git-status

Langue: en

Version: 07/28/2010 (ubuntu - 24/10/10)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

git-status - Show the working tree status

SYNOPSIS

git status [<options>...] [--] [<pathspec>...]

DESCRIPTION

Displays paths that have differences between the index file and the current HEAD commit, paths that have differences between the working tree and the index file, and paths in the working tree that are not tracked by git (and are not ignored by gitignore(5)). The first are what you would commit by running git commit; the second and third are what you could commit by running git add before running git commit.

OPTIONS

-s, --short

Give the output in the short-format.

--porcelain

Give the output in a stable, easy-to-parse format for scripts. Currently this is identical to --short output, but is guaranteed not to change in the future, making it safe for scripts.

-u[<mode>], --untracked-files[=<mode>]

Show untracked files (Default: all).
The mode parameter is optional, and is used to specify the handling of untracked files. The possible options are:

no - Show no untracked files

normal - Shows untracked files and directories

all - Also shows individual files in untracked directories.

See git-config(1) for configuration variable used to change the default for when the option is not specified.

-z

Terminate entries with NUL, instead of LF. This implies the --porcelain output format if no other format is given.

OUTPUT

The output from this command is designed to be used as a commit template comment, and all the output lines are prefixed with #. The default, long format, is designed to be human readable, verbose and descriptive. They are subject to change in any time.

The paths mentioned in the output, unlike many other git commands, are made relative to the current directory if you are working in a subdirectory (this is on purpose, to help cutting and pasting). See the status.relativePaths config option below.

In short-format, the status of each path is shown as

 XY PATH1 -> PATH2
 

where PATH1 is the path in the HEAD, and ` → PATH2` part is shown only when PATH1 corresponds to a different path in the index/worktree (i.e. the file is renamed). The XY is a two-letter status code.

The fields (including the →) are separated from each other by a single space. If a filename contains whitespace or other nonprintable characters, that field will be quoted in the manner of a C string literal: surrounded by ASCII double quote (34) characters, and with interior special characters backslash-escaped.

For paths with merge conflicts, X and Y show the modification states of each side of the merge. For paths that do not have merge conflicts, X shows the status of the index, and Y shows the status of the work tree. For untracked paths, XY are ??. Other status codes can be interpreted as follows:

• ' ' = unmodified

M = modified

A = added

D = deleted

R = renamed

C = copied

U = updated but unmerged

Ignored files are not listed.

 X          Y     Meaning
 -------------------------------------------------
           [MD]   not updated
 M        [ MD]   updated in index
 A        [ MD]   added to index
 D         [ M]   deleted from index
 R        [ MD]   renamed in index
 C        [ MD]   copied in index
 [MARC]           index and work tree matches
 [ MARC]     M    work tree changed since index
 [ MARC]     D    deleted in work tree
 -------------------------------------------------
 D           D    unmerged, both deleted
 A           U    unmerged, added by us
 U           D    unmerged, deleted by them
 U           A    unmerged, added by them
 D           U    unmerged, deleted by us
 A           A    unmerged, both added
 U           U    unmerged, both modified
 -------------------------------------------------
 ?           ?    untracked
 -------------------------------------------------
 

There is an alternate -z format recommended for machine parsing. In that format, the status field is the same, but some other things change. First, the is omitted from rename entries and the field order is reversed (e.g from → to becomes to from). Second, a NUL (ASCII 0) follows each filename, replacing space as a field separator and the terminating newline (but a space still separates the status field from the first filename). Third, filenames containing special characters are not specially formatted; no quoting or backslash-escaping is performed.

CONFIGURATION

The command honors color.status (or status.color --- they mean the same thing and the latter is kept for backward compatibility) and color.status.<slot> configuration variables to colorize its output.

If the config variable status.relativePaths is set to false, then all paths shown are relative to the repository root, not to the current directory.

If status.submodulesummary is set to a non zero number or true (identical to -1 or an unlimited number), the submodule summary will be enabled for the long format and a summary of commits for modified submodules will be shown (see --summary-limit option of git-submodule(1)).

SEE ALSO

gitignore(5)

AUTHOR

Written by Junio C Hamano <m[blue]gitster@pobox.comm[][1]>.

DOCUMENTATION

Documentation by David Greaves, Junio C Hamano and the git-list <m[blue]git@vger.kernel.orgm[][2]>.

GIT

Part of the git(1) suite

NOTES

1.
gitster@pobox.com
mailto:gitster@pobox.com
2.
git@vger.kernel.org
mailto:git@vger.kernel.org