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git/git-stash.sh

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#!/bin/sh
# Copyright (c) 2007, Nanako Shiraishi
dashless=$(basename "$0" | sed -e 's/-/ /')
USAGE="list [<options>]
or: $dashless show [<stash>]
or: $dashless drop [-q|--quiet] [<stash>]
or: $dashless ( pop | apply ) [--index] [-q|--quiet] [<stash>]
or: $dashless branch <branchname> [<stash>]
or: $dashless [save [--patch] [-k|--[no-]keep-index] [-q|--quiet]
[-u|--include-untracked] [-a|--all] [<message>]]
or: $dashless clear"
SUBDIRECTORY_OK=Yes
OPTIONS_SPEC=
START_DIR=`pwd`
. git-sh-setup
. git-sh-i18n
require_work_tree
cd_to_toplevel
TMP="$GIT_DIR/.git-stash.$$"
TMPindex=${GIT_INDEX_FILE-"$GIT_DIR/index"}.stash.$$
trap 'rm -f "$TMP-"* "$TMPindex"' 0
ref_stash=refs/stash
if git config --get-colorbool color.interactive; then
help_color="$(git config --get-color color.interactive.help 'red bold')"
reset_color="$(git config --get-color '' reset)"
else
help_color=
reset_color=
fi
no_changes () {
git diff-index --quiet --cached HEAD --ignore-submodules -- &&
git diff-files --quiet --ignore-submodules &&
(test -z "$untracked" || test -z "$(untracked_files)")
}
untracked_files () {
excl_opt=--exclude-standard
test "$untracked" = "all" && excl_opt=
git ls-files -o -z $excl_opt
}
clear_stash () {
if test $# != 0
then
die "$(gettext "git stash clear with parameters is unimplemented")"
fi
if current=$(git rev-parse --verify $ref_stash 2>/dev/null)
then
git update-ref -d $ref_stash $current
fi
}
create_stash () {
stash_msg="$1"
untracked="$2"
git update-index -q --refresh
if no_changes
then
exit 0
fi
# state of the base commit
if b_commit=$(git rev-parse --verify HEAD)
then
head=$(git rev-list --oneline -n 1 HEAD --)
else
die "$(gettext "You do not have the initial commit yet")"
fi
if branch=$(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD)
then
branch=${branch#refs/heads/}
else
branch='(no branch)'
fi
msg=$(printf '%s: %s' "$branch" "$head")
# state of the index
i_tree=$(git write-tree) &&
i_commit=$(printf 'index on %s\n' "$msg" |
git commit-tree $i_tree -p $b_commit) ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot save the current index state")"
if test -n "$untracked"
then
# Untracked files are stored by themselves in a parentless commit, for
# ease of unpacking later.
u_commit=$(
untracked_files | (
export GIT_INDEX_FILE="$TMPindex"
rm -f "$TMPindex" &&
git update-index -z --add --remove --stdin &&
u_tree=$(git write-tree) &&
printf 'untracked files on %s\n' "$msg" | git commit-tree $u_tree &&
rm -f "$TMPindex"
) ) || die "Cannot save the untracked files"
untracked_commit_option="-p $u_commit";
else
untracked_commit_option=
fi
if test -z "$patch_mode"
then
# state of the working tree
w_tree=$( (
git read-tree --index-output="$TMPindex" -m $i_tree &&
GIT_INDEX_FILE="$TMPindex" &&
export GIT_INDEX_FILE &&
git diff --name-only -z HEAD -- >"$TMP-stagenames" &&
git update-index -z --add --remove --stdin <"$TMP-stagenames" &&
git write-tree &&
rm -f "$TMPindex"
) ) ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot save the current worktree state")"
else
rm -f "$TMP-index" &&
GIT_INDEX_FILE="$TMP-index" git read-tree HEAD &&
# find out what the user wants
GIT_INDEX_FILE="$TMP-index" \
git add--interactive --patch=stash -- &&
# state of the working tree
w_tree=$(GIT_INDEX_FILE="$TMP-index" git write-tree) ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot save the current worktree state")"
git diff-tree -p HEAD $w_tree -- >"$TMP-patch" &&
test -s "$TMP-patch" ||
die "$(gettext "No changes selected")"
rm -f "$TMP-index" ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot remove temporary index (can't happen)")"
fi
# create the stash
if test -z "$stash_msg"
then
stash_msg=$(printf 'WIP on %s' "$msg")
else
stash_msg=$(printf 'On %s: %s' "$branch" "$stash_msg")
fi
w_commit=$(printf '%s\n' "$stash_msg" |
git commit-tree $w_tree -p $b_commit -p $i_commit $untracked_commit_option) ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot record working tree state")"
}
save_stash () {
keep_index=
patch_mode=
untracked=
while test $# != 0
do
case "$1" in
-k|--keep-index)
keep_index=t
;;
--no-keep-index)
keep_index=n
;;
-p|--patch)
patch_mode=t
# only default to keep if we don't already have an override
test -z "$keep_index" && keep_index=t
;;
-q|--quiet)
GIT_QUIET=t
;;
-u|--include-untracked)
untracked=untracked
;;
-a|--all)
untracked=all
;;
--)
shift
break
;;
-*)
option="$1"
# TRANSLATORS: $option is an invalid option, like
# `--blah-blah'. The 7 spaces at the beginning of the
# second line correspond to "error: ". So you should line
# up the second line with however many characters the
# translation of "error: " takes in your language. E.g. in
# English this is:
#
# $ git stash save --blah-blah 2>&1 | head -n 2
# error: unknown option for 'stash save': --blah-blah
# To provide a message, use git stash save -- '--blah-blah'
eval_gettextln "$("error: unknown option for 'stash save': \$option
To provide a message, use git stash save -- '\$option'")"
usage
;;
*)
break
;;
esac
shift
done
if test -n "$patch_mode" && test -n "$untracked"
then
die "Can't use --patch and --include-untracked or --all at the same time"
fi
stash_msg="$*"
git update-index -q --refresh
if no_changes
then
say "$(gettext "No local changes to save")"
exit 0
fi
test -f "$GIT_DIR/logs/$ref_stash" ||
clear_stash || die "$(gettext "Cannot initialize stash")"
create_stash "$stash_msg" $untracked
# Make sure the reflog for stash is kept.
: >>"$GIT_DIR/logs/$ref_stash"
git update-ref -m "$stash_msg" $ref_stash $w_commit ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot save the current status")"
say Saved working directory and index state "$stash_msg"
if test -z "$patch_mode"
then
git reset --hard ${GIT_QUIET:+-q}
test "$untracked" = "all" && CLEAN_X_OPTION=-x || CLEAN_X_OPTION=
if test -n "$untracked"
then
git clean --force --quiet -d $CLEAN_X_OPTION
fi
if test "$keep_index" = "t" && test -n $i_tree
then
git read-tree --reset -u $i_tree
fi
else
git apply -R < "$TMP-patch" ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot remove worktree changes")"
if test "$keep_index" != "t"
then
git reset
fi
fi
}
have_stash () {
git rev-parse --verify $ref_stash >/dev/null 2>&1
}
list_stash () {
have_stash || return 0
git log --format="%gd: %gs" -g "$@" $ref_stash --
}
show_stash () {
assert_stash_like "$@"
git diff ${FLAGS:---stat} $b_commit $w_commit
}
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
#
# Parses the remaining options looking for flags and
# at most one revision defaulting to ${ref_stash}@{0}
# if none found.
#
# Derives related tree and commit objects from the
# revision, if one is found.
#
# stash records the work tree, and is a merge between the
# base commit (first parent) and the index tree (second parent).
#
# REV is set to the symbolic version of the specified stash-like commit
# IS_STASH_LIKE is non-blank if ${REV} looks like a stash
# IS_STASH_REF is non-blank if the ${REV} looks like a stash ref
# s is set to the SHA1 of the stash commit
# w_commit is set to the commit containing the working tree
# b_commit is set to the base commit
# i_commit is set to the commit containing the index tree
# u_commit is set to the commit containing the untracked files tree
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
# w_tree is set to the working tree
# b_tree is set to the base tree
# i_tree is set to the index tree
# u_tree is set to the untracked files tree
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
#
# GIT_QUIET is set to t if -q is specified
# INDEX_OPTION is set to --index if --index is specified.
# FLAGS is set to the remaining flags
#
# dies if:
# * too many revisions specified
# * no revision is specified and there is no stash stack
# * a revision is specified which cannot be resolve to a SHA1
# * a non-existent stash reference is specified
#
parse_flags_and_rev()
{
test "$PARSE_CACHE" = "$*" && return 0 # optimisation
PARSE_CACHE="$*"
IS_STASH_LIKE=
IS_STASH_REF=
INDEX_OPTION=
s=
w_commit=
b_commit=
i_commit=
u_commit=
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
w_tree=
b_tree=
i_tree=
u_tree=
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
REV=$(git rev-parse --no-flags --symbolic "$@") || exit 1
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
FLAGS=
for opt
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
do
case "$opt" in
-q|--quiet)
GIT_QUIET=-t
;;
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
--index)
INDEX_OPTION=--index
;;
-*)
FLAGS="${FLAGS}${FLAGS:+ }$opt"
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
;;
esac
done
set -- $REV
case $# in
0)
have_stash || die "$(gettext "No stash found.")"
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
set -- ${ref_stash}@{0}
;;
1)
:
;;
*)
die "$(eval_gettext "Too many revisions specified: \$REV")"
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
;;
esac
REV=$(git rev-parse --quiet --symbolic --verify $1 2>/dev/null) || {
reference="$1"
die "$(eval_gettext "\$reference is not valid reference")"
}
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
i_commit=$(git rev-parse --quiet --verify $REV^2 2>/dev/null) &&
set -- $(git rev-parse $REV $REV^1 $REV: $REV^1: $REV^2: 2>/dev/null) &&
s=$1 &&
w_commit=$1 &&
b_commit=$2 &&
w_tree=$3 &&
b_tree=$4 &&
i_tree=$5 &&
IS_STASH_LIKE=t &&
test "$ref_stash" = "$(git rev-parse --symbolic-full-name "${REV%@*}")" &&
IS_STASH_REF=t
u_commit=$(git rev-parse --quiet --verify $REV^3 2>/dev/null) &&
u_tree=$(git rev-parse $REV^3: 2>/dev/null)
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
}
is_stash_like()
{
parse_flags_and_rev "$@"
test -n "$IS_STASH_LIKE"
}
assert_stash_like() {
is_stash_like "$@" || {
args="$*"
die "$(eval_gettext "'\$args' is not a stash-like commit")"
}
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
}
is_stash_ref() {
is_stash_like "$@" && test -n "$IS_STASH_REF"
}
assert_stash_ref() {
is_stash_ref "$@" || {
args="$*"
die "$(eval_gettext "'\$args' is not a stash reference")"
}
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
}
apply_stash () {
assert_stash_like "$@"
git update-index -q --refresh || die "$(gettext "unable to refresh index")"
# current index state
c_tree=$(git write-tree) ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot apply a stash in the middle of a merge")"
unstashed_index_tree=
if test -n "$INDEX_OPTION" && test "$b_tree" != "$i_tree" &&
test "$c_tree" != "$i_tree"
then
git diff-tree --binary $s^2^..$s^2 | git apply --cached
test $? -ne 0 &&
die "$(gettext "Conflicts in index. Try without --index.")"
unstashed_index_tree=$(git write-tree) ||
die "$(gettext "Could not save index tree")"
git reset
fi
if test -n "$u_tree"
then
GIT_INDEX_FILE="$TMPindex" git-read-tree "$u_tree" &&
GIT_INDEX_FILE="$TMPindex" git checkout-index --all &&
rm -f "$TMPindex" ||
die 'Could not restore untracked files from stash'
fi
eval "
GITHEAD_$w_tree='Stashed changes' &&
GITHEAD_$c_tree='Updated upstream' &&
GITHEAD_$b_tree='Version stash was based on' &&
export GITHEAD_$w_tree GITHEAD_$c_tree GITHEAD_$b_tree
"
if test -n "$GIT_QUIET"
then
GIT_MERGE_VERBOSITY=0 && export GIT_MERGE_VERBOSITY
fi
if git merge-recursive $b_tree -- $c_tree $w_tree
then
# No conflict
if test -n "$unstashed_index_tree"
then
git read-tree "$unstashed_index_tree"
else
a="$TMP-added" &&
git diff-index --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A $c_tree >"$a" &&
git read-tree --reset $c_tree &&
git update-index --add --stdin <"$a" ||
die "$(gettext "Cannot unstage modified files")"
rm -f "$a"
fi
squelch=
if test -n "$GIT_QUIET"
then
squelch='>/dev/null 2>&1'
fi
(cd "$START_DIR" && eval "git status $squelch") || :
else
# Merge conflict; keep the exit status from merge-recursive
status=$?
if test -n "$INDEX_OPTION"
then
gettextln "Index was not unstashed." >&2
fi
exit $status
fi
}
pop_stash() {
assert_stash_ref "$@"
apply_stash "$@" &&
drop_stash "$@"
}
drop_stash () {
assert_stash_ref "$@"
git reflog delete --updateref --rewrite "${REV}" &&
say "$(eval_gettext "Dropped \${REV} (\$s)")" ||
die "$(eval_gettext "\${REV}: Could not drop stash entry")"
# clear_stash if we just dropped the last stash entry
git rev-parse --verify "$ref_stash@{0}" >/dev/null 2>&1 || clear_stash
}
apply_to_branch () {
test -n "$1" || die "$(gettext "No branch name specified")"
branch=$1
shift 1
set -- --index "$@"
assert_stash_like "$@"
git checkout -b $branch $REV^ &&
apply_stash "$@" && {
test -z "$IS_STASH_REF" || drop_stash "$@"
}
}
detached-stash: introduce parse_flags_and_revs function Introduce parse_flags_and_revs. This function requires that there is at most one stash-like revision parameter and zero or more flags. It knows how to parse -q,--quiet and --index flags, but leaves other flags parsed. Specified revisions are checked to see that they are at least stash-like (meaning: they look like something created by git stash save or git stash create). If this is so, then IS_STASH_LIKE is initialized to a non-empty value. If the specified revision also looks like a stash log entry reference, then IS_STASH_REF is initialized to a non-empty value. References of the form ref@{spec} are required to precisely identify an individual commit. If no reference is specified, stash@{0} is assumed. Once the specified reference is validated to be at least stash_like an ensemble of derived variables, (w_commit, w_tree, b_commit, etc) is initialized with a single call to git rev-parse. Repeated calls to parse_flags_and_rev() avoid repeated calls to git rev-parse if the specified arguments have already been parsed. Subsequent patches in the series modify the existing git stash subcommands to make use of these functions as appropriate. An ensemble of supporting functions that make use of the state established by parse_flags_and_rev(). These are described below: The ancillary functions are: is_stash_like(): which can be used to test whether a specified commit looks like a commit created with git stash save or git stash create. assert_stash_like(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments stash-like. is_stash_ref(): which checks whether an argument is valid stash reference(e.g. is of the form ['refs/']stash['@{'something'}]) assert_stash_ref(): which can be used by commands that misbehave unless their arguments are both stash-like and refer to valid stash entries. Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-08-21 06:46:22 +02:00
PARSE_CACHE='--not-parsed'
# The default command is "save" if nothing but options are given
seen_non_option=
for opt
do
case "$opt" in
-*) ;;
*) seen_non_option=t; break ;;
esac
done
test -n "$seen_non_option" || set "save" "$@"
# Main command set
case "$1" in
list)
shift
list_stash "$@"
;;
show)
shift
show_stash "$@"
;;
save)
shift
save_stash "$@"
;;
apply)
shift
apply_stash "$@"
;;
clear)
shift
clear_stash "$@"
;;
create)
if test $# -gt 0 && test "$1" = create
then
shift
fi
create_stash "$*" && echo "$w_commit"
;;
drop)
shift
drop_stash "$@"
;;
pop)
shift
pop_stash "$@"
;;
branch)
shift
apply_to_branch "$@"
;;
*)
case $# in
0)
save_stash &&
say "$(gettext "(To restore them type \"git stash apply\")")"
;;
*)
usage
esac
;;
esac