======= Git Bash 사용하기 ======= https://git-scm.com/downloads에서 윈도우용 git을 받으면 git bash가 같이 설치되는데 아주 편리하다. 윈도우 WSL보다 더 편리한 것같다. 하지만 Linux에서 bash,zsh를 사용할 때처럼 window의 git bash로 쓰고 싶은데 windows는 동일하게 작동하지 않는다. 참조 * [[https://violetboralee.medium.com/windows-%EC%82%AC%EC%9A%A9%EC%9E%90%EB%A5%BC-%EC%9C%84%ED%95%9C-git-bash-%EC%84%A4%EC%A0%95-ac50acb34c46|Windows 사용자를 위한 Git Bash 설정]] * https://raw.githubusercontent.com/git/git/master/contrib/completion/git-completion.bash * https://raw.githubusercontent.com/git/git/master/contrib/completion/git-prompt.sh === ls시 그룹명이 표현 하도록 하기 === 파일을 편집 C:\Program Files\Git\etc\nsswitch.conf하고 다음 줄을 변경합니다. group: files # db -> group: files db 이렇게 하면 시스템이 /etc/group파일(" files ")과 기본 Windows 파일 시스템(" db ") 모두에서 그룹 정보를 확인할 수 있습니다. (원래 버전에서는 " db " 옵션이 주석 처리되어 운영체제를 확인하지 않습니다.) 그러면 다음과 같은 출력을 얻게 됩니다 ls -l. -rw-r--r-- 1 JoelFan Domain Users 8774 Aug 13 2021 README.md ====== 편리하게 사용하기 위해서 설정하는 것들 ====== 다운로드 (사용자홈에 받는다.) * [[https://www.garamx.com/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=windows:git_bash#git-completionbash|git-completetion.bash]] * [[https://www.garamx.com/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=windows:git_bash#git-promptsh|git-prompt.sh]] 적당히 .bash_profile, .bashrc수정 # Enable tab completion source ~/git-completion.bash # setting Colors! green="\[\033[0;32m\]" blue="\[\033[0;34m\]" purple="\[\033[0;35m\]" reset="\[\033[0m\]" # Change command prompt source ~/git-prompt.sh export GIT_PS1_SHOWDIRTYSTATE=1 # 위 코드는 repository에 변경이 있는 경우, 상태에 따라 *나 + 기호가 표시되도록 해줍니다. # unstaged 변경: * # staged 변경: + # setopt PROMPT_SUBST # MacOS ZSH에서는 PROMPT_SUBST설정 export PS1="$purple\u@\h$green\$(__git_ps1)$blue \w $reset $ " # generated by Git for Windows test -f ~/.profile && . ~/.profile test -f ~/.bashrc && . ~/.bashrc ==== git-completion.bash ==== # bash/zsh completion support for core Git. # # Copyright (C) 2006,2007 Shawn O. Pearce # Conceptually based on gitcompletion (http://gitweb.hawaga.org.uk/). # Distributed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.0. # # The contained completion routines provide support for completing: # # *) local and remote branch names # *) local and remote tag names # *) .git/remotes file names # *) git 'subcommands' # *) git email aliases for git-send-email # *) tree paths within 'ref:path/to/file' expressions # *) file paths within current working directory and index # *) common --long-options # # To use these routines: # # 1) Copy this file to somewhere (e.g. ~/.git-completion.bash). # 2) Add the following line to your .bashrc/.zshrc: # source ~/.git-completion.bash # 3) Consider changing your PS1 to also show the current branch, # see git-prompt.sh for details. # # If you use complex aliases of form '!f() { ... }; f', you can use the null # command ':' as the first command in the function body to declare the desired # completion style. For example '!f() { : git commit ; ... }; f' will # tell the completion to use commit completion. This also works with aliases # of form "!sh -c '...'". For example, "!sh -c ': git commit ; ... '". # Note that "git" is optional --- '!f() { : commit; ...}; f' would complete # just like the 'git commit' command. # # If you have a command that is not part of git, but you would still # like completion, you can use __git_complete: # # __git_complete gl git_log # # Or if it's a main command (i.e. git or gitk): # # __git_complete gk gitk # # Compatible with bash 3.2.57. # # You can set the following environment variables to influence the behavior of # the completion routines: # # GIT_COMPLETION_CHECKOUT_NO_GUESS # # When set to "1", do not include "DWIM" suggestions in git-checkout # and git-switch completion (e.g., completing "foo" when "origin/foo" # exists). # # GIT_COMPLETION_SHOW_ALL_COMMANDS # # When set to "1" suggest all commands, including plumbing commands # which are hidden by default (e.g. "cat-file" on "git ca"). # # GIT_COMPLETION_SHOW_ALL # # When set to "1" suggest all options, including options which are # typically hidden (e.g. '--allow-empty' for 'git commit'). # # GIT_COMPLETION_IGNORE_CASE # # When set, uses for-each-ref '--ignore-case' to find refs that match # case insensitively, even on systems with case sensitive file systems # (e.g., completing tag name "FOO" on "git checkout f"). case "$COMP_WORDBREAKS" in *:*) : great ;; *) COMP_WORDBREAKS="$COMP_WORDBREAKS:" esac # Discovers the path to the git repository taking any '--git-dir=' and # '-C ' options into account and stores it in the $__git_repo_path # variable. __git_find_repo_path () { if [ -n "${__git_repo_path-}" ]; then # we already know where it is return fi if [ -n "${__git_C_args-}" ]; then __git_repo_path="$(git "${__git_C_args[@]}" \ ${__git_dir:+--git-dir="$__git_dir"} \ rev-parse --absolute-git-dir 2>/dev/null)" elif [ -n "${__git_dir-}" ]; then test -d "$__git_dir" && __git_repo_path="$__git_dir" elif [ -n "${GIT_DIR-}" ]; then test -d "$GIT_DIR" && __git_repo_path="$GIT_DIR" elif [ -d .git ]; then __git_repo_path=.git else __git_repo_path="$(git rev-parse --git-dir 2>/dev/null)" fi } # Deprecated: use __git_find_repo_path() and $__git_repo_path instead # __gitdir accepts 0 or 1 arguments (i.e., location) # returns location of .git repo __gitdir () { if [ -z "${1-}" ]; then __git_find_repo_path || return 1 echo "$__git_repo_path" elif [ -d "$1/.git" ]; then echo "$1/.git" else echo "$1" fi } # Runs git with all the options given as argument, respecting any # '--git-dir=' and '-C ' options present on the command line __git () { git ${__git_C_args:+"${__git_C_args[@]}"} \ ${__git_dir:+--git-dir="$__git_dir"} "$@" 2>/dev/null } # Helper function to read the first line of a file into a variable. # __git_eread requires 2 arguments, the file path and the name of the # variable, in that order. # # This is taken from git-prompt.sh. __git_eread () { test -r "$1" && IFS=$'\r\n' read -r "$2" <"$1" } # Runs git in $__git_repo_path to determine whether a pseudoref exists. # 1: The pseudo-ref to search __git_pseudoref_exists () { local ref=$1 local head __git_find_repo_path # If the reftable is in use, we have to shell out to 'git rev-parse' # to determine whether the ref exists instead of looking directly in # the filesystem to determine whether the ref exists. Otherwise, use # Bash builtins since executing Git commands are expensive on some # platforms. if __git_eread "$__git_repo_path/HEAD" head; then if [ "$head" == "ref: refs/heads/.invalid" ]; then __git show-ref --exists "$ref" return $? fi fi [ -f "$__git_repo_path/$ref" ] } # Removes backslash escaping, single quotes and double quotes from a word, # stores the result in the variable $dequoted_word. # 1: The word to dequote. __git_dequote () { local rest="$1" len ch dequoted_word="" while test -n "$rest"; do len=${#dequoted_word} dequoted_word="$dequoted_word${rest%%[\\\'\"]*}" rest="${rest:$((${#dequoted_word}-$len))}" case "${rest:0:1}" in \\) ch="${rest:1:1}" case "$ch" in $'\n') ;; *) dequoted_word="$dequoted_word$ch" ;; esac rest="${rest:2}" ;; \') rest="${rest:1}" len=${#dequoted_word} dequoted_word="$dequoted_word${rest%%\'*}" rest="${rest:$((${#dequoted_word}-$len+1))}" ;; \") rest="${rest:1}" while test -n "$rest" ; do len=${#dequoted_word} dequoted_word="$dequoted_word${rest%%[\\\"]*}" rest="${rest:$((${#dequoted_word}-$len))}" case "${rest:0:1}" in \\) ch="${rest:1:1}" case "$ch" in \"|\\|\$|\`) dequoted_word="$dequoted_word$ch" ;; $'\n') ;; *) dequoted_word="$dequoted_word\\$ch" ;; esac rest="${rest:2}" ;; \") rest="${rest:1}" break ;; esac done ;; esac done } # The following function is based on code from: # # bash_completion - programmable completion functions for bash 3.2+ # # Copyright © 2006-2008, Ian Macdonald # © 2009-2010, Bash Completion Maintainers # # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) # any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, see . # # The latest version of this software can be obtained here: # # http://bash-completion.alioth.debian.org/ # # RELEASE: 2.x # This function can be used to access a tokenized list of words # on the command line: # # __git_reassemble_comp_words_by_ref '=:' # if test "${words_[cword_-1]}" = -w # then # ... # fi # # The argument should be a collection of characters from the list of # word completion separators (COMP_WORDBREAKS) to treat as ordinary # characters. # # This is roughly equivalent to going back in time and setting # COMP_WORDBREAKS to exclude those characters. The intent is to # make option types like --date= and : easy to # recognize by treating each shell word as a single token. # # It is best not to set COMP_WORDBREAKS directly because the value is # shared with other completion scripts. By the time the completion # function gets called, COMP_WORDS has already been populated so local # changes to COMP_WORDBREAKS have no effect. # # Output: words_, cword_, cur_. __git_reassemble_comp_words_by_ref() { local exclude i j first # Which word separators to exclude? exclude="${1//[^$COMP_WORDBREAKS]}" cword_=$COMP_CWORD if [ -z "$exclude" ]; then words_=("${COMP_WORDS[@]}") return fi # List of word completion separators has shrunk; # re-assemble words to complete. for ((i=0, j=0; i < ${#COMP_WORDS[@]}; i++, j++)); do # Append each nonempty word consisting of just # word separator characters to the current word. first=t while [ $i -gt 0 ] && [ -n "${COMP_WORDS[$i]}" ] && # word consists of excluded word separators [ "${COMP_WORDS[$i]//[^$exclude]}" = "${COMP_WORDS[$i]}" ] do # Attach to the previous token, # unless the previous token is the command name. if [ $j -ge 2 ] && [ -n "$first" ]; then ((j--)) fi first= words_[$j]=${words_[j]}${COMP_WORDS[i]} if [ $i = $COMP_CWORD ]; then cword_=$j fi if (($i < ${#COMP_WORDS[@]} - 1)); then ((i++)) else # Done. return fi done words_[$j]=${words_[j]}${COMP_WORDS[i]} if [ $i = $COMP_CWORD ]; then cword_=$j fi done } if ! type _get_comp_words_by_ref >/dev/null 2>&1; then _get_comp_words_by_ref () { local exclude cur_ words_ cword_ if [ "$1" = "-n" ]; then exclude=$2 shift 2 fi __git_reassemble_comp_words_by_ref "$exclude" cur_=${words_[cword_]} while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do case "$1" in cur) cur=$cur_ ;; prev) prev=${words_[$cword_-1]} ;; words) words=("${words_[@]}") ;; cword) cword=$cword_ ;; esac shift done } fi # Fills the COMPREPLY array with prefiltered words without any additional # processing. # Callers must take care of providing only words that match the current word # to be completed and adding any prefix and/or suffix (trailing space!), if # necessary. # 1: List of newline-separated matching completion words, complete with # prefix and suffix. __gitcomp_direct () { local IFS=$'\n' COMPREPLY=($1) } # Similar to __gitcomp_direct, but appends to COMPREPLY instead. # Callers must take care of providing only words that match the current word # to be completed and adding any prefix and/or suffix (trailing space!), if # necessary. # 1: List of newline-separated matching completion words, complete with # prefix and suffix. __gitcomp_direct_append () { local IFS=$'\n' COMPREPLY+=($1) } __gitcompappend () { local x i=${#COMPREPLY[@]} for x in $1; do if [[ "$x" == "$3"* ]]; then COMPREPLY[i++]="$2$x$4" fi done } __gitcompadd () { COMPREPLY=() __gitcompappend "$@" } # Generates completion reply, appending a space to possible completion words, # if necessary. # It accepts 1 to 4 arguments: # 1: List of possible completion words. # 2: A prefix to be added to each possible completion word (optional). # 3: Generate possible completion matches for this word (optional). # 4: A suffix to be appended to each possible completion word (optional). __gitcomp () { local cur_="${3-$cur}" case "$cur_" in *=) ;; --no-*) local c i=0 IFS=$' \t\n' for c in $1; do if [[ $c == "--" ]]; then continue fi c="$c${4-}" if [[ $c == "$cur_"* ]]; then case $c in --*=|*.) ;; *) c="$c " ;; esac COMPREPLY[i++]="${2-}$c" fi done ;; *) local c i=0 IFS=$' \t\n' for c in $1; do if [[ $c == "--" ]]; then c="--no-...${4-}" if [[ $c == "$cur_"* ]]; then COMPREPLY[i++]="${2-}$c " fi break fi c="$c${4-}" if [[ $c == "$cur_"* ]]; then case $c in *=|*.) ;; *) c="$c " ;; esac COMPREPLY[i++]="${2-}$c" fi done ;; esac } # Clear the variables caching builtins' options when (re-)sourcing # the completion script. if [[ -n ${ZSH_VERSION-} ]]; then unset ${(M)${(k)parameters[@]}:#__gitcomp_builtin_*} 2>/dev/null else unset $(compgen -v __gitcomp_builtin_) fi # This function is equivalent to # # __gitcomp "$(git xxx --git-completion-helper) ..." # # except that the output is cached. Accept 1-3 arguments: # 1: the git command to execute, this is also the cache key # 2: extra options to be added on top (e.g. negative forms) # 3: options to be excluded __gitcomp_builtin () { # spaces must be replaced with underscore for multi-word # commands, e.g. "git remote add" becomes remote_add. local cmd="$1" local incl="${2-}" local excl="${3-}" local var=__gitcomp_builtin_"${cmd//-/_}" local options eval "options=\${$var-}" if [ -z "$options" ]; then local completion_helper if [ "${GIT_COMPLETION_SHOW_ALL-}" = "1" ]; then completion_helper="--git-completion-helper-all" else completion_helper="--git-completion-helper" fi # leading and trailing spaces are significant to make # option removal work correctly. options=" $incl $(__git ${cmd/_/ } $completion_helper) " || return for i in $excl; do options="${options/ $i / }" done eval "$var=\"$options\"" fi __gitcomp "$options" } # Variation of __gitcomp_nl () that appends to the existing list of # completion candidates, COMPREPLY. __gitcomp_nl_append () { local IFS=$'\n' __gitcompappend "$1" "${2-}" "${3-$cur}" "${4- }" } # Generates completion reply from newline-separated possible completion words # by appending a space to all of them. # It accepts 1 to 4 arguments: # 1: List of possible completion words, separated by a single newline. # 2: A prefix to be added to each possible completion word (optional). # 3: Generate possible completion matches for this word (optional). # 4: A suffix to be appended to each possible completion word instead of # the default space (optional). If specified but empty, nothing is # appended. __gitcomp_nl () { COMPREPLY=() __gitcomp_nl_append "$@" } # Fills the COMPREPLY array with prefiltered paths without any additional # processing. # Callers must take care of providing only paths that match the current path # to be completed and adding any prefix path components, if necessary. # 1: List of newline-separated matching paths, complete with all prefix # path components. __gitcomp_file_direct () { local IFS=$'\n' COMPREPLY=($1) # use a hack to enable file mode in bash < 4 compopt -o filenames +o nospace 2>/dev/null || compgen -f /non-existing-dir/ >/dev/null || true } # Generates completion reply with compgen from newline-separated possible # completion filenames. # It accepts 1 to 3 arguments: # 1: List of possible completion filenames, separated by a single newline. # 2: A directory prefix to be added to each possible completion filename # (optional). # 3: Generate possible completion matches for this word (optional). __gitcomp_file () { local IFS=$'\n' # XXX does not work when the directory prefix contains a tilde, # since tilde expansion is not applied. # This means that COMPREPLY will be empty and Bash default # completion will be used. __gitcompadd "$1" "${2-}" "${3-$cur}" "" # use a hack to enable file mode in bash < 4 compopt -o filenames +o nospace 2>/dev/null || compgen -f /non-existing-dir/ >/dev/null || true } # Execute 'git ls-files', unless the --committable option is specified, in # which case it runs 'git diff-index' to find out the files that can be # committed. It return paths relative to the directory specified in the first # argument, and using the options specified in the second argument. __git_ls_files_helper () { if [ "$2" = "--committable" ]; then __git -C "$1" -c core.quotePath=false diff-index \ --name-only --relative HEAD -- "${3//\\/\\\\}*" else # NOTE: $2 is not quoted in order to support multiple options __git -C "$1" -c core.quotePath=false ls-files \ --exclude-standard $2 -- "${3//\\/\\\\}*" fi } # __git_index_files accepts 1 or 2 arguments: # 1: Options to pass to ls-files (required). # 2: A directory path (optional). # If provided, only files within the specified directory are listed. # Sub directories are never recursed. Path must have a trailing # slash. # 3: List only paths matching this path component (optional). __git_index_files () { local root="$2" match="$3" __git_ls_files_helper "$root" "$1" "${match:-?}" | awk -F / -v pfx="${2//\\/\\\\}" '{ paths[$1] = 1 } END { for (p in paths) { if (substr(p, 1, 1) != "\"") { # No special characters, easy! print pfx p continue } # The path is quoted. p = dequote(p) if (p == "") continue # Even when a directory name itself does not contain # any special characters, it will still be quoted if # any of its (stripped) trailing path components do. # Because of this we may have seen the same directory # both quoted and unquoted. if (p in paths) # We have seen the same directory unquoted, # skip it. continue else print pfx p } } function dequote(p, bs_idx, out, esc, esc_idx, dec) { # Skip opening double quote. p = substr(p, 2) # Interpret backslash escape sequences. while ((bs_idx = index(p, "\\")) != 0) { out = out substr(p, 1, bs_idx - 1) esc = substr(p, bs_idx + 1, 1) p = substr(p, bs_idx + 2) if ((esc_idx = index("abtvfr\"\\", esc)) != 0) { # C-style one-character escape sequence. out = out substr("\a\b\t\v\f\r\"\\", esc_idx, 1) } else if (esc == "n") { # Uh-oh, a newline character. # We cannot reliably put a pathname # containing a newline into COMPREPLY, # and the newline would create a mess. # Skip this path. return "" } else { # Must be a \nnn octal value, then. dec = esc * 64 + \ substr(p, 1, 1) * 8 + \ substr(p, 2, 1) out = out sprintf("%c", dec) p = substr(p, 3) } } # Drop closing double quote, if there is one. # (There is not any if this is a directory, as it was # already stripped with the trailing path components.) if (substr(p, length(p), 1) == "\"") out = out substr(p, 1, length(p) - 1) else out = out p return out }' } # __git_complete_index_file requires 1 argument: # 1: the options to pass to ls-file # # The exception is --committable, which finds the files appropriate commit. __git_complete_index_file () { local dequoted_word pfx="" cur_ __git_dequote "$cur" case "$dequoted_word" in ?*/*) pfx="${dequoted_word%/*}/" cur_="${dequoted_word##*/}" ;; *) cur_="$dequoted_word" esac __gitcomp_file_direct "$(__git_index_files "$1" "$pfx" "$cur_")" } # Lists branches from the local repository. # 1: A prefix to be added to each listed branch (optional). # 2: List only branches matching this word (optional; list all branches if # unset or empty). # 3: A suffix to be appended to each listed branch (optional). __git_heads () { local pfx="${1-}" cur_="${2-}" sfx="${3-}" __git for-each-ref --format="${pfx//\%/%%}%(refname:strip=2)$sfx" \ ${GIT_COMPLETION_IGNORE_CASE+--ignore-case} \ "refs/heads/$cur_*" "refs/heads/$cur_*/**" } # Lists branches from remote repositories. # 1: A prefix to be added to each listed branch (optional). # 2: List only branches matching this word (optional; list all branches if # unset or empty). # 3: A suffix to be appended to each listed branch (optional). __git_remote_heads () { local pfx="${1-}" cur_="${2-}" sfx="${3-}" __git for-each-ref --format="${pfx//\%/%%}%(refname:strip=2)$sfx" \ ${GIT_COMPLETION_IGNORE_CASE+--ignore-case} \ "refs/remotes/$cur_*" "refs/remotes/$cur_*/**" } # Lists tags from the local repository. # Accepts the same positional parameters as __git_heads() above. __git_tags () { local pfx="${1-}" cur_="${2-}" sfx="${3-}" __git for-each-ref --format="${pfx//\%/%%}%(refname:strip=2)$sfx" \ ${GIT_COMPLETION_IGNORE_CASE+--ignore-case} \ "refs/tags/$cur_*" "refs/tags/$cur_*/**" } # List unique branches from refs/remotes used for 'git checkout' and 'git # switch' tracking DWIMery. # 1: A prefix to be added to each listed branch (optional) # 2: List only branches matching this word (optional; list all branches if # unset or empty). # 3: A suffix to be appended to each listed branch (optional). __git_dwim_remote_heads () { local pfx="${1-}" cur_="${2-}" sfx="${3-}" local fer_pfx="${pfx//\%/%%}" # "escape" for-each-ref format specifiers # employ the heuristic used by git checkout and git switch # Try to find a remote branch that cur_es the completion word # but only output if the branch name is unique __git for-each-ref --format="$fer_pfx%(refname:strip=3)$sfx" \ --sort="refname:strip=3" \ ${GIT_COMPLETION_IGNORE_CASE+--ignore-case} \ "refs/remotes/*/$cur_*" "refs/remotes/*/$cur_*/**" | \ uniq -u } # Lists refs from the local (by default) or from a remote repository. # It accepts 0, 1 or 2 arguments: # 1: The remote to list refs from (optional; ignored, if set but empty). # Can be the name of a configured remote, a path, or a URL. # 2: In addition to local refs, list unique branches from refs/remotes/ for # 'git checkout's tracking DWIMery (optional; ignored, if set but empty). # 3: A prefix to be added to each listed ref (optional). # 4: List only refs matching this word (optional; list all refs if unset or # empty). # 5: A suffix to be appended to each listed ref (optional; ignored, if set # but empty). # # Use __git_complete_refs() instead. __git_refs () { local i hash dir track="${2-}" local list_refs_from=path remote="${1-}" local format refs local pfx="${3-}" cur_="${4-$cur}" sfx="${5-}" local match="${4-}" local umatch="${4-}" local fer_pfx="${pfx//\%/%%}" # "escape" for-each-ref format specifiers __git_find_repo_path dir="$__git_repo_path" if [ -z "$remote" ]; then if [ -z "$dir" ]; then return fi else if __git_is_configured_remote "$remote"; then # configured remote takes precedence over a # local directory with the same name list_refs_from=remote elif [ -d "$remote/.git" ]; then dir="$remote/.git" elif [ -d "$remote" ]; then dir="$remote" else list_refs_from=url fi fi if test "${GIT_COMPLETION_IGNORE_CASE:+1}" = "1" then # uppercase with tr instead of ${match,^^} for bash 3.2 compatibility umatch=$(echo "$match" | tr a-z A-Z 2>/dev/null || echo "$match") fi if [ "$list_refs_from" = path ]; then if [[ "$cur_" == ^* ]]; then pfx="$pfx^" fer_pfx="$fer_pfx^" cur_=${cur_#^} match=${match#^} umatch=${umatch#^} fi case "$cur_" in refs|refs/*) format="refname" refs=("$match*" "$match*/**") track="" ;; *) for i in HEAD FETCH_HEAD ORIG_HEAD MERGE_HEAD REBASE_HEAD CHERRY_PICK_HEAD REVERT_HEAD BISECT_HEAD AUTO_MERGE; do case "$i" in $match*|$umatch*) if [ -e "$dir/$i" ]; then echo "$pfx$i$sfx" fi ;; esac done format="refname:strip=2" refs=("refs/tags/$match*" "refs/tags/$match*/**" "refs/heads/$match*" "refs/heads/$match*/**" "refs/remotes/$match*" "refs/remotes/$match*/**") ;; esac __git_dir="$dir" __git for-each-ref --format="$fer_pfx%($format)$sfx" \ ${GIT_COMPLETION_IGNORE_CASE+--ignore-case} \ "${refs[@]}" if [ -n "$track" ]; then __git_dwim_remote_heads "$pfx" "$match" "$sfx" fi return fi case "$cur_" in refs|refs/*) __git ls-remote "$remote" "$match*" | \ while read -r hash i; do case "$i" in *^{}) ;; *) echo "$pfx$i$sfx" ;; esac done ;; *) if [ "$list_refs_from" = remote ]; then case "HEAD" in $match*|$umatch*) echo "${pfx}HEAD$sfx" ;; esac __git for-each-ref --format="$fer_pfx%(refname:strip=3)$sfx" \ ${GIT_COMPLETION_IGNORE_CASE+--ignore-case} \ "refs/remotes/$remote/$match*" \ "refs/remotes/$remote/$match*/**" else local query_symref case "HEAD" in $match*|$umatch*) query_symref="HEAD" ;; esac __git ls-remote "$remote" $query_symref \ "refs/tags/$match*" "refs/heads/$match*" \ "refs/remotes/$match*" | while read -r hash i; do case "$i" in *^{}) ;; refs/*) echo "$pfx${i#refs/*/}$sfx" ;; *) echo "$pfx$i$sfx" ;; # symbolic refs esac done fi ;; esac } # Completes refs, short and long, local and remote, symbolic and pseudo. # # Usage: __git_complete_refs [ ==== git-prompt.sh ==== # bash/zsh git prompt support # # Copyright (C) 2006,2007 Shawn O. Pearce # Distributed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.0. # # This script allows you to see repository status in your prompt. # # To enable: # # 1) Copy this file to somewhere (e.g. ~/.git-prompt.sh). # 2) Add the following line to your .bashrc/.zshrc: # source ~/.git-prompt.sh # 3a) Change your PS1 to call __git_ps1 as # command-substitution: # Bash: PS1='[\u@\h \W$(__git_ps1 " (%s)")]\$ ' # ZSH: setopt PROMPT_SUBST ; PS1='[%n@%m %c$(__git_ps1 " (%s)")]\$ ' # the optional argument will be used as format string. # 3b) Alternatively, for a slightly faster prompt, __git_ps1 can # be used for PROMPT_COMMAND in Bash or for precmd() in Zsh # with two parameters,
 and , which are strings
#        you would put in $PS1 before and after the status string
#        generated by the git-prompt machinery.  e.g.
#        Bash: PROMPT_COMMAND='__git_ps1 "\u@\h:\w" "\\\$ "'
#          will show username, at-sign, host, colon, cwd, then
#          various status string, followed by dollar and SP, as
#          your prompt.
#        ZSH:  precmd () { __git_ps1 "%n" ":%~$ " "|%s" }
#          will show username, pipe, then various status string,
#          followed by colon, cwd, dollar and SP, as your prompt.
#        Optionally, you can supply a third argument with a printf
#        format string to finetune the output of the branch status
#
# The repository status will be displayed only if you are currently in a
# git repository. The %s token is the placeholder for the shown status.
#
# The prompt status always includes the current branch name.
#
# In addition, if you set GIT_PS1_SHOWDIRTYSTATE to a nonempty value,
# unstaged (*) and staged (+) changes will be shown next to the branch
# name.  You can configure this per-repository with the
# bash.showDirtyState variable, which defaults to true once
# GIT_PS1_SHOWDIRTYSTATE is enabled.
#
# You can also see if currently something is stashed, by setting
# GIT_PS1_SHOWSTASHSTATE to a nonempty value. If something is stashed,
# then a '$' will be shown next to the branch name.
#
# If you would like to see if there're untracked files, then you can set
# GIT_PS1_SHOWUNTRACKEDFILES to a nonempty value. If there're untracked
# files, then a '%' will be shown next to the branch name.  You can
# configure this per-repository with the bash.showUntrackedFiles
# variable, which defaults to true once GIT_PS1_SHOWUNTRACKEDFILES is
# enabled.
#
# If you would like to see the difference between HEAD and its upstream,
# set GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM="auto".  A "<" indicates you are behind, ">"
# indicates you are ahead, "<>" indicates you have diverged and "="
# indicates that there is no difference. You can further control
# behaviour by setting GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM to a space-separated list
# of values:
#
#     verbose       show number of commits ahead/behind (+/-) upstream
#     name          if verbose, then also show the upstream abbrev name
#     legacy        don't use the '--count' option available in recent
#                   versions of git-rev-list
#     git           always compare HEAD to @{upstream}
#     svn           always compare HEAD to your SVN upstream
#
# By default, __git_ps1 will compare HEAD to your SVN upstream if it can
# find one, or @{upstream} otherwise.  Once you have set
# GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM, you can override it on a per-repository basis by
# setting the bash.showUpstream config variable.
#
# You can change the separator between the branch name and the above
# state symbols by setting GIT_PS1_STATESEPARATOR. The default separator
# is SP.
#
# When there is an in-progress operation such as a merge, rebase,
# revert, cherry-pick, or bisect, the prompt will include information
# related to the operation, often in the form "|".
#
# When the repository has a sparse-checkout, a notification of the form
# "|SPARSE" will be included in the prompt.  This can be shortened to a
# single '?' character by setting GIT_PS1_COMPRESSSPARSESTATE, or omitted
# by setting GIT_PS1_OMITSPARSESTATE.
#
# If you would like to see a notification on the prompt when there are
# unresolved conflicts, set GIT_PS1_SHOWCONFLICTSTATE to "yes". The
# prompt will include "|CONFLICT".
#
# If you would like to see more information about the identity of
# commits checked out as a detached HEAD, set GIT_PS1_DESCRIBE_STYLE
# to one of these values:
#
#     contains      relative to newer annotated tag (v1.6.3.2~35)
#     branch        relative to newer tag or branch (master~4)
#     describe      relative to older annotated tag (v1.6.3.1-13-gdd42c2f)
#     tag           relative to any older tag (v1.6.3.1-13-gdd42c2f)
#     default       exactly matching tag
#
# If you would like a colored hint about the current dirty state, set
# GIT_PS1_SHOWCOLORHINTS to a nonempty value. The colors are based on
# the colored output of "git status -sb".
#
# If you would like __git_ps1 to do nothing in the case when the current
# directory is set up to be ignored by git, then set
# GIT_PS1_HIDE_IF_PWD_IGNORED to a nonempty value. Override this on the
# repository level by setting bash.hideIfPwdIgnored to "false".

# check whether printf supports -v
__git_printf_supports_v=
printf -v __git_printf_supports_v -- '%s' yes >/dev/null 2>&1

# stores the divergence from upstream in $p
# used by GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM
__git_ps1_show_upstream ()
{
	local key value
	local svn_remote svn_url_pattern count n
	local upstream_type=git legacy="" verbose="" name=""

	svn_remote=()
	# get some config options from git-config
	local output="$(git config -z --get-regexp '^(svn-remote\..*\.url|bash\.showupstream)$' 2>/dev/null | tr '\0\n' '\n ')"
	while read -r key value; do
		case "$key" in
		bash.showupstream)
			GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM="$value"
			if [[ -z "${GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM}" ]]; then
				p=""
				return
			fi
			;;
		svn-remote.*.url)
			svn_remote[$((${#svn_remote[@]} + 1))]="$value"
			svn_url_pattern="$svn_url_pattern\\|$value"
			upstream_type=svn+git # default upstream type is SVN if available, else git
			;;
		esac
	done <<< "$output"

	# parse configuration values
	local option
	for option in ${GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM}; do
		case "$option" in
		git|svn) upstream_type="$option" ;;
		verbose) verbose=1 ;;
		legacy)  legacy=1  ;;
		name)    name=1 ;;
		esac
	done

	# Find our upstream type
	case "$upstream_type" in
	git)    upstream_type="@{upstream}" ;;
	svn*)
		# get the upstream from the "git-svn-id: ..." in a commit message
		# (git-svn uses essentially the same procedure internally)
		local -a svn_upstream
		svn_upstream=($(git log --first-parent -1 \
					--grep="^git-svn-id: \(${svn_url_pattern#??}\)" 2>/dev/null))
		if [[ 0 -ne ${#svn_upstream[@]} ]]; then
			svn_upstream=${svn_upstream[${#svn_upstream[@]} - 2]}
			svn_upstream=${svn_upstream%@*}
			local n_stop="${#svn_remote[@]}"
			for ((n=1; n <= n_stop; n++)); do
				svn_upstream=${svn_upstream#${svn_remote[$n]}}
			done

			if [[ -z "$svn_upstream" ]]; then
				# default branch name for checkouts with no layout:
				upstream_type=${GIT_SVN_ID:-git-svn}
			else
				upstream_type=${svn_upstream#/}
			fi
		elif [[ "svn+git" = "$upstream_type" ]]; then
			upstream_type="@{upstream}"
		fi
		;;
	esac

	# Find how many commits we are ahead/behind our upstream
	if [[ -z "$legacy" ]]; then
		count="$(git rev-list --count --left-right \
				"$upstream_type"...HEAD 2>/dev/null)"
	else
		# produce equivalent output to --count for older versions of git
		local commits
		if commits="$(git rev-list --left-right "$upstream_type"...HEAD 2>/dev/null)"
		then
			local commit behind=0 ahead=0
			for commit in $commits
			do
				case "$commit" in
				"<"*) ((behind++)) ;;
				*)    ((ahead++))  ;;
				esac
			done
			count="$behind	$ahead"
		else
			count=""
		fi
	fi

	# calculate the result
	if [[ -z "$verbose" ]]; then
		case "$count" in
		"") # no upstream
			p="" ;;
		"0	0") # equal to upstream
			p="=" ;;
		"0	"*) # ahead of upstream
			p=">" ;;
		*"	0") # behind upstream
			p="<" ;;
		*)	    # diverged from upstream
			p="<>" ;;
		esac
	else # verbose, set upstream instead of p
		case "$count" in
		"") # no upstream
			upstream="" ;;
		"0	0") # equal to upstream
			upstream="|u=" ;;
		"0	"*) # ahead of upstream
			upstream="|u+${count#0	}" ;;
		*"	0") # behind upstream
			upstream="|u-${count%	0}" ;;
		*)	    # diverged from upstream
			upstream="|u+${count#*	}-${count%	*}" ;;
		esac
		if [[ -n "$count" && -n "$name" ]]; then
			__git_ps1_upstream_name=$(git rev-parse \
				--abbrev-ref "$upstream_type" 2>/dev/null)
			if [ $pcmode = yes ] && [ $ps1_expanded = yes ]; then
				upstream="$upstream \${__git_ps1_upstream_name}"
			else
				upstream="$upstream ${__git_ps1_upstream_name}"
				# not needed anymore; keep user's
				# environment clean
				unset __git_ps1_upstream_name
			fi
		fi
	fi

}

# Helper function that is meant to be called from __git_ps1.  It
# injects color codes into the appropriate gitstring variables used
# to build a gitstring. Colored variables are responsible for clearing
# their own color.
__git_ps1_colorize_gitstring ()
{
	if [[ -n ${ZSH_VERSION-} ]]; then
		local c_red='%F{red}'
		local c_green='%F{green}'
		local c_lblue='%F{blue}'
		local c_clear='%f'
	else
		# Using \001 and \002 around colors is necessary to prevent
		# issues with command line editing/browsing/completion!
		local c_red=$'\001\e[31m\002'
		local c_green=$'\001\e[32m\002'
		local c_lblue=$'\001\e[1;34m\002'
		local c_clear=$'\001\e[0m\002'
	fi
	local bad_color=$c_red
	local ok_color=$c_green
	local flags_color="$c_lblue"

	local branch_color=""
	if [ $detached = no ]; then
		branch_color="$ok_color"
	else
		branch_color="$bad_color"
	fi
	if [ -n "$c" ]; then
		c="$branch_color$c$c_clear"
	fi
	b="$branch_color$b$c_clear"

	if [ -n "$w" ]; then
		w="$bad_color$w$c_clear"
	fi
	if [ -n "$i" ]; then
		i="$ok_color$i$c_clear"
	fi
	if [ -n "$s" ]; then
		s="$flags_color$s$c_clear"
	fi
	if [ -n "$u" ]; then
		u="$bad_color$u$c_clear"
	fi
}

# Helper function to read the first line of a file into a variable.
# __git_eread requires 2 arguments, the file path and the name of the
# variable, in that order.
__git_eread ()
{
	test -r "$1" && IFS=$'\r\n' read -r "$2" <"$1"
}

# see if a cherry-pick or revert is in progress, if the user has committed a
# conflict resolution with 'git commit' in the middle of a sequence of picks or
# reverts then CHERRY_PICK_HEAD/REVERT_HEAD will not exist so we have to read
# the todo file.
__git_sequencer_status ()
{
	local todo
	if test -f "$g/CHERRY_PICK_HEAD"
	then
		r="|CHERRY-PICKING"
		return 0;
	elif test -f "$g/REVERT_HEAD"
	then
		r="|REVERTING"
		return 0;
	elif __git_eread "$g/sequencer/todo" todo
	then
		case "$todo" in
		p[\ \	]|pick[\ \	]*)
			r="|CHERRY-PICKING"
			return 0
		;;
		revert[\ \	]*)
			r="|REVERTING"
			return 0
		;;
		esac
	fi
	return 1
}

# __git_ps1 accepts 0 or 1 arguments (i.e., format string)
# when called from PS1 using command substitution
# in this mode it prints text to add to bash PS1 prompt (includes branch name)
#
# __git_ps1 requires 2 or 3 arguments when called from PROMPT_COMMAND (pc)
# in that case it _sets_ PS1. The arguments are parts of a PS1 string.
# when two arguments are given, the first is prepended and the second appended
# to the state string when assigned to PS1.
# The optional third parameter will be used as printf format string to further
# customize the output of the git-status string.
# In this mode you can request colored hints using GIT_PS1_SHOWCOLORHINTS=true
__git_ps1 ()
{
	# preserve exit status
	local exit=$?
	local pcmode=no
	local detached=no
	local ps1pc_start='\u@\h:\w '
	local ps1pc_end='\$ '
	local printf_format=' (%s)'

	case "$#" in
		2|3)	pcmode=yes
			ps1pc_start="$1"
			ps1pc_end="$2"
			printf_format="${3:-$printf_format}"
			# set PS1 to a plain prompt so that we can
			# simply return early if the prompt should not
			# be decorated
			PS1="$ps1pc_start$ps1pc_end"
		;;
		0|1)	printf_format="${1:-$printf_format}"
		;;
		*)	return $exit
		;;
	esac

	# ps1_expanded:  This variable is set to 'yes' if the shell
	# subjects the value of PS1 to parameter expansion:
	#
	#   * bash does unless the promptvars option is disabled
	#   * zsh does not unless the PROMPT_SUBST option is set
	#   * POSIX shells always do
	#
	# If the shell would expand the contents of PS1 when drawing
	# the prompt, a raw ref name must not be included in PS1.
	# This protects the user from arbitrary code execution via
	# specially crafted ref names.  For example, a ref named
	# 'refs/heads/$(IFS=_;cmd=sudo_rm_-rf_/;$cmd)' might cause the
	# shell to execute 'sudo rm -rf /' when the prompt is drawn.
	#
	# Instead, the ref name should be placed in a separate global
	# variable (in the __git_ps1_* namespace to avoid colliding
	# with the user's environment) and that variable should be
	# referenced from PS1.  For example:
	#
	#     __git_ps1_foo=$(do_something_to_get_ref_name)
	#     PS1="...stuff...\${__git_ps1_foo}...stuff..."
	#
	# If the shell does not expand the contents of PS1, the raw
	# ref name must be included in PS1.
	#
	# The value of this variable is only relevant when in pcmode.
	#
	# Assume that the shell follows the POSIX specification and
	# expands PS1 unless determined otherwise.  (This is more
	# likely to be correct if the user has a non-bash, non-zsh
	# shell and safer than the alternative if the assumption is
	# incorrect.)
	#
	local ps1_expanded=yes
	[ -z "${ZSH_VERSION-}" ] || [[ -o PROMPT_SUBST ]] || ps1_expanded=no
	[ -z "${BASH_VERSION-}" ] || shopt -q promptvars || ps1_expanded=no

	local repo_info rev_parse_exit_code
	repo_info="$(git rev-parse --git-dir --is-inside-git-dir \
		--is-bare-repository --is-inside-work-tree --show-ref-format \
		--short HEAD 2>/dev/null)"
	rev_parse_exit_code="$?"

	if [ -z "$repo_info" ]; then
		return $exit
	fi

	local short_sha=""
	if [ "$rev_parse_exit_code" = "0" ]; then
		short_sha="${repo_info##*$'\n'}"
		repo_info="${repo_info%$'\n'*}"
	fi
	local ref_format="${repo_info##*$'\n'}"
	repo_info="${repo_info%$'\n'*}"
	local inside_worktree="${repo_info##*$'\n'}"
	repo_info="${repo_info%$'\n'*}"
	local bare_repo="${repo_info##*$'\n'}"
	repo_info="${repo_info%$'\n'*}"
	local inside_gitdir="${repo_info##*$'\n'}"
	local g="${repo_info%$'\n'*}"

	if [ "true" = "$inside_worktree" ] &&
	   [ -n "${GIT_PS1_HIDE_IF_PWD_IGNORED-}" ] &&
	   [ "$(git config --bool bash.hideIfPwdIgnored)" != "false" ] &&
	   git check-ignore -q .
	then
		return $exit
	fi

	local sparse=""
	if [ -z "${GIT_PS1_COMPRESSSPARSESTATE-}" ] &&
	   [ -z "${GIT_PS1_OMITSPARSESTATE-}" ] &&
	   [ "$(git config --bool core.sparseCheckout)" = "true" ]; then
		sparse="|SPARSE"
	fi

	local r=""
	local b=""
	local step=""
	local total=""
	if [ -d "$g/rebase-merge" ]; then
		__git_eread "$g/rebase-merge/head-name" b
		__git_eread "$g/rebase-merge/msgnum" step
		__git_eread "$g/rebase-merge/end" total
		r="|REBASE"
	else
		if [ -d "$g/rebase-apply" ]; then
			__git_eread "$g/rebase-apply/next" step
			__git_eread "$g/rebase-apply/last" total
			if [ -f "$g/rebase-apply/rebasing" ]; then
				__git_eread "$g/rebase-apply/head-name" b
				r="|REBASE"
			elif [ -f "$g/rebase-apply/applying" ]; then
				r="|AM"
			else
				r="|AM/REBASE"
			fi
		elif [ -f "$g/MERGE_HEAD" ]; then
			r="|MERGING"
		elif __git_sequencer_status; then
			:
		elif [ -f "$g/BISECT_LOG" ]; then
			r="|BISECTING"
		fi

		if [ -n "$b" ]; then
			:
		elif [ -h "$g/HEAD" ]; then
			# symlink symbolic ref
			b="$(git symbolic-ref HEAD 2>/dev/null)"
		else
			local head=""

			case "$ref_format" in
			files)
				if ! __git_eread "$g/HEAD" head; then
					return $exit
				fi

				if [[ $head == "ref: "* ]]; then
					head="${head#ref: }"
				else
					head=""
				fi
				;;
			*)
				head="$(git symbolic-ref HEAD 2>/dev/null)"
				;;
			esac

			if test -z "$head"; then
				detached=yes
				b="$(
				case "${GIT_PS1_DESCRIBE_STYLE-}" in
				(contains)
					git describe --contains HEAD ;;
				(branch)
					git describe --contains --all HEAD ;;
				(tag)
					git describe --tags HEAD ;;
				(describe)
					git describe HEAD ;;
				(* | default)
					git describe --tags --exact-match HEAD ;;
				esac 2>/dev/null)" ||

				b="$short_sha..."
				b="($b)"
			else
				b="$head"
			fi
		fi
	fi

	if [ -n "$step" ] && [ -n "$total" ]; then
		r="$r $step/$total"
	fi

	local conflict="" # state indicator for unresolved conflicts
	if [[ "${GIT_PS1_SHOWCONFLICTSTATE}" == "yes" ]] &&
	   [[ $(git ls-files --unmerged 2>/dev/null) ]]; then
		conflict="|CONFLICT"
	fi

	local w=""
	local i=""
	local s=""
	local u=""
	local h=""
	local c=""
	local p="" # short version of upstream state indicator
	local upstream="" # verbose version of upstream state indicator

	if [ "true" = "$inside_gitdir" ]; then
		if [ "true" = "$bare_repo" ]; then
			c="BARE:"
		else
			b="GIT_DIR!"
		fi
	elif [ "true" = "$inside_worktree" ]; then
		if [ -n "${GIT_PS1_SHOWDIRTYSTATE-}" ] &&
		   [ "$(git config --bool bash.showDirtyState)" != "false" ]
		then
			git diff --no-ext-diff --quiet || w="*"
			git diff --no-ext-diff --cached --quiet || i="+"
			if [ -z "$short_sha" ] && [ -z "$i" ]; then
				i="#"
			fi
		fi
		if [ -n "${GIT_PS1_SHOWSTASHSTATE-}" ] &&
		   git rev-parse --verify --quiet refs/stash >/dev/null
		then
			s="$"
		fi

		if [ -n "${GIT_PS1_SHOWUNTRACKEDFILES-}" ] &&
		   [ "$(git config --bool bash.showUntrackedFiles)" != "false" ] &&
		   git ls-files --others --exclude-standard --directory --no-empty-directory --error-unmatch -- ':/*' >/dev/null 2>/dev/null
		then
			u="%${ZSH_VERSION+%}"
		fi

		if [ -n "${GIT_PS1_COMPRESSSPARSESTATE-}" ] &&
		   [ "$(git config --bool core.sparseCheckout)" = "true" ]; then
			h="?"
		fi

		if [ -n "${GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM-}" ]; then
			__git_ps1_show_upstream
		fi
	fi

	local z="${GIT_PS1_STATESEPARATOR-" "}"

	b=${b##refs/heads/}
	if [ $pcmode = yes ] && [ $ps1_expanded = yes ]; then
		__git_ps1_branch_name=$b
		b="\${__git_ps1_branch_name}"
	fi

	if [ -n "${GIT_PS1_SHOWCOLORHINTS-}" ]; then
		__git_ps1_colorize_gitstring
	fi

	local f="$h$w$i$s$u$p"
	local gitstring="$c$b${f:+$z$f}${sparse}$r${upstream}${conflict}"

	if [ $pcmode = yes ]; then
		if [ "${__git_printf_supports_v-}" != yes ]; then
			gitstring=$(printf -- "$printf_format" "$gitstring")
		else
			printf -v gitstring -- "$printf_format" "$gitstring"
		fi
		PS1="$ps1pc_start$gitstring$ps1pc_end"
	else
		printf -- "$printf_format" "$gitstring"
	fi

	return $exit
}