-expire task will not run
with the --auto option. A negative value will force the task
to run every time. Otherwise, a positive value implies the
command should run when the number of expired reflog entries
in the "HEAD" reflog is at least the value of
maintenance.loose-objects.auto. The default value is 100.
maintenance.rerere-gc.auto
This integer config option controls how often the rerere-gc
task should be run as part of git maintenance run --auto. If
zero, then the rerere-gc task will not run with the --auto
option. A negative value will force the task to run every
time. Otherwise, any positive value implies the command will
run when the "rr-cache" directory exists and has at least one
entry, regardless of whether it is stale or not. This
heuristic may be refined in the future. The default value is
1.
maintenance.worktree-prune.auto
This integer config option controls how often the
worktree-prune task should be run as part of git maintenance
run --auto. If zero, then the worktree-prune task will not run
with the --auto option. A negative value will force the task
to run every time. Otherwise, a positive value implies the
command should run when the number of prunable worktrees
exceeds the value. The default value is 1.
man.viewer
Specify the programs that may be used to display help in the
man format. See git-help(1).
man.<tool>.cmd
Specify the command to invoke the specified man viewer. The
specified command is evaluated in shell with the man page
passed as an argument. (See git-help(1).)
man.<tool>.path
Override the path for the given tool that may be used to
display help in the man format. See git-help(1).
merge.conflictStyle
Specify the style in which conflicted hunks are written out to
working tree files upon merge. The default is "merge", which
shows a <<<<<<< conflict marker, changes made by one side, a
======= marker, changes made by the other side, and then a
>>>>>>> marker. An alternate style, "diff3", adds a |||||||
marker and the original text before the ======= marker. The
"merge" style tends to produce smaller conflict regions than
diff3, both because of the exclusion of the original text, and
because when a subset of lines match on the two sides, they
are just pulled out of the conflict region. Another alternate
style, "zdiff3", is similar to diff3 but removes matching
lines on the two sides from the conflict region when those
matching lines appear near either the beginning or end of a
conflict region.
merge.defaultToUpstream
If merge is called without any commit argument, merge the
upstream branches configured for the current branch by using
their last observed values stored in their remote-tracking
branches. The values of the branch.<current branch>.merge that
name the branches at the remote named by
branch.<current-branch>.remote are consulted, and then they
are mapped via remote.<remote>.fetch to their corresponding
remote-tracking branches, and the tips of these tracking
branches are merged. Defaults to true.
merge.ff
By default, Git does not create an extra merge commit when
merging a commit that is a descendant of the current commit.
Instead, the tip of the current branch is fast-forwarded. When
set to false, this variable tells Git to create an extra merge
commit in such a case (equivalent to giving the --no-ff option
from the command line). When set to only, only such
fast-forward merges are allowed (equivalent to giving the
--ff-only option from the command line).
merge.verifySignatures
If true, this is equivalent to the --verify-signatures command
line option. See git-merge(1) for details.
merge.branchdesc
In addition to branch names, populate the log message with the
branch description text associated with them. Defaults to
false.
merge.log
In addition to branch names, populate the log message with at
most the specified number of one-line descriptions from the
actual commits that are being merged. Defaults to false, and
true is a synonym for 20.
merge.suppressDest
By adding a glob that matches the names of integration
branches to this multi-valued configuration variable, the
default merge message computed for merges into these
integration branches will omit "into <branch-name>" from its
title.
An element with an empty value can be used to clear the list
of globs accumulated from previous configuration entries. When
there is no merge.suppressDest variable defined, the default
value of master is used for backward compatibility.
merge.renameLimit
The number of files to consider in the exhaustive portion of
rename detection during a merge. If not specified, defaults to
the value of diff.renameLimit. If neither merge.renameLimit
nor diff.renameLimit are specified, currently defaults to
7000. This setting has no effect if rename detection is turned
off.
merge.renames
Whether Git detects renames. If set to false, rename detection
is disabled. If set to true, basic rename detection is
enabled. Defaults to the value of diff.renames.
merge.directoryRenames
Whether Git detects directory renames, affecting what happens
at merge time to new files added to a directory on one side of
history when that directory was renamed on the other side of
history. Possible values are:
false
Directory rename detection is disabled, meaning that such
new files will be left behind in the old directory.
true
Directory rename detection is enabled, meaning that such
new files will be moved into the new directory.
conflict
A conflict will be reported for such paths.
If merge.renames is false, merge.directoryRenames is ignored
and treated as false. Defaults to conflict.
merge.renormalize
Tell Git that canonical representation of files in the
repository has changed over time (e.g. earlier commits record
text files with CRLF line endings, but recent ones use LF line
endings). In such a repository, for each file where a
three-way content merge is needed, Git can convert the data
recorded in commits to a canonical form before performing a
merge to reduce unnecessary conflicts. For more information,
see section "Merging branches with differing checkin/checkout
attributes" in gitattributes(5).
merge.stat
What, if anything, to print between ORIG_HEAD and the merge
result at the end of the merge. Possible values are:
false
Show nothing.
true
Show git diff --diffstat --summary ORIG_HEAD.
compact
Show git diff --compact-summary ORIG_HEAD.
but any unrecognised value (e.g., a value added by a future
version of Git) is taken as true instead of triggering an
error. Defaults to true.
merge.autoStash
When set to true, automatically create a temporary stash entry
before the operation begins, and apply it after the operation
ends. This means that you can run merge on a dirty worktree.
However, use with care: the final stash application after a
successful merge might result in non-trivial conflicts. This
option can be overridden by the --no-autostash and --autostash
options of git-merge(1). Defaults to false.
merge.tool
Controls which merge tool is used by git-mergetool(1). The
list below shows the valid built-in values. Any other value is
treated as a custom merge tool and requires that a
corresponding mergetool.<tool>.cmd variable is defined.
merge.guitool
Controls which merge tool is used by git-mergetool(1) when the
-g/--gui flag is specified. The list below shows the valid
built-in values. Any other value is treated as a custom merge
tool and requires that a corresponding mergetool.<guitool>.cmd
variable is defined.
araxis
Use Araxis Merge (requires a graphical session)
bc
Use Beyond Compare (requires a graphical session)
bc3
Use Beyond Compare (requires a graphical session)
bc4
Use Beyond Compare (requires a graphical session)
codecompare
Use Code Compare (requires a graphical session)
deltawalker
Use DeltaWalker (requires a graphical session)
diffmerge
Use DiffMerge (requires a graphical session)
diffuse
Use Diffuse (requires a graphical session)
ecmerge
Use ECMerge (requires a graphical session)
emerge
Use Emacs' Emerge
examdiff
Use ExamDiff Pro (requires a graphical session)
guiffy
Use Guiffy’s Diff Tool (requires a graphical session)
gvimdiff
Use gVim (requires a graphical session) with a custom
layout (see git help mergetool's BACKEND SPECIFIC HINTS
section)
gvimdiff1
Use gVim (requires a graphical session) with a 2 panes
layout (LOCAL and REMOTE)
gvimdiff2
Use gVim (requires a graphical session) with a 3 panes
layout (LOCAL, MERGED and REMOTE)
gvimdiff3
Use gVim (requires a graphical session) where only the
MERGED file is shown
kdiff3
Use KDiff3 (requires a graphical session)
meld
Use Meld (requires a graphical session) with optional auto
merge (see git help mergetool's CONFIGURATION section)
nvimdiff
Use Neovim with a custom layout (see git help mergetool's
BACKEND SPECIFIC HINTS section)
nvimdiff1
Use Neovim with a 2 panes layout (LOCAL and REMOTE)
nvimdiff2
Use Neovim with a 3 panes layout (LOCAL, MERGED and
REMOTE)
nvimdiff3
Use Neovim where only the MERGED file is shown
opendiff
Use FileMerge (requires a graphical session)
p4merge
Use HelixCore P4Merge (requires a graphical session)
smerge
Use Sublime Merge (requires a graphical session)
tkdiff
Use TkDiff (requires a graphical session)
tortoisemerge
Use TortoiseMerge (requires a graphical session)
vimdiff
Use Vim with a custom layout (see git help mergetool's
BACKEND SPECIFIC HINTS section)
vimdiff1
Use Vim with a 2 panes layout (LOCAL and REMOTE)
vimdiff2
Use Vim with a 3 panes layout (LOCAL, MERGED and REMOTE)
vimdiff3
Use Vim where only the MERGED file is shown
vscode
Use Visual Studio Code (requires a graphical session)
winmerge
Use WinMerge (requires a graphical session)
xxdiff
Use xxdiff (requires a graphical session)
merge.verbosity
Controls the amount of output shown by the recursive merge
strategy. Level 0 outputs nothing except a final error message
if conflicts were detected. Level 1 outputs only conflicts, 2
outputs conflicts and file changes. Level 5 and above outputs
debugging information. The default is level 2. Can be
overridden by the GIT_MERGE_VERBOSITY environment variable.
merge.<driver>.name
Defines a human-readable name for a custom low-level merge
driver. See gitattributes(5) for details.
merge.<driver>.driver
Defines the command that implements a custom low-level merge
driver. See gitattributes(5) for details.
merge.<driver>.recursive
Names a low-level merge driver to be used when performing an
internal merge between common ancestors. See gitattributes(5)
for details.
mergetool.<tool>.path
Override the path for the given tool. This is useful in case
your tool is not in the $PATH.
mergetool.<tool>.cmd
Specify the command to invoke the specified merge tool. The
specified command is evaluated in shell with the following
variables available: BASE is the name of a temporary file
containing the common base of the files to be merged, if
available; LOCAL is the name of a temporary file containing
the contents of the file on the current branch; REMOTE is the
name of a temporary file containing the contents of the file
from the branch being merged; MERGED contains the name of the
file to which the merge tool should write the results of a
successful merge.
mergetool.<tool>.hideResolved
Allows the user to override the global mergetool.hideResolved
value for a specific tool. See mergetool.hideResolved for the
full description.
mergetool.<tool>.trustExitCode
For a custom merge command, specify whether the exit code of
the merge command can be used to determine whether the merge
was successful. If this is not set to true then the merge
target file timestamp is checked, and the merge is assumed to
have been successful if the file has been updated; otherwise,
the user is prompted to indicate the success of the merge.
mergetool.meld.hasOutput
Older versions of meld do not support the --output option. Git
will attempt to detect whether meld supports --output by
inspecting the output of meld --help. Configuring
mergetool.meld.hasOutput will make Git skip these checks and
use the configured value instead. Setting
mergetool.meld.hasOutput to true tells Git to unconditionally
use the --output option, and false avoids using --output.
mergetool.meld.useAutoMerge
When the --auto-merge is given, meld will merge all
non-conflicting parts automatically, highlight the conflicting
parts, and wait for user decision. Setting
mergetool.meld.useAutoMerge to true tells Git to
unconditionally use the --auto-merge option with meld. Setting
this value to auto makes git detect whether --auto-merge is
supported and will only use --auto-merge when available. A
value of false avoids using --auto-merge altogether, and is
the default value.
mergetool.<variant>.layout
Configure the split window layout for vimdiff’s <variant>,
which is any of vimdiff, nvimdiff, gvimdiff. Upon launching
git mergetool with --tool=<variant> (or without --tool if
merge.tool is configured as <variant>), Git will consult
mergetool.<variant>.layout to determine the tool’s layout. If
the variant-specific configuration is not available, vimdiff '
s is used as fallback. If that too is not available, a default
layout with 4 windows will be used. To configure the layout,
see the BACKEND SPECIFIC HINTS section in git-mergetool(1).
mergetool.hideResolved
During a merge, Git will automatically resolve as many
conflicts as possible and write the $MERGED file containing
conflict markers around any conflicts that it cannot resolve;
$LOCAL and $REMOTE normally are the versions of the file from
before Git`s conflict resolution. This flag causes $LOCAL and
$REMOTE to be overwritten so that only the unresolved
conflicts are presented to the merge tool. Can be configured
per-tool via the mergetool.<tool>.hideResolved configuration
variable. Defaults to false.
mergetool.keepBackup
After performing a merge, the original file with conflict
markers can be saved as a file with a .orig extension. If this
variable is set to false then this file is not preserved.
Defaults to true (i.e. keep the backup files).
mergetool.keepTemporaries
When invoking a custom merge tool, Git uses a set of temporary
files to pass to the tool. If the tool returns an error and
this variable is set to true, then these temporary files will
be preserved; otherwise, they will be removed after the tool
has exited. Defaults to false.
mergetool.writeToTemp
Git writes temporary BASE, LOCAL, and REMOTE versions of
conflicting files in the worktree by default. Git will attempt
to use a temporary directory for these files when set true.
Defaults to false.
mergetool.prompt
Prompt before each invocation of the merge resolution program.
mergetool.guiDefault
Set true to use the merge.guitool by default (equivalent to
specifying the --gui argument), or auto to select
merge.guitool or merge.tool depending on the presence of a
DISPLAY environment variable value. The default is false,
where the --gui argument must be provided explicitly for the
merge.guitool to be used.
notes.mergeStrategy
Which merge strategy to choose by default when resolving notes
conflicts. Must be one of manual, ours, theirs, union, or
cat_sort_uniq. Defaults to manual. See the "NOTES MERGE
STRATEGIES" section of git-notes(1) for more information on
each strategy.
This setting can be overridden by passing the --strategy
option to git-notes(1).
notes.<name>.mergeStrategy
Which merge strategy to choose when doing a notes merge into
refs/notes/<name>. This overrides the more general
notes.mergeStrategy. See the "NOTES MERGE STRATEGIES" section
in git-notes(1) for more information on the available
strategies.
notes.displayRef
Which ref (or refs, if a glob or specified more than once), in
addition to the default set by core.notesRef or GIT_NOTES_REF,
to read notes from when showing commit messages with the git
log family of commands.
This setting can be overridden with the GIT_NOTES_DISPLAY_REF
environment variable, which must be a colon separated list of
refs or globs.
A warning will be issued for refs that do not exist, but a
glob that does not match any refs is silently ignored.
This setting can be disabled by the --no-notes option to the
git-log(1) family of commands, or by the --notes=<ref> option
accepted by those commands.
The effective value of core.notesRef (possibly overridden by
GIT_NOTES_REF) is also implicitly added to the list of refs to
be displayed.
notes.rewrite.<command>
When rewriting commits with <command> (currently amend or
rebase), if this variable is false, git will not copy notes
from the original to the rewritten commit. Defaults to true.
See also notes.rewriteRef below.
This setting can be overridden with the GIT_NOTES_REWRITE_REF
environment variable, which must be a colon separated list of
refs or globs.
notes.rewriteMode
When copying notes during a rewrite (see the
notes.rewrite.<command> option), determines what to do if the
target commit already has a note. Must be one of overwrite,
concatenate, cat_sort_uniq, or ignore. Defaults to
concatenate.
This setting can be overridden with the GIT_NOTES_REWRITE_MODE
environment variable.
notes.rewriteRef
When copying notes during a rewrite, specifies the (fully
qualified) ref whose notes should be copied. May be a glob, in
which case notes in all matching refs will be copied. You may
also specify this configuration several times.
Does not have a default value; you must configure this
variable to enable note rewriting. Set it to
refs/notes/commits to enable rewriting for the default commit
notes.
Can be overridden with the GIT_NOTES_REWRITE_REF environment
variable. See notes.rewrite.<command> above for a further
description of its format.
pack.window
The size of the window used by git-pack-objects(1) when no
window size is given on the command line. Defaults to 10.
pack.depth
The maximum delta depth used by git-pack-objects(1) when no
maximum depth is given on the command line. Defaults to 50.
Maximum value is 4095.
pack.windowMemory
The maximum size of memory that is consumed by each thread in
git-pack-objects(1) for pack window memory when no limit is
given on the command line. The value can be suffixed with "k",
"m", or "g". When left unconfigured (or set explicitly to 0),
there will be no limit.
pack.compression
An integer -1..9, indicating the compression level for objects
in a pack file. -1 is the zlib default. 0 means no
compression, and 1..9 are various speed/size tradeoffs, 9
being slowest. If not set, defaults to core.compression. If
that is not set, defaults to -1, the zlib default, which is "a
default compromise between speed and compression (currently
equivalent to level 6)."
Note that changing the compression level will not
automatically recompress all existing objects. You can force
recompression by passing the -F option to git-repack(1).
pack.allowPackReuse
When true or "single", and when reachability bitmaps are
enabled, pack-objects will try to send parts of the bitmapped
packfile verbatim. When "multi", and when a multi-pack
reachability bitmap is available, pack-objects will try to
send parts of all packs in the MIDX.
If only a single pack bitmap is available, and
pack.allowPackReuse is set to "multi", reuse parts of just the
bitmapped packfile. This can reduce memory and CPU usage to
serve fetches, but might result in sending a slightly larger
pack. Defaults to true.
pack.island
An extended regular expression configuring a set of delta
islands. See "DELTA ISLANDS" in git-pack-objects(1) for
details.
pack.islandCore
Specify an island name which gets to have its objects be
packed first. This creates a kind of pseudo-pack at the front
of one pack, so that the objects from the specified island are
hopefully faster to copy into any pack that should be served
to a user requesting these objects. In practice this means
that the island specified should likely correspond to what is
the most commonly cloned in the repo. See also "DELTA ISLANDS"
in git-pack-objects(1).
pack.deltaCacheSize
The maximum memory in bytes used for caching deltas in
git-pack-objects(1) before writing them out to a pack. This
cache is used to speed up the writing object phase by not
having to recompute the final delta result once the best match
for all objects is found. Repacking large repositories on
machines which are tight with memory might be badly impacted
by this though, especially if this cache pushes the system
into swapping. A value of 0 means no limit. The smallest size
of 1 byte may be used to virtually disable this cache.
Defaults to 256 MiB.
pack.deltaCacheLimit
The maximum size of a delta, that is cached in
git-pack-objects(1). This cache is used to speed up the
writing object phase by not having to recompute the final
delta result once the best match for all objects is found.
Defaults to 1000. Maximum value is 65535.
pack.threads
Specifies the number of threads to spawn when searching for
best delta matches. This requires that git-pack-objects(1) be
compiled with pthreads otherwise this option is ignored with a
warning. This is meant to reduce packing time on
multiprocessor machines. The required amount of memory for the
delta search window is however multiplied by the number of
threads. Specifying 0 will cause Git to auto-detect the number
of CPUs and set the number of threads accordingly.
pack.indexVersion
Specify the default pack index version. Valid values are 1 for
legacy pack index used by Git versions prior to 1.5.2, and 2
for the new pack index with capabilities for packs larger than
4 GB as well as proper protection against the repacking of
corrupted packs. Version 2 is the default. Note that version 2
is enforced and this config option is ignored whenever the
corresponding pack is larger than 2 GB.
If you have an old Git that does not understand the version 2
*.idx file, cloning or fetching over a non-native protocol
(e.g. "http") that will copy both *.pack file and
corresponding *.idx file from the other side may give you a
repository that cannot be accessed with your older version of
Git. If the *.pack file is smaller than 2 GB, however, you can
use git-index-pack(1) on the *.pack file to regenerate the
*.idx file.
pack.packSizeLimit
The maximum size of a pack. This setting only affects packing
to a file when repacking, i.e. the git:// protocol is
unaffected. It can be overridden by the --max-pack-size option
of git-repack(1). Reaching this limit results in the creation
of multiple packfiles.
Note that this option is rarely useful, and may result in a
larger total on-disk size (because Git will not store deltas
between packs) and worse runtime performance (object lookup
within multiple packs is slower than a single pack, and
optimizations like reachability bitmaps cannot cope with
multiple packs).
If you need to actively run Git using smaller packfiles (e.g.,
because your filesystem does not support large files), this
option may help. But if your goal is to transmit a packfile
over a medium that supports limited sizes (e.g., removable
media that cannot store the whole repository), you are likely
better off creating a single large packfile and splitting it
using a generic multi-volume archive tool (e.g., Unix split).
The minimum size allowed is limited to 1 MiB. The default is
unlimited. Common unit suffixes of k, m, or g are supported.
pack.useBitmaps
When true, git will use pack bitmaps (if available) when
packing to stdout (e.g., during the server side of a fetch).
Defaults to true. You should not generally need to turn this
off unless you are debugging pack bitmaps.
pack.useBitmapBoundaryTraversal
When true, Git will use an experimental algorithm for
computing reachability queries with bitmaps. Instead of
building up complete bitmaps for all of the negated tips and
then OR-ing them together, consider negated tips with existing
bitmaps as additive (i.e. OR-ing them into the result if they
exist, ignoring them otherwise), and build up a bitmap at the
boundary instead.
When using this algorithm, Git may include too many objects as
a result of not opening up trees belonging to certain
UNINTERESTING commits. This inexactness matches the non-bitmap
traversal algorithm.
In many cases, this can provide a speed-up over the exact
algorithm, particularly when there is poor bitmap coverage of
the negated side of the query.
pack.useSparse
When true, git will default to using the --sparse option in
git pack-objects when the --revs option is present. This
algorithm only walks trees that appear in paths that introduce
new objects. This can have significant performance benefits
when computing a pack to send a small change. However, it is
possible that extra objects are added to the pack-file if the
included commits contain certain types of direct renames.
Default is true.
pack.usePathWalk
Enable the --path-walk option by default for git pack-objects
processes. See git-pack-objects(1) for full details.
pack.preferBitmapTips
When selecting which commits will receive bitmaps, prefer a
commit at the tip of any reference that is a suffix of any
value of this configuration over any other commits in the
"selection window".
Note that setting this configuration to refs/foo does not mean
that the commits at the tips of refs/foo/bar and refs/foo/baz
will necessarily be selected. This is because commits are
selected for bitmaps from within a series of windows of
variable length.
If a commit at the tip of any reference which is a suffix of
any value of this configuration is seen in a window, it is
immediately given preference over any other commit in that
window.
pack.writeBitmaps (deprecated)
This is a deprecated synonym for repack.writeBitmaps.
pack.writeBitmapHashCache
When true, git will include a "hash cache" section in the
bitmap index (if one is written). This cache can be used to
feed git’s delta heuristics, potentially leading to better
deltas between bitmapped and non-bitmapped objects (e.g., when
serving a fetch between an older, bitmapped pack and objects
that have been pushed since the last gc). The downside is that
it consumes 4 bytes per object of disk space. Defaults to
true.
When writing a multi-pack reachability bitmap, no new
namehashes are computed; instead, any namehashes stored in an
existing bitmap are permuted into their appropriate location
when writing a new bitmap.
pack.writeBitmapLookupTable
When true, Git will include a "lookup table" section in the
bitmap index (if one is written). This table is used to defer
loading individual bitmaps as late as possible. This can be
beneficial in repositories that have relatively large bitmap
indexes. Defaults to false.
pack.readReverseIndex
When true, git will read any .rev file(s) that may be
available (see: gitformat-pack(5)). When false, the reverse
index will be generated from scratch and stored in memory.
Defaults to true.
pack.writeReverseIndex
When true, git will write a corresponding .rev file (see:
gitformat-pack(5)) for each new packfile that it writes in all
places except for git-fast-import(1) and in the bulk checkin
mechanism. Defaults to true.
pager.<cmd>
If the value is boolean, turns on or off pagination of the
output of a particular Git subcommand when writing to a tty.
Otherwise, turns on pagination for the subcommand using the
pager specified by the value of pager.<cmd>. If --paginate or
--no-pager is specified on the command line, it takes
precedence over this option. To disable pagination for all
commands, set core.pager or GIT_PAGER to cat.
pretty.<name>
Alias for a --pretty= format string, as specified in
git-log(1). Any aliases defined here can be used just as the
built-in pretty formats could. For example, running git config
pretty.changelog "format:* %H %s" would cause the invocation
git log --pretty=changelog to be equivalent to running git log
"--pretty=format:* %H %s". Note that an alias with the same
name as a built-in format will be silently ignored.
promisor.quiet
If set to "true" assume --quiet when fetching additional
objects for a partial clone.
promisor.advertise
If set to "true", a server will use the "promisor-remote"
capability, see gitprotocol-v2(5), to advertise the promisor
remotes it is using, if it uses some. Default is "false",
which means the "promisor-remote" capability is not
advertised.
promisor.acceptFromServer
If set to "all", a client will accept all the promisor remotes
a server might advertise using the "promisor-remote"
capability. If set to "knownName" the client will accept
promisor remotes which are already configured on the client
and have the same name as those advertised by the client. This
is not very secure, but could be used in a corporate setup
where servers and clients are trusted to not switch name and
URLs. If set to "knownUrl", the client will accept promisor
remotes which have both the same name and the same URL
configured on the client as the name and URL advertised by the
server. This is more secure than "all" or "knownName", so it
should be used if possible instead of those options. Default
is "none", which means no promisor remote advertised by a
server will be accepted. By accepting a promisor remote, the
client agrees that the server might omit objects that are
lazily fetchable from this promisor remote from its responses
to "fetch" and "clone" requests from the client. Name and URL
comparisons are case sensitive. See gitprotocol-v2(5).
protocol.allow
If set, provide a user defined default policy for all
protocols which don’t explicitly have a policy
(protocol.<name>.allow). By default, if unset, known-safe
protocols (http, https, git, ssh) have a default policy of
always, known-dangerous protocols (ext) have a default policy
of never, and all other protocols (including file) have a
default policy of user. Supported policies:
• always - protocol is always able to be used.
• never - protocol is never able to be used.
• user - protocol is only able to be used when
GIT_PROTOCOL_FROM_USER is either unset or has a value of
1. This policy should be used when you want a protocol to
be directly usable by the user but don’t want it used by
commands which execute clone/fetch/push commands without
user input, e.g. recursive submodule initialization.
protocol.<name>.allow
Set a policy to be used by protocol <name> with
clone/fetch/push commands. See protocol.allow above for the
available policies.
The protocol names currently used by git are:
• file: any local file-based path (including file:// URLs,
or local paths)
• git: the anonymous git protocol over a direct TCP
connection (or proxy, if configured)
• ssh: git over ssh (including host:path syntax, ssh://,
etc).
• http: git over http, both "smart http" and "dumb http".
Note that this does not include https; if you want to
configure both, you must do so individually.
• any external helpers are named by their protocol (e.g.,
use hg to allow the git-remote-hg helper)
protocol.version
If set, clients will attempt to communicate with a server
using the specified protocol version. If the server does not
support it, communication falls back to version 0. If unset,
the default is 2. Supported versions:
• 0 - the original wire protocol.
• 1 - the original wire protocol with the addition of a
version string in the initial response from the server.
• 2 - Wire protocol version 2, see gitprotocol-v2(5).
pull.ff
By default, Git does not create an extra merge commit when
merging a commit that is a descendant of the current commit.
Instead, the tip of the current branch is fast-forwarded. When
set to false, this variable tells Git to create an extra merge
commit in such a case (equivalent to giving the --no-ff option
from the command line). When set to only, only such
fast-forward merges are allowed (equivalent to giving the
--ff-only option from the command line). This setting
overrides merge.ff when pulling.
pull.rebase
When true, rebase branches on top of the fetched branch,
instead of merging the default branch from the default remote
when "git pull" is run. See "branch.<name>.rebase" for setting
this on a per-branch basis.
When merges (or just m), pass the --rebase-merges option to
git rebase so that the local merge commits are included in the
rebase (see git-rebase(1) for details).
When the value is interactive (or just i), the rebase is run
in interactive mode.
NOTE: this is a possibly dangerous operation; do not use it
unless you understand the implications (see git-rebase(1) for
details).
pull.octopus
The default merge strategy to use when pulling multiple
branches at once.
pull.autoStash
When set to true, automatically create a temporary stash entry
to record the local changes before the operation begins, and
restore them after the operation completes. When your "git
pull" rebases (instead of merges), this may be convenient,
since unlike merging pull that tolerates local changes that do
not interfere with the merge, rebasing pull refuses to work
with any local changes.
If pull.autostash is set (either to true or false),
merge.autostash and rebase.autostash are ignored. If
pull.autostash is not set at all, depending on the value of
pull.rebase, merge.autostash or rebase.autostash is used
instead. Can be overridden by the --[no-]autostash command
line option.
pull.twohead
The default merge strategy to use when pulling a single
branch.
push.autoSetupRemote
If set to "true" assume --set-upstream on default push when no
upstream tracking exists for the current branch; this option
takes effect with push.default options simple, upstream, and
current. It is useful if by default you want new branches to
be pushed to the default remote (like the behavior of
push.default=current) and you also want the upstream tracking
to be set. Workflows most likely to benefit from this option
are simple central workflows where all branches are expected
to have the same name on the remote.
push.default
Defines the action git push should take if no refspec is given
(whether from the command-line, config, or elsewhere).
Different values are well-suited for specific workflows; for
instance, in a purely central workflow (i.e. the fetch source
is equal to the push destination), upstream is probably what
you want. Possible values are:
• nothing - do not push anything (error out) unless a
refspec is given. This is primarily meant for people who
want to avoid mistakes by always being explicit.
• current - push the current branch to update a branch with
the same name on the receiving end. Works in both central
and non-central workflows.
• upstream - push the current branch back to the branch
whose changes are usually integrated into the current
branch (which is called @{upstream}). This mode only makes
sense if you are pushing to the same repository you would
normally pull from (i.e. central workflow).
• tracking - This is a deprecated synonym for upstream.
• simple - push the current branch with the same name on the
remote.
If you are working on a centralized workflow (pushing to
the same repository you pull from, which is typically
origin), then you need to configure an upstream branch
with the same name.
This mode is the default since Git 2.0, and is the safest
option suited for beginners.
• matching - push all branches having the same name on both
ends. This makes the repository you are pushing to
remember the set of branches that will be pushed out (e.g.
if you always push maint and master there and no other
branches, the repository you push to will have these two
branches, and your local maint and master will be pushed
there).
To use this mode effectively, you have to make sure all
the branches you would push out are ready to be pushed out
before running git push, as the whole point of this mode
is to allow you to push all of the branches in one go. If
you usually finish work on only one branch and push out
the result, while other branches are unfinished, this mode
is not for you. Also this mode is not suitable for pushing
into a shared central repository, as other people may add
new branches there, or update the tip of existing branches
outside your control.
This used to be the default, but not since Git 2.0 (simple
is the new default).
push.followTags
If set to true, enable --follow-tags option by default. You
may override this configuration at time of push by specifying
--no-follow-tags.
push.gpgSign
May be set to a boolean value, or the string if-asked. A true
value causes all pushes to be GPG signed, as if --signed is
passed to git-push(1). The string if-asked causes pushes to be
signed if the server supports it, as if --signed=if-asked is
passed to git push. A false value may override a value from a
lower-priority config file. An explicit command-line flag
always overrides this config option.
push.pushOption
When no --push-option=<option> argument is given from the
command line, git push behaves as if each <value> of this
variable is given as --push-option=<value>.
This is a multi-valued variable, and an empty value can be
used in a higher priority configuration file (e.g.
.git/config in a repository) to clear the values inherited
from a lower priority configuration files (e.g.
$HOME/.gitconfig).
Example:
/etc/gitconfig
push.pushoption = a
push.pushoption = b
~/.gitconfig
push.pushoption = c
repo/.git/config
push.pushoption =
push.pushoption = b
This will result in only b (a and c are cleared).
push.recurseSubmodules
May be "check", "on-demand", "only", or "no", with the same
behavior as that of "push --recurse-submodules". If not set,
no is used by default, unless submodule.recurse is set (in
which case a true value means on-demand).
push.useForceIfIncludes
If set to "true", it is equivalent to specifying
--force-if-includes as an option to git-push(1) in the command
line. Adding --no-force-if-includes at the time of push
overrides this configuration setting.
push.negotiate
If set to "true", attempt to reduce the size of the packfile
sent by rounds of negotiation in which the client and the
server attempt to find commits in common. If "false", Git will
rely solely on the server’s ref advertisement to find commits
in common.
push.useBitmaps
If set to "false", disable use of bitmaps for "git push" even
if pack.useBitmaps is "true", without preventing other git
operations from using bitmaps. Default is true.
rebase.backend
Default backend to use for rebasing. Possible choices are
apply or merge. In the future, if the merge backend gains all
remaining capabilities of the apply backend, this setting may
become unused.
rebase.stat
Whether to show a diffstat of what changed upstream since the
last rebase. False by default.
rebase.autoSquash
If set to true, enable the --autosquash option of
git-rebase(1) by default for interactive mode. This can be
overridden with the --no-autosquash option.
rebase.autoStash
When set to true, automatically create a temporary stash entry
before the operation begins, and apply it after the operation
ends. This means that you can run rebase on a dirty worktree.
However, use with care: the final stash application after a
successful rebase might result in non-trivial conflicts. This
option can be overridden by the --no-autostash and --autostash
options of git-rebase(1). Defaults to false.
rebase.updateRefs
If set to true enable --update-refs option by default.
rebase.missingCommitsCheck
If set to "warn", git rebase -i will print a warning if some
commits are removed (e.g. a line was deleted), however the
rebase will still proceed. If set to "error", it will print
the previous warning and stop the rebase, git rebase
--edit-todo can then be used to correct the error. If set to
"ignore", no checking is done. To drop a commit without
warning or error, use the drop command in the todo list.
Defaults to "ignore".
rebase.instructionFormat
A format string, as specified in git-log(1), to be used for
the todo list during an interactive rebase. The format will
automatically have the commit hash prepended to the format.
rebase.abbreviateCommands
If set to true, git rebase will use abbreviated command names
in the todo list resulting in something like this:
p deadbee The oneline of the commit
p fa1afe1 The oneline of the next commit
...
instead of:
pick deadbee The oneline of the commit
pick fa1afe1 The oneline of the next commit
...
Defaults to false.
rebase.rescheduleFailedExec
Automatically reschedule exec commands that failed. This only
makes sense in interactive mode (or when an --exec option was
provided). This is the same as specifying the
--reschedule-failed-exec option.
rebase.forkPoint
If set to false set --no-fork-point option by default.
rebase.rebaseMerges
Whether and how to set the --rebase-merges option by default.
Can be rebase-cousins, no-rebase-cousins, or a boolean.
Setting to true or to no-rebase-cousins is equivalent to
--rebase-merges=no-rebase-cousins, setting to rebase-cousins
is equivalent to --rebase-merges=rebase-cousins, and setting
to false is equivalent to --no-rebase-merges. Passing
--rebase-merges on the command line, with or without an
argument, overrides any rebase.rebaseMerges configuration.
rebase.maxLabelLength
When generating label names from commit subjects, truncate the
names to this length. By default, the names are truncated to a
little less than NAME_MAX (to allow e.g. .lock files to be
written for the corresponding loose refs).
receive.advertiseAtomic
By default, git-receive-pack will advertise the atomic push
capability to its clients. If you don’t want to advertise this
capability, set this variable to false.
receive.advertisePushOptions
When set to true, git-receive-pack will advertise the push
options capability to its clients. False by default.
receive.autogc
By default, git-receive-pack will run "git maintenance run
--auto" after receiving data from git-push and updating refs.
You can stop it by setting this variable to false.
receive.certNonceSeed
By setting this variable to a string, git receive-pack will
accept a git push --signed and verify it by using a "nonce"
protected by HMAC using this string as a secret key.
receive.certNonceSlop
When a git push --signed sends a push certificate with a
"nonce" that was issued by a receive-pack serving the same
repository within this many seconds, export the "nonce" found
in the certificate to GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE to the hooks
(instead of what the receive-pack asked the sending side to
include). This may allow writing checks in pre-receive and
post-receive a bit easier. Instead of checking
GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE_SLOP environment variable that records by
how many seconds the nonce is stale to decide if they want to
accept the certificate, they only can check
GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE_STATUS is OK.
receive.fsckObjects
If it is set to true, git-receive-pack will check all received
objects. See transfer.fsckObjects for what’s checked. Defaults
to false. If not set, the value of transfer.fsckObjects is
used instead.
receive.fsck.<msg-id>
Acts like fsck.<msg-id>, but is used by git-receive-pack(1)
instead of git-fsck(1). See the fsck.<msg-id> documentation
for details.
receive.fsck.skipList
Acts like fsck.skipList, but is used by git-receive-pack(1)
instead of git-fsck(1). See the fsck.skipList documentation
for details.
receive.keepAlive
After receiving the pack from the client, receive-pack may
produce no output (if --quiet was specified) while processing
the pack, causing some networks to drop the TCP connection.
With this option set, if receive-pack does not transmit any
data in this phase for receive.keepAlive seconds, it will send
a short keepalive packet. The default is 5 seconds; set to 0
to disable keepalives entirely.
receive.unpackLimit
If the number of objects received in a push is below this
limit then the objects will be unpacked into loose object
files. However if the number of received objects equals or
exceeds this limit then the received pack will be stored as a
pack, after adding any missing delta bases. Storing the pack
from a push can make the push operation complete faster,
especially on slow filesystems. If not set, the value of
transfer.unpackLimit is used instead.
receive.maxInputSize
If the size of the incoming pack stream is larger than this
limit, then git-receive-pack will error out, instead of
accepting the pack file. If not set or set to 0, then the size
is unlimited.
receive.denyDeletes
If set to true, git-receive-pack will deny a ref update that
deletes the ref. Use this to prevent such a ref deletion via a
push.
receive.denyDeleteCurrent
If set to true, git-receive-pack will deny a ref update that
deletes the currently checked out branch of a non-bare
repository.
receive.denyCurrentBranch
If set to true or "refuse", git-receive-pack will deny a ref
update to the currently checked out branch of a non-bare
repository. Such a push is potentially dangerous because it
brings the HEAD out of sync with the index and working tree.
If set to "warn", print a warning of such a push to stderr,
but allow the push to proceed. If set to false or "ignore",
allow such pushes with no message. Defaults to "refuse".
Another option is "updateInstead" which will update the
working tree if pushing into the current branch. This option
is intended for synchronizing working directories when one
side is not easily accessible via interactive ssh (e.g. a live
web site, hence the requirement that the working directory be
clean). This mode also comes in handy when developing inside a
VM to test and fix code on different Operating Systems.
By default, "updateInstead" will refuse the push if the
working tree or the index have any difference from the HEAD,
but the push-to-checkout hook can be used to customize this.
See githooks(5).
receive.denyNonFastForwards
If set to true, git-receive-pack will deny a ref update which
is not a fast-forward. Use this to prevent such an update via
a push, even if that push is forced. This configuration
variable is set when initializing a shared repository.
receive.hideRefs
This variable is the same as transfer.hideRefs, but applies
only to receive-pack (and so affects pushes, but not fetches).
An attempt to update or delete a hidden ref by git push is
rejected.
receive.procReceiveRefs
This is a multi-valued variable that defines reference
prefixes to match the commands in receive-pack. Commands
matching the prefixes will be executed by an external hook
"proc-receive", instead of the internal execute_commands
function. If this variable is not defined, the "proc-receive"
hook will never be used, and all commands will be executed by
the internal execute_commands function.
For example, if this variable is set to "refs/for", pushing to
reference such as "refs/for/master" will not create or update
a reference named "refs/for/master", but may create or update
a pull request directly by running the hook "proc-receive".
Optional modifiers can be provided in the beginning of the
value to filter commands for specific actions: create (a),
modify (m), delete (d). A ! can be included in the modifiers
to negate the reference prefix entry. E.g.:
git config --system --add receive.procReceiveRefs ad:refs/heads
git config --system --add receive.procReceiveRefs !:refs/heads
receive.updateServerInfo
If set to true, git-receive-pack will run
git-update-server-info after receiving data from git-push and
updating refs.
receive.shallowUpdate
If set to true, .git/shallow can be updated when new refs
require new shallow roots. Otherwise those refs are rejected.
reftable.blockSize
The size in bytes used by the reftable backend when writing
blocks. The block size is determined by the writer, and does
not have to be a power of 2. The block size must be larger
than the longest reference name or log entry used in the
repository, as references cannot span blocks.
Powers of two that are friendly to the virtual memory system
or filesystem (such as 4kB or 8kB) are recommended. Larger
sizes (64kB) can yield better compression, with a possible
increased cost incurred by readers during access.
The largest block size is 16777215 bytes (15.99 MiB). The
default value is 4096 bytes (4kB). A value of 0 will use the
default value.
reftable.restartInterval
The interval at which to create restart points. The reftable
backend determines the restart points at file creation. Every
16 may be more suitable for smaller block sizes (4k or 8k),
every 64 for larger block sizes (64k).
More frequent restart points reduces prefix compression and
increases space consumed by the restart table, both of which
increase file size.
Less frequent restart points makes prefix compression more
effective, decreasing overall file size, with increased
penalties for readers walking through more records after the
binary search step.
A maximum of 65535 restart points per block is supported.
The default value is to create restart points every 16
records. A value of 0 will use the default value.
reftable.indexObjects
Whether the reftable backend shall write object blocks. Object
blocks are a reverse mapping of object ID to the references
pointing to them.
The default value is true.
reftable.geometricFactor
Whenever the reftable backend appends a new table to the
stack, it performs auto compaction to ensure that there is
only a handful of tables. The backend does this by ensuring
that tables form a geometric sequence regarding the respective
sizes of each table.
By default, the geometric sequence uses a factor of 2, meaning
that for any table, the next-biggest table must at least be
twice as big. A maximum factor of 256 is supported.
reftable.lockTimeout
Whenever the reftable backend appends a new table to the
stack, it has to lock the central "tables.list" file before
updating it. This config controls how long the process will
wait to acquire the lock in case another process has already
acquired it. Value 0 means not to retry at all; -1 means to
try indefinitely. Default is 100 (i.e., retry for 100ms).
remote.pushDefault
The remote to push to by default. Overrides
branch.<name>.remote for all branches, and is overridden by
branch.<name>.pushRemote for specific branches.
remote.<name>.url
The URL of a remote repository. See git-fetch(1) or
git-push(1). A configured remote can have multiple URLs; in
this case the first is used for fetching, and all are used for
pushing (assuming no remote.<name>.pushurl is defined).
Setting this key to the empty string clears the list of urls,
allowing you to override earlier config.
remote.<name>.pushurl
The push URL of a remote repository. See git-push(1). If a
pushurl option is present in a configured remote, it is used
for pushing instead of remote.<name>.url. A configured remote
can have multiple push URLs; in this case a push goes to all
of them. Setting this key to the empty string clears the list
of urls, allowing you to override earlier config.
remote.<name>.proxy
For remotes that require curl (http, https and ftp), the URL
to the proxy to use for that remote. Set to the empty string
to disable proxying for that remote.
remote.<name>.proxyAuthMethod
For remotes that require curl (http, https and ftp), the
method to use for authenticating against the proxy in use
(probably set in remote.<name>.proxy). See
http.proxyAuthMethod.
remote.<name>.fetch
The default set of "refspec" for git-fetch(1). See
git-fetch(1).
remote.<name>.push
The default set of "refspec" for git-push(1). See git-push(1).
remote.<name>.mirror
If true, pushing to this remote will automatically behave as
if the --mirror option was given on the command line.
remote.<name>.skipDefaultUpdate
A deprecated synonym to remote.<name>.skipFetchAll (if both
are set in the configuration files with different values, the
value of the last occurrence will be used).
remote.<name>.skipFetchAll
If true, this remote will be skipped when updating using
git-fetch(1), the update subcommand of git-remote(1), and
ignored by the prefetch task of git maintenance.
remote.<name>.receivepack
The default program to execute on the remote side when
pushing. See option --receive-pack of git-push(1).
remote.<name>.uploadpack
The default program to execute on the remote side when
fetching. See option --upload-pack of git-fetch-pack(1).
remote.<name>.tagOpt
Setting this value to --no-tags disables automatic tag
following when fetching from remote <name>. Setting it to
--tags will fetch every tag from remote <name>, even if they
are not reachable from remote branch heads. Passing these
flags directly to git-fetch(1) can override this setting. See
options --tags and --no-tags of git-fetch(1).
remote.<name>.vcs
Setting this to a value <vcs> will cause Git to interact with
the remote with the git-remote-<vcs> helper.
remote.<name>.prune
When set to true, fetching from this remote by default will
also remove any remote-tracking references that no longer
exist on the remote (as if the --prune option was given on the
command line). Overrides fetch.prune settings, if any.
remote.<name>.pruneTags
When set to true, fetching from this remote by default will
also remove any local tags that no longer exist on the remote
if pruning is activated in general via remote.<name>.prune,
fetch.prune or --prune. Overrides fetch.pruneTags settings, if
any.
See also remote.<name>.prune and the PRUNING section of
git-fetch(1).
remote.<name>.promisor
When set to true, this remote will be used to fetch promisor
objects.
remote.<name>.partialclonefilter
The filter that will be applied when fetching from this
promisor remote. Changing or clearing this value will only
affect fetches for new commits. To fetch associated objects
for commits already present in the local object database, use
the --refetch option of git-fetch(1).
remote.<name>.serverOption
The default set of server options used when fetching from this
remote. These server options can be overridden by the
--server-option= command line arguments.
This is a multi-valued variable, and an empty value can be
used in a higher priority configuration file (e.g.
.git/config in a repository) to clear the values inherited
from a lower priority configuration files (e.g.
$HOME/.gitconfig).
remote.<name>.followRemoteHEAD
How git-fetch(1) should handle updates to remotes/<name>/HEAD
when fetching using the configured refspecs of a remote. The
default value is "create", which will create
remotes/<name>/HEAD if it exists on the remote, but not
locally; this will not touch an already existing local
reference. Setting it to "warn" will print a message if the
remote has a different value than the local one; in case there
is no local reference, it behaves like "create". A variant on
"warn" is "warn-if-not-$branch", which behaves like "warn",
but if HEAD on the remote is $branch it will be silent.
Setting it to "always" will silently update
remotes/<name>/HEAD to the value on the remote. Finally,
setting it to "never" will never change or create the local
reference.
remotes.<group>
The list of remotes which are fetched by "git remote update
<group>". See git-remote(1).
repack.useDeltaBaseOffset
By default, git-repack(1) creates packs that use delta-base
offset. If you need to share your repository with Git older
than version 1.4.4, either directly or via a dumb protocol
such as http, then you need to set this option to "false" and
repack. Access from old Git versions over the native protocol
are unaffected by this option.
repack.packKeptObjects
If set to true, makes git repack act as if --pack-kept-objects
was passed. See git-repack(1) for details. Defaults to false
normally, but true if a bitmap index is being written (either
via --write-bitmap-index or repack.writeBitmaps).
repack.useDeltaIslands
If set to true, makes git repack act as if --delta-islands was
passed. Defaults to false.
repack.writeBitmaps
When true, git will write a bitmap index when packing all
objects to disk (e.g., when git repack -a is run). This index
can speed up the "counting objects" phase of subsequent packs
created for clones and fetches, at the cost of some disk space
and extra time spent on the initial repack. This has no effect
if multiple packfiles are created. Defaults to true on bare
repos, false otherwise.
repack.updateServerInfo
If set to false, git-repack(1) will not run
git-update-server-info(1). Defaults to true. Can be overridden
when true by the -n option of git-repack(1).
repack.cruftWindow, repack.cruftWindowMemory, repack.cruftDepth,
repack.cruftThreads
Parameters used by git-pack-objects(1) when generating a cruft
pack and the respective parameters are not given over the
command line. See similarly named pack.* configuration
variables for defaults and meaning.
repack.midxMustContainCruft
When set to true, git-repack(1) will unconditionally include
cruft pack(s), if any, in the multi-pack index when invoked
with --write-midx. When false, cruft packs are only included
in the MIDX when necessary (e.g., because they might be
required to form a reachability closure with MIDX bitmaps).
Defaults to true.
rerere.autoUpdate
When set to true, git-rerere updates the index with the
resulting contents after it cleanly resolves conflicts using
previously recorded resolutions. Defaults to false.
rerere.enabled
Activate recording of resolved conflicts, so that identical
conflict hunks can be resolved automatically, should they be
encountered again. By default, git-rerere(1) is enabled if
there is an rr-cache directory under the $GIT_DIR, e.g. if
"rerere" was previously used in the repository.
revert.reference
Setting this variable to true makes git revert behave as if
the --reference option is given.
safe.bareRepository
Specifies which bare repositories Git will work with. The
currently supported values are:
• all: Git works with all bare repositories. This is the
default.
• explicit: Git only works with bare repositories specified
via the top-level --git-dir command-line option, or the
GIT_DIR environment variable (see git(1)).
If you do not use bare repositories in your workflow, then
it may be beneficial to set safe.bareRepository to
explicit in your global config. This will protect you from
attacks that involve cloning a repository that contains a
bare repository and running a Git command within that
directory.
This config setting is only respected in protected
configuration (see the section called “SCOPES”). This
prevents untrusted repositories from tampering with this
value.
safe.directory
These config entries specify Git-tracked directories that are
considered safe even if they are owned by someone other than
the current user. By default, Git will refuse to even parse a
Git config of a repository owned by someone else, let alone
run its hooks, and this config setting allows users to specify
exceptions, e.g. for intentionally shared repositories (see
the --shared option in git-init(1)).
This is a multi-valued setting, i.e. you can add more than one
directory via git config --add. To reset the list of safe
directories (e.g. to override any such directories specified
in the system config), add a safe.directory entry with an
empty value.
This config setting is only respected in protected
configuration (see the section called “SCOPES”). This prevents
untrusted repositories from tampering with this value.
The value of this setting is interpolated, i.e. ~/<path>
expands to a path relative to the home directory and
%(prefix)/<path> expands to a path relative to Git’s (runtime)
prefix.
To completely opt-out of this security check, set
safe.directory to the string *. This will allow all
repositories to be treated as if their directory was listed in
the safe.directory list. If safe.directory=* is set in system
config and you want to re-enable this protection, then
initialize your list with an empty value before listing the
repositories that you deem safe. Giving a directory with /*
appended to it will allow access to all repositories under the
named directory.
As explained, Git only allows you to access repositories owned
by yourself, i.e. the user who is running Git, by default.
When Git is running as root in a non Windows platform that
provides sudo, however, git checks the SUDO_UID environment
variable that sudo creates and will allow access to the uid
recorded as its value in addition to the id from root. This is
to make it easy to perform a common sequence during
installation "make && sudo make install". A git process
running under sudo runs as root but the sudo command exports
the environment variable to record which id the original user
has. If that is not what you would prefer and want git to only
trust repositories that are owned by root instead, then you
can remove the SUDO_UID variable from root’s environment
before invoking git.
sendemail.identity
A configuration identity. When given, causes values in the
sendemail.<identity> subsection to take precedence over values
in the sendemail section. The default identity is the value of
sendemail.identity.
sendemail.smtpEncryption
See git-send-email(1) for description. Note that this setting
is not subject to the identity mechanism.
sendemail.smtpSSLCertPath
Path to ca-certificates (either a directory or a single file).
Set it to an empty string to disable certificate verification.
sendemail.<identity>.*
Identity-specific versions of the sendemail.* parameters
found below, taking precedence over those when this identity
is selected, through either the command-line or
sendemail.identity.
sendemail.multiEdit
If true (default), a single editor instance will be spawned to
edit files you have to edit (patches when --annotate is used,
and the summary when --compose is used). If false, files will
be edited one after the other, spawning a new editor each
time.
sendemail.confirm
Sets the default for whether to confirm before sending. Must
be one of always, never, cc, compose, or auto. See --confirm
in the git-send-email(1) documentation for the meaning of
these values.
sendemail.mailmap
If true, makes git-send-email(1) assume --mailmap, otherwise
assume --no-mailmap. False by default.
sendemail.mailmap.file
The location of a git-send-email(1) specific augmenting
mailmap file. The default mailmap and mailmap.file are loaded
first. Thus, entries in this file take precedence over entries
in the default mailmap locations. See gitmailmap(5).
sendemail.mailmap.blob
Like sendemail.mailmap.file, but consider the value as a
reference to a blob in the repository. Entries in
sendemail.mailmap.file take precedence over entries here. See
gitmailmap(5).
sendemail.aliasesFile
To avoid typing long email addresses, point this to one or
more email aliases files. You must also supply
sendemail.aliasFileType.
sendemail.aliasFileType
Format of the file(s) specified in sendemail.aliasesFile. Must
be one of mutt, mailrc, pine, elm, gnus, or sendmail.
What an alias file in each format looks like can be found in
the documentation of the email program of the same name. The
differences and limitations from the standard formats are
described below:
sendmail
• Quoted aliases and quoted addresses are not supported:
lines that contain a " symbol are ignored.
• Redirection to a file (/path/name) or pipe (|command)
is not supported.
• File inclusion (:include: /path/name) is not
supported.
• Warnings are printed on the standard error output for
any explicitly unsupported constructs, and any other
lines that are not recognized by the parser.
sendemail.annotate, sendemail.bcc, sendemail.cc, sendemail.ccCmd,
sendemail.chainReplyTo, sendemail.envelopeSender, sendemail.from,
sendemail.headerCmd, sendemail.signedOffByCc, sendemail.smtpPass,
sendemail.suppressCc, sendemail.suppressFrom, sendemail.to,
sendemail.toCmd, sendemail.smtpDomain, sendemail.smtpServer,
sendemail.smtpServerPort, sendemail.smtpServerOption,
sendemail.smtpUser, sendemail.thread, sendemail.transferEncoding,
sendemail.validate, sendemail.xmailer
These configuration variables all provide a default for
git-send-email(1) command-line options. See its documentation
for details.
sendemail.outlookidfix
If true, makes git-send-email(1) assume --outlook-id-fix, and
if false assume --no-outlook-id-fix. If not specified, it will
behave the same way as if --outlook-id-fix is not specified.
sendemail.signedOffCc (deprecated)
Deprecated alias for sendemail.signedOffByCc.
sendemail.smtpBatchSize
Number of messages to be sent per connection, after that a
relogin will happen. If the value is 0 or undefined, send all
messages in one connection. See also the --batch-size option
of git-send-email(1).
sendemail.smtpReloginDelay
Seconds to wait before reconnecting to the smtp server. See
also the --relogin-delay option of git-send-email(1).
sendemail.forbidSendmailVariables
To avoid common misconfiguration mistakes, git-send-email(1)
will abort with a warning if any configuration options for
sendmail exist. Set this variable to bypass the check.
sequence.editor
Text editor used by git rebase -i for editing the rebase
instruction file. The value is meant to be interpreted by the
shell when it is used. It can be overridden by the
GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR environment variable. When not configured,
the default commit message editor is used instead.
showBranch.default
The default set of branches for git-show-branch(1). See
git-show-branch(1).
sparse.expectFilesOutsideOfPatterns
Typically with sparse checkouts, files not matching any
sparsity patterns are marked with a SKIP_WORKTREE bit in the
index and are missing from the working tree. Accordingly, Git
will ordinarily check whether files with the SKIP_WORKTREE bit
are in fact present in the working tree contrary to
expectations. If Git finds any, it marks those paths as
present by clearing the relevant SKIP_WORKTREE bits. This
option can be used to tell Git that such
present-despite-skipped files are expected and to stop
checking for them.
The default is false, which allows Git to automatically
recover from the list of files in the index and working tree
falling out of sync.
Set this to true if you are in a setup where some external
factor relieves Git of the responsibility for maintaining the
consistency between the presence of working tree files and
sparsity patterns. For example, if you have a Git-aware
virtual file system that has a robust mechanism for keeping
the working tree and the sparsity patterns up to date based on
access patterns.
Regardless of this setting, Git does not check for
present-despite-skipped files unless sparse checkout is
enabled, so this config option has no effect unless
core.sparseCheckout is true.
splitIndex.maxPercentChange
When the split index feature is used, this specifies the
percent of entries the split index can contain compared to the
total number of entries in both the split index and the shared
index before a new shared index is written. The value should
be between 0 and 100. If the value is 0, then a new shared
index is always written; if it is 100, a new shared index is
never written. By default, the value is 20, so a new shared
index is written if the number of entries in the split index
would be greater than 20 percent of the total number of
entries. See git-update-index(1).
splitIndex.sharedIndexExpire
When the split index feature is used, shared index files that
were not modified since the time this variable specifies will
be removed when a new shared index file is created. The value
"now" expires all entries immediately, and "never" suppresses
expiration altogether. The default value is "2.weeks.ago".
Note that a shared index file is considered modified (for the
purpose of expiration) each time a new split-index file is
either created based on it or read from it. See
git-update-index(1).
ssh.variant
By default, Git determines the command line arguments to use
based on the basename of the configured SSH command
(configured using the environment variable GIT_SSH or
GIT_SSH_COMMAND or the config setting core.sshCommand). If the
basename is unrecognized, Git will attempt to detect support
of OpenSSH options by first invoking the configured SSH
command with the -G (print configuration) option and will
subsequently use OpenSSH options (if that is successful) or no
options besides the host and remote command (if it fails).
The config variable ssh.variant can be set to override this
detection. Valid values are ssh (to use OpenSSH options),
plink, putty, tortoiseplink, simple (no options except the
host and remote command). The default auto-detection can be
explicitly requested using the value auto. Any other value is
treated as ssh. This setting can also be overridden via the
environment variable GIT_SSH_VARIANT.
The current command-line parameters used for each variant are
as follows:
• ssh - [-p port] [-4] [-6] [-o option] [username@]host
command
• simple - [username@]host command
• plink or putty - [-P port] [-4] [-6] [username@]host
command
• tortoiseplink - [-P port] [-4] [-6] -batch [username@]host
command
Except for the simple variant, command-line parameters are
likely to change as git gains new features.
stash.showIncludeUntracked
If this is set to true, the git stash show command will show
the untracked files of a stash entry. Defaults to false. See
the description of the show command in git-stash(1).
stash.showPatch
If this is set to true, the git stash show command without an
option will show the stash entry in patch form. Defaults to
false. See the description of the show command in
git-stash(1).
stash.showStat
If this is set to true, the git stash show command without an
option will show a diffstat of the stash entry. Defaults to
true. See the description of the show command in git-stash(1).
status.relativePaths
By default, git-status(1) shows paths relative to the current
directory. Setting this variable to false shows paths relative
to the repository root (this was the default for Git prior to
v1.5.4).
status.short
Set to true to enable --short by default in git-status(1). The
option --no-short takes precedence over this variable.
status.branch
Set to true to enable --branch by default in git-status(1).
The option --no-branch takes precedence over this variable.
status.aheadBehind
Set to true to enable --ahead-behind and false to enable
--no-ahead-behind by default in git-status(1) for
non-porcelain status formats. Defaults to true.
status.displayCommentPrefix
If set to true, git-status(1) will insert a comment prefix
before each output line (starting with core.commentChar, i.e.
# by default). This was the behavior of git-status(1) in Git
1.8.4 and previous. Defaults to false.
status.renameLimit
The number of files to consider when performing rename
detection in git-status(1) and git-commit(1). Defaults to the
value of diff.renameLimit.
status.renames
Whether and how Git detects renames in git-status(1) and
git-commit(1) . If set to "false", rename detection is
disabled. If set to "true", basic rename detection is enabled.
If set to "copies" or "copy", Git will detect copies, as well.
Defaults to the value of diff.renames.
status.showStash
If set to true, git-status(1) will display the number of
entries currently stashed away. Defaults to false.
status.showUntrackedFiles
By default, git-status(1) and git-commit(1) show files which
are not currently tracked by Git. Directories which contain
only untracked files, are shown with the directory name only.
Showing untracked files means that Git needs to lstat() all
the files in the whole repository, which might be slow on some
systems. So, this variable controls how the commands display
the untracked files. Possible values are:
• no - Show no untracked files.
• normal - Show untracked files and directories.
• all - Show also individual files in untracked directories.
If this variable is not specified, it defaults to normal. All
usual spellings for Boolean value true are taken as normal and
false as no. This variable can be overridden with the
-u|--untracked-files option of git-status(1) and
git-commit(1).
status.submoduleSummary
Defaults to false. If this is set to a non-zero number or true
(identical to -1 or an unlimited number), the submodule
summary will be enabled and a summary of commits for modified
submodules will be shown (see --summary-limit option of
git-submodule(1)). Please note that the summary output command
will be suppressed for all submodules when
diff.ignoreSubmodules is set to all or only for those
submodules where submodule.<name>.ignore=all. The only
exception to that rule is that status and commit will show
staged submodule changes. To also view the summary for ignored
submodules you can either use the --ignore-submodules=dirty
command-line option or the git submodule summary command,
which shows a similar output but does not honor these
settings.
submodule.<name>.url
The URL for a submodule. This variable is copied from the
.gitmodules file to the git config via git submodule init. The
user can change the configured URL before obtaining the
submodule via git submodule update. If neither
submodule.<name>.active nor submodule.active are set, the
presence of this variable is used as a fallback to indicate
whether the submodule is of interest to git commands. See
git-submodule(1) and gitmodules(5) for details.
submodule.<name>.update
The method by which a submodule is updated by git submodule
update, which is the only affected command, others such as git
checkout --recurse-submodules are unaffected. It exists for
historical reasons, when git submodule was the only command to
interact with submodules; settings like submodule.active and
pull.rebase are more specific. It is populated by git
submodule init from the gitmodules(5) file. See description of
update command in git-submodule(1).
submodule.<name>.branch
The remote branch name for a submodule, used by git submodule
update --remote. Set this option to override the value found
in the .gitmodules file. See git-submodule(1) and
gitmodules(5) for details.
submodule.<name>.fetchRecurseSubmodules
This option can be used to control recursive fetching of this
submodule. It can be overridden by using the
--[no-]recurse-submodules command-line option to "git fetch"
and "git pull". This setting will override that from in the
gitmodules(5) file.
submodule.<name>.ignore
Defines under what circumstances "git status" and the diff
family show a submodule as modified. When set to "all", it
will never be considered modified (but it will nonetheless
show up in the output of status and commit when it has been
staged), "dirty" will ignore all changes to the submodule’s
work tree and takes only differences between the HEAD of the
submodule and the commit recorded in the superproject into
account. "untracked" will additionally let submodules with
modified tracked files in their work tree show up. Using
"none" (the default when this option is not set) also shows
submodules that have untracked files in their work tree as
changed. This setting overrides any setting made in
.gitmodules for this submodule, both settings can be
overridden on the command line by using the
"--ignore-submodules" option. The git submodule commands are
not affected by this setting.
submodule.<name>.active
Boolean value indicating if the submodule is of interest to
git commands. This config option takes precedence over the
submodule.active config option. See gitsubmodules(7) for
details.
submodule.active
A repeated field which contains a pathspec used to match
against a submodule’s path to determine if the submodule is of
interest to git commands. See gitsubmodules(7) for details.
submodule.recurse
A boolean indicating if commands should enable the
--recurse-submodules option by default. Defaults to false.
When set to true, it can be deactivated via the
--no-recurse-submodules option. Note that some Git commands
lacking this option may call some of the above commands
affected by submodule.recurse; for instance git remote update
will call git fetch but does not have a
--no-recurse-submodules option. For these commands a
workaround is to temporarily change the configuration value by
using git -c submodule.recurse=0.
The following list shows the commands that accept
--recurse-submodules and whether they are supported by this
setting.
• checkout, fetch, grep, pull, push, read-tree, reset,
restore and switch are always supported.
• clone and ls-files are not supported.
• branch is supported only if submodule.propagateBranches is
enabled
submodule.propagateBranches
[EXPERIMENTAL] A boolean that enables branching support when
using --recurse-submodules or submodule.recurse=true. Enabling
this will allow certain commands to accept
--recurse-submodules and certain commands that already accept
--recurse-submodules will now consider branches. Defaults to
false.
submodule.fetchJobs
Specifies how many submodules are fetched/cloned at the same
time. A positive integer allows up to that number of
submodules fetched in parallel. A value of 0 will give some
reasonable default. If unset, it defaults to 1.
submodule.alternateLocation
Specifies how the submodules obtain alternates when submodules
are cloned. Possible values are no, superproject. By default
no is assumed, which doesn’t add references. When the value is
set to superproject the submodule to be cloned computes its
alternates location relative to the superprojects alternate.
submodule.alternateErrorStrategy
Specifies how to treat errors with the alternates for a
submodule as computed via submodule.alternateLocation.
Possible values are ignore, info, die. Default is die. Note
that if set to ignore or info, and if there is an error with
the computed alternate, the clone proceeds as if no alternate
was specified.
tag.forceSignAnnotated
A boolean to specify whether annotated tags created should be
GPG signed. If --annotate is specified on the command line, it
takes precedence over this option.
tag.sort
This variable controls the sort ordering of tags when
displayed by git-tag(1). Without the "--sort=<value>" option
provided, the value of this variable will be used as the
default.
tag.gpgSign
A boolean to specify whether all tags should be GPG signed.
Use of this option when running in an automated script can
result in a large number of tags being signed. It is therefore
convenient to use an agent to avoid typing your gpg passphrase
several times. Note that this option doesn’t affect tag
signing behavior enabled by "-u <keyid>" or
"--local-user=<keyid>" options.
tar.umask
This variable can be used to restrict the permission bits of
tar archive entries. The default is 0002, which turns off the
world write bit. The special value "user" indicates that the
archiving user’s umask will be used instead. See umask(2) and
git-archive(1).
Trace2 config settings are only read from the system and global
config files; repository local and worktree config files and -c
command line arguments are not respected.
trace2.normalTarget
This variable controls the normal target destination. It may
be overridden by the GIT_TRACE2 environment variable. The
following table shows possible values.
trace2.perfTarget
This variable controls the performance target destination. It
may be overridden by the GIT_TRACE2_PERF environment variable.
The following table shows possible values.
trace2.eventTarget
This variable controls the event target destination. It may be
overridden by the GIT_TRACE2_EVENT environment variable. The
following table shows possible values.
• 0 or false - Disables the target.
• 1 or true - Writes to STDERR.
• [2-9] - Writes to the already opened file descriptor.
• <absolute-pathname> - Writes to the file in append mode.
If the target already exists and is a directory, the
traces will be written to files (one per process)
underneath the given directory.
• af_unix:[<socket-type>:]<absolute-pathname> - Write to a
Unix DomainSocket (on platforms that support them). Socket
type can be either stream or dgram; if omitted Git will
try both.
trace2.normalBrief
Boolean. When true time, filename, and line fields are omitted
from normal output. May be overridden by the GIT_TRACE2_BRIEF
environment variable. Defaults to false.
trace2.perfBrief
Boolean. When true time, filename, and line fields are omitted
from PERF output. May be overridden by the
GIT_TRACE2_PERF_BRIEF environment variable. Defaults to false.
trace2.eventBrief
Boolean. When true time, filename, and line fields are omitted
from event output. May be overridden by the
GIT_TRACE2_EVENT_BRIEF environment variable. Defaults to
false.
trace2.eventNesting
Integer. Specifies desired depth of nested regions in the
event output. Regions deeper than this value will be omitted.
May be overridden by the GIT_TRACE2_EVENT_NESTING environment
variable. Defaults to 2.
trace2.configParams
A comma-separated list of patterns of "important" config
settings that should be recorded in the trace2 output. For
example, core.*,remote.*.url would cause the trace2 output to
contain events listing each configured remote. May be
overridden by the GIT_TRACE2_CONFIG_PARAMS environment
variable. Unset by default.
trace2.envVars
A comma-separated list of "important" environment variables
that should be recorded in the trace2 output. For example,
GIT_HTTP_USER_AGENT,GIT_CONFIG would cause the trace2 output
to contain events listing the overrides for HTTP user agent
and the location of the Git configuration file (assuming any
are set). May be overridden by the GIT_TRACE2_ENV_VARS
environment variable. Unset by default.
trace2.destinationDebug
Boolean. When true Git will print error messages when a trace
target destination cannot be opened for writing. By default,
these errors are suppressed and tracing is silently disabled.
May be overridden by the GIT_TRACE2_DST_DEBUG environment
variable.
trace2.maxFiles
Integer. When writing trace files to a target directory, do
not write additional traces if doing so would exceed this many
files. Instead, write a sentinel file that will block further
tracing to this directory. Defaults to 0, which disables this
check.
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 <key><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: <key>% <value> (one percent sign and one
space will appear between the key 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 <key>.
If it is before, then each new trailer will appear just before
the first trailer with the same <key>.
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 <key> 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 (<key>, <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 with the same (<key>, <value>) pair is already in the
input.
With add, a new trailer will be added, even if some trailers
with the same (<key>, <value>) pair are already in the input.
With replace, an existing trailer with the same <key> will be
deleted and the new trailer will be added. The deleted trailer
will be the closest one (with the same <key>) 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 <key> 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
<key> 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.<keyAlias>.key
Defines a <keyAlias> for the <key>. The <keyAlias> must be a
prefix (case does not matter) of the <key>. For example, in
git config trailer.ack.key "Acked-by" the "Acked-by" is the
<key> and the "ack" is the <keyAlias>. This configuration
allows the shorter --trailer "ack:..." invocation on the
command line using the "ack" <keyAlias> instead of the longer
--trailer "Acked-by:...".
At the end of the <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 in the key, then it overrides the
default separator when adding the trailer.
trailer.<keyAlias>.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 <keyAlias>.
trailer.<keyAlias>.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 <keyAlias>.
trailer.<keyAlias>.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 <keyAlias>.
trailer.<keyAlias>.command
Deprecated in favor of trailer.<keyAlias>.cmd. This option
behaves in the same way as trailer.<keyAlias>.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.<keyAlias>.cmd and
trailer.<keyAlias>.command are given for the same <keyAlias>,
trailer.<keyAlias>.cmd is used and trailer.<keyAlias>.command
is ignored.
trailer.<keyAlias>.cmd
This option can be used to specify a shell command that will
be called once to automatically add a trailer with the
specified <keyAlias>, and then called each time a --trailer
<keyAlias>=<value> argument is specified to modify the <value>
of the trailer that this option would produce.
When the specified command is first called to add a trailer
with the specified <keyAlias>, the behavior is as if a special
--trailer <keyAlias>=<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 <keyAlias>=<value> arguments are also passed
on the command line, the command is called again once for each
of these arguments with the same <keyAlias>. 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
<keyAlias>=<value> argument.
transfer.credentialsInUrl
A configured URL can contain plaintext credentials in the form
<protocol>://<user>:<password>@<domain>/<path>. You may want
to warn or forbid the use of such configuration (in favor of
using git-credential(1)). This will be used on git-clone(1),
git-fetch(1), git-push(1), and any other direct use of the
configured URL.
Note that this is currently limited to detecting credentials
in remote.<name>.url configuration; it won’t detect
credentials in remote.<name>.pushurl configuration.
You might want to enable this to prevent inadvertent
credentials exposure, e.g. because:
• The OS or system where you’re running git may not provide
a way or otherwise allow you to configure the permissions
of the configuration file where the username and/or
password are stored.
• Even if it does, having such data stored "at rest" might
expose you in other ways, e.g. a backup process might copy
the data to another system.
• The git programs will pass the full URL to one another as
arguments on the command-line, meaning the credentials
will be exposed to other unprivileged users on systems
that allow them to see the full process list of other
users. On linux the "hidepid" setting documented in
procfs(5) allows for configuring this behavior.
If such concerns don’t apply to you then you probably
don’t need to be concerned about credentials exposure due
to storing sensitive data in git’s configuration files. If
you do want to use this, set transfer.credentialsInUrl to
one of these values:
• allow (default): Git will proceed with its activity
without warning.
• warn: Git will write a warning message to stderr when
parsing a URL with a plaintext credential.
• die: Git will write a failure message to stderr when
parsing a URL with a plaintext credential.
transfer.fsckObjects
When fetch.fsckObjects or receive.fsckObjects are not set, the
value of this variable is used instead. Defaults to false.
When set, the fetch or receive will abort in the case of a
malformed object or a link to a nonexistent object. In
addition, various other issues are checked for, including
legacy issues (see fsck.<msg-id>), and potential security
issues like the existence of a .GIT directory or a malicious
.gitmodules file (see the release notes for v2.2.1 and v2.17.1
for details). Other sanity and security checks may be added in
future releases.
On the receiving side, failing fsckObjects will make those
objects unreachable, see "QUARANTINE ENVIRONMENT" in
git-receive-pack(1). On the fetch side, malformed objects will
instead be left unreferenced in the repository.
Due to the non-quarantine nature of the fetch.fsckObjects
implementation it cannot be relied upon to leave the object
store clean like receive.fsckObjects can.
As objects are unpacked they’re written to the object store,
so there can be cases where malicious objects get introduced
even though the "fetch" failed, only to have a subsequent
"fetch" succeed because only new incoming objects are checked,
not those that have already been written to the object store.
That difference in behavior should not be relied upon. In the
future, such objects may be quarantined for "fetch" as well.
For now, the paranoid need to find some way to emulate the
quarantine environment if they’d like the same protection as
"push". E.g. in the case of an internal mirror do the
mirroring in two steps, one to fetch the untrusted objects,
and then do a second "push" (which will use the quarantine) to
another internal repo, and have internal clients consume this
pushed-to repository, or embargo internal fetches and only
allow them once a full "fsck" has run (and no new fetches have
happened in the meantime).
transfer.hideRefs
String(s) receive-pack and upload-pack use to decide which
refs to omit from their initial advertisements. Use more than
one definition to specify multiple prefix strings. A ref that
is under the hierarchies listed in the value of this variable
is excluded, and is hidden when responding to git push or git
fetch. See receive.hideRefs and uploadpack.hideRefs for
program-specific versions of this config.
You may also include a ! in front of the ref name to negate
the entry, explicitly exposing it, even if an earlier entry
marked it as hidden. If you have multiple hideRefs values,
later entries override earlier ones (and entries in
more-specific config files override less-specific ones).
If a namespace is in use, the namespace prefix is stripped
from each reference before it is matched against
transfer.hiderefs patterns. In order to match refs before
stripping, add a ^ in front of the ref name. If you combine !
and ^, ! must be specified first.
For example, if refs/heads/master is specified in
transfer.hideRefs and the current namespace is foo, then
refs/namespaces/foo/refs/heads/master is omitted from the
advertisements. If uploadpack.allowRefInWant is set,
upload-pack will treat want-ref refs/heads/master in a
protocol v2 fetch command as if
refs/namespaces/foo/refs/heads/master did not exist.
receive-pack, on the other hand, will still advertise the
object id the ref is pointing to without mentioning its name
(a so-called ".have" line).
Even if you hide refs, a client may still be able to steal the
target objects via the techniques described in the "SECURITY"
section of the gitnamespaces(7) man page; it’s best to keep
private data in a separate repository.
transfer.unpackLimit
When fetch.unpackLimit or receive.unpackLimit are not set, the
value of this variable is used instead. The default value is
100.
transfer.advertiseSID
Boolean. When true, client and server processes will advertise
their unique session IDs to their remote counterpart. Defaults
to false.
transfer.bundleURI
When true, local git clone commands will request bundle
information from the remote server (if advertised) and
download bundles before continuing the clone through the Git
protocol. Defaults to false.
transfer.advertiseObjectInfo
When true, the object-info capability is advertised by
servers. Defaults to false.
uploadarchive.allowUnreachable
If true, allow clients to use git archive --remote to request
any tree, whether reachable from the ref tips or not. See the
discussion in the "SECURITY" section of git-upload-archive(1)
for more details. Defaults to false.
uploadpack.hideRefs
This variable is the same as transfer.hideRefs, but applies
only to upload-pack (and so affects only fetches, not pushes).
An attempt to fetch a hidden ref by git fetch will fail. See
also uploadpack.allowTipSHA1InWant.
uploadpack.allowTipSHA1InWant
When uploadpack.hideRefs is in effect, allow upload-pack to
accept a fetch request that asks for an object at the tip of a
hidden ref (by default, such a request is rejected). See also
uploadpack.hideRefs. Even if this is false, a client may be
able to steal objects via the techniques described in the
"SECURITY" section of the gitnamespaces(7) man page; it’s best
to keep private data in a separate repository.
uploadpack.allowReachableSHA1InWant
Allow upload-pack to accept a fetch request that asks for an
object that is reachable from any ref tip. However, note that
calculating object reachability is computationally expensive.
Defaults to false. Even if this is false, a client may be able
to steal objects via the techniques described in the
"SECURITY" section of the gitnamespaces(7) man page; it’s best
to keep private data in a separate repository.
uploadpack.allowAnySHA1InWant
Allow upload-pack to accept a fetch request that asks for any
object at all. It implies uploadpack.allowTipSHA1InWant and
uploadpack.allowReachableSHA1InWant. If set to true it will
enable both of them, it set to false it will disable both of
them. By default not set.
uploadpack.keepAlive
When upload-pack has started pack-objects, there may be a
quiet period while pack-objects prepares the pack. Normally it
would output progress information, but if --quiet was used for
the fetch, pack-objects will output nothing at all until the
pack data begins. Some clients and networks may consider the
server to be hung and give up. Setting this option instructs
upload-pack to send an empty keepalive packet every
uploadpack.keepAlive seconds. Setting this option to 0
disables keepalive packets entirely. The default is 5 seconds.
uploadpack.packObjectsHook
If this option is set, when upload-pack would run git
pack-objects to create a packfile for a client, it will run
this shell command instead. The pack-objects command and
arguments it would have run (including the git pack-objects at
the beginning) are appended to the shell command. The stdin
and stdout of the hook are treated as if pack-objects itself
was run. I.e., upload-pack will feed input intended for
pack-objects to the hook, and expects a completed packfile on
stdout.
Note that this configuration variable is only respected when
it is specified in protected configuration (see the section
called “SCOPES”). This is a safety measure against fetching
from untrusted repositories.
uploadpack.allowFilter
If this option is set, upload-pack will support partial clone
and partial fetch object filtering.
uploadpackfilter.allow
Provides a default value for unspecified object filters (see:
the below configuration variable). If set to true, this will
also enable all filters which get added in the future.
Defaults to true.
uploadpackfilter.<filter>.allow
Explicitly allow or ban the object filter corresponding to
<filter>, where <filter> may be one of: blob:none, blob:limit,
object:type, tree, sparse:oid, or combine. If using combined
filters, both combine and all of the nested filter kinds must
be allowed. Defaults to uploadpackfilter.allow.
uploadpackfilter.tree.maxDepth
Only allow --filter=tree:<n> when <n> is no more than the
value of uploadpackfilter.tree.maxDepth. If set, this also
implies uploadpackfilter.tree.allow=true, unless this
configuration variable had already been set. Has no effect if
unset.
uploadpack.allowRefInWant
If this option is set, upload-pack will support the
ref-in-want feature of the protocol version 2 fetch command.
This feature is intended for the benefit of load-balanced
servers which may not have the same view of what OIDs their
refs point to due to replication delay.
url.<base>.insteadOf
Any URL that starts with this value will be rewritten to
start, instead, with <base>. In cases where some site serves a
large number of repositories, and serves them with multiple
access methods, and some users need to use different access
methods, this feature allows people to specify any of the
equivalent URLs and have Git automatically rewrite the URL to
the best alternative for the particular user, even for a
never-before-seen repository on the site. When more than one
insteadOf strings match a given URL, the longest match is
used.
Note that any protocol restrictions will be applied to the
rewritten URL. If the rewrite changes the URL to use a custom
protocol or remote helper, you may need to adjust the
protocol.*.allow config to permit the request. In particular,
protocols you expect to use for submodules must be set to
always rather than the default of user. See the description of
protocol.allow above.
url.<base>.pushInsteadOf
Any URL that starts with this value will not be pushed to;
instead, it will be rewritten to start with <base>, and the
resulting URL will be pushed to. In cases where some site
serves a large number of repositories, and serves them with
multiple access methods, some of which do not allow push, this
feature allows people to specify a pull-only URL and have Git
automatically use an appropriate URL to push, even for a
never-before-seen repository on the site. When more than one
pushInsteadOf strings match a given URL, the longest match is
used. If a remote has an explicit pushurl, Git will ignore
this setting for that remote.
user.name, user.email, author.name, author.email, committer.name,
committer.email
The user.name and user.email variables determine what ends up
in the author and committer fields of commit objects. If you
need the author or committer to be different, the author.name,
author.email, committer.name, or committer.email variables can
be set. All of these can be overridden by the GIT_AUTHOR_NAME,
GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL, GIT_COMMITTER_NAME, GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL, and
EMAIL environment variables.
Note that the name forms of these variables conventionally
refer to some form of a personal name. See git-commit(1) and
the environment variables section of git(1) for more
information on these settings and the credential.username
option if you’re looking for authentication credentials
instead.
user.useConfigOnly
Instruct Git to avoid trying to guess defaults for user.email
and user.name, and instead retrieve the values only from the
configuration. For example, if you have multiple email
addresses and would like to use a different one for each
repository, then with this configuration option set to true in
the global config along with a name, Git will prompt you to
set up an email before making new commits in a newly cloned
repository. Defaults to false.
user.signingKey
If git-tag(1) or git-commit(1) is not selecting the key you
want it to automatically when creating a signed tag or commit,
you can override the default selection with this variable.
This option is passed unchanged to gpg’s --local-user
parameter, so you may specify a key using any method that gpg
supports. If gpg.format is set to ssh this can contain the
path to either your private ssh key or the public key when
ssh-agent is used. Alternatively it can contain a public key
prefixed with key:: directly (e.g.: "key::ssh-rsa XXXXXX
identifier"). The private key needs to be available via
ssh-agent. If not set Git will call gpg.ssh.defaultKeyCommand
(e.g.: "ssh-add -L") and try to use the first key available.
For backward compatibility, a raw key which begins with
"ssh-", such as "ssh-rsa XXXXXX identifier", is treated as
"key::ssh-rsa XXXXXX identifier", but this form is deprecated;
use the key:: form instead.
versionsort.prereleaseSuffix (deprecated)
Deprecated alias for versionsort.suffix. Ignored if
versionsort.suffix is set.
versionsort.suffix
Even when version sort is used in git-tag(1), tagnames with
the same base version but different suffixes are still sorted
lexicographically, resulting e.g. in prerelease tags appearing
after the main release (e.g. "1.0-rc1" after "1.0"). This
variable can be specified to determine the sorting order of
tags with different suffixes.
By specifying a single suffix in this variable, any tagname
containing that suffix will appear before the corresponding
main release. E.g. if the variable is set to "-rc", then all
"1.0-rcX" tags will appear before "1.0". If specified multiple
times, once per suffix, then the order of suffixes in the
configuration will determine the sorting order of tagnames
with those suffixes. E.g. if "-pre" appears before "-rc" in
the configuration, then all "1.0-preX" tags will be listed
before any "1.0-rcX" tags. The placement of the main release
tag relative to tags with various suffixes can be determined
by specifying the empty suffix among those other suffixes.
E.g. if the suffixes "-rc", "", "-ck", and "-bfs" appear in
the configuration in this order, then all "v4.8-rcX" tags are
listed first, followed by "v4.8", then "v4.8-ckX" and finally
"v4.8-bfsX".
If more than one suffix matches the same tagname, then that
tagname will be sorted according to the suffix which starts at
the earliest position in the tagname. If more than one
different matching suffix starts at that earliest position,
then that tagname will be sorted according to the longest of
those suffixes. The sorting order between different suffixes
is undefined if they are in multiple config files.
web.browser
Specify a web browser that may be used by some commands.
Currently only git-instaweb(1) and git-help(1) may use it.
worktree.guessRemote
If no branch is specified and neither -b nor -B nor --detach
is used, then git worktree add defaults to creating a new
branch from HEAD. If worktree.guessRemote is set to true,
worktree add tries to find a remote-tracking branch whose name
uniquely matches the new branch name. If such a branch exists,
it is checked out and set as "upstream" for the new branch. If
no such match can be found, it falls back to creating a new
branch from the current HEAD.
worktree.useRelativePaths
Link worktrees using relative paths (when "true") or absolute
paths (when "false"). This is particularly useful for setups
where the repository and worktrees may be moved between
different locations or environments. Defaults to "false".
Note that setting worktree.useRelativePaths to "true" implies
enabling the extension.relativeWorktrees config (see
git-config(1)), thus making it incompatible with older
versions of Git.
When using the deprecated [section.subsection] syntax, changing a
value will result in adding a multi-line key instead of a change,
if the subsection is given with at least one uppercase character.
For example when the config looks like
[section.subsection]
key = value1
and running git config section.Subsection.key value2 will result
in
[section.subsection]
key = value1
key = value2
Part of the git(1) suite
1. the bundle URI design document
file:///home/mtk/share/doc/git-doc/technical/bundle-uri.html
This page is part of the git (Git distributed version control
system) project. Information about the project can be found at
⟨http://git-scm.com/⟩. If you have a bug report for this manual
page, see ⟨http://git-scm.com/community⟩. This page was obtained
from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://github.com/git/git.git⟩ on 2025-08-11. (At that time,
the date of the most recent commit that was found in the
repository was 2025-08-07.) If you discover any rendering
problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there is
a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
[email protected]
Git 2.51.0.rc1 2025-08-07 GIT-CONFIG(1)
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