применить изменения, внесенные некоторыми существующими коммитами (Apply the changes introduced by some existing commits)
Имя (Name)
git-cherry-pick - Apply the changes introduced by some existing
commits
Синопсис (Synopsis)
git cherry-pick [--edit] [-n] [-m parent-number] [-s] [-x] [--ff]
[-S[<keyid>]] <commit>...
git cherry-pick (--continue | --skip | --abort | --quit)
Описание (Description)
Given one or more existing commits, apply the change each one
introduces, recording a new commit for each. This requires your
working tree to be clean (no modifications from the HEAD commit).
When it is not obvious how to apply a change, the following
happens:
1. The current branch and HEAD
pointer stay at the last commit
successfully made.
2. The CHERRY_PICK_HEAD
ref is set to point at the commit that
introduced the change that is difficult to apply.
3. Paths in which the change applied cleanly are updated both in
the index file and in your working tree.
4. For conflicting paths, the index file records up to three
versions, as described in the "TRUE MERGE" section of
git-merge(1). The working tree files will include a
description of the conflict bracketed by the usual conflict
markers <<<<<<<
and >>>>>>>
.
5. No other modifications are made.
See git-merge(1) for some hints on resolving such conflicts.
Параметры (Options)
<commit>...
Commits to cherry-pick. For a more complete list of ways to
spell commits, see gitrevisions(7). Sets of commits can be
passed but no traversal is done by default, as if the
--no-walk
option was specified, see git-rev-list(1). Note
that specifying a range will feed all <commit>... arguments
to a single revision walk (see a later example that uses
maint master..next).
-e, --edit
With this option, git cherry-pick will let you edit the
commit message prior to committing.
--cleanup=<mode>
This option determines how the commit message will be cleaned
up before being passed on to the commit machinery. See
git-commit(1) for more details. In particular, if the <mode>
is given a value of scissors
, scissors will be appended to
MERGE_MSG
before being passed on in the case of a conflict.
-x
When recording the commit, append a line that says "(cherry
picked from commit ...)" to the original commit message in
order to indicate which commit this change was cherry-picked
from. This is done only for cherry picks without conflicts.
Do not use this option if you are cherry-picking from your
private branch because the information is useless to the
recipient. If on the other hand you are cherry-picking
between two publicly visible branches (e.g. backporting a fix
to a maintenance branch for an older release from a
development branch), adding this information can be useful.
-r
It used to be that the command defaulted to do -x
described
above, and -r
was to disable it. Now the default is not to do
-x
so this option is a no-op.
-m parent-number, --mainline parent-number
Usually you cannot cherry-pick a merge because you do not
know which side of the merge should be considered the
mainline. This option specifies the parent number (starting
from 1) of the mainline and allows cherry-pick to replay the
change relative to the specified parent.
-n, --no-commit
Usually the command automatically creates a sequence of
commits. This flag applies the changes necessary to
cherry-pick each named commit to your working tree and the
index, without making any commit. In addition, when this
option is used, your index does not have to match the HEAD
commit. The cherry-pick is done against the beginning state
of your index.
This is useful when cherry-picking more than one commits'
effect to your index in a row.
-s, --signoff
Add a Signed-off-by
trailer at the end of the commit message.
See the signoff option in git-commit(1) for more information.
-S[<keyid>], --gpg-sign[=<keyid>], --no-gpg-sign
GPG-sign commits. The keyid
argument is optional and defaults
to the committer identity; if specified, it must be stuck to
the option without a space. --no-gpg-sign
is useful to
countermand both commit.gpgSign
configuration variable, and
earlier --gpg-sign
.
--ff
If the current HEAD is the same as the parent of the
cherry-pick'ed commit, then a fast forward to this commit
will be performed.
--allow-empty
By default, cherry-picking an empty commit will fail,
indicating that an explicit invocation of git commit
--allow-empty
is required. This option overrides that
behavior, allowing empty commits to be preserved
automatically in a cherry-pick. Note that when "--ff" is in
effect, empty commits that meet the "fast-forward"
requirement will be kept even without this option. Note also,
that use of this option only keeps commits that were
initially empty (i.e. the commit recorded the same tree as
its parent). Commits which are made empty due to a previous
commit are dropped. To force the inclusion of those commits
use --keep-redundant-commits
.
--allow-empty-message
By default, cherry-picking a commit with an empty message
will fail. This option overrides that behavior, allowing
commits with empty messages to be cherry picked.
--keep-redundant-commits
If a commit being cherry picked duplicates a commit already
in the current history, it will become empty. By default
these redundant commits cause cherry-pick
to stop so the user
can examine the commit. This option overrides that behavior
and creates an empty commit object. Implies --allow-empty
.
--strategy=<strategy>
Use the given merge strategy. Should only be used once. See
the MERGE STRATEGIES section in git-merge(1) for details.
-X<option>, --strategy-option=<option>
Pass the merge strategy-specific option through to the merge
strategy. See git-merge(1) for details.
--rerere-autoupdate, --no-rerere-autoupdate
Allow the rerere mechanism to update the index with the
result of auto-conflict resolution if possible.
SEQUENCER SUBCOMMANDS
--continue
Continue the operation in progress using the information in
.git/sequencer
. Can be used to continue after resolving
conflicts in a failed cherry-pick or revert.
--skip
Skip the current commit and continue with the rest of the
sequence.
--quit
Forget about the current operation in progress. Can be used
to clear the sequencer state after a failed cherry-pick or
revert.
--abort
Cancel the operation and return to the pre-sequence state.
Примеры (Examples)
git cherry-pick master
Apply the change introduced by the commit at the tip of the
master branch and create a new commit with this change.
git cherry-pick ..master
, git cherry-pick ^HEAD master
Apply the changes introduced by all commits that are
ancestors of master but not of HEAD to produce new commits.
git cherry-pick maint next ^master
, git cherry-pick maint
master..next
Apply the changes introduced by all commits that are
ancestors of maint or next, but not master or any of its
ancestors. Note that the latter does not mean maint
and
everything between master
and next
; specifically, maint
will
not be used if it is included in master
.
git cherry-pick master~4 master~2
Apply the changes introduced by the fifth and third last
commits pointed to by master and create 2 new commits with
these changes.
git cherry-pick -n master~1 next
Apply to the working tree and the index the changes
introduced by the second last commit pointed to by master and
by the last commit pointed to by next, but do not create any
commit with these changes.
git cherry-pick --ff ..next
If history is linear and HEAD is an ancestor of next, update
the working tree and advance the HEAD pointer to match next.
Otherwise, apply the changes introduced by those commits that
are in next but not HEAD to the current branch, creating a
new commit for each new change.
git rev-list --reverse master -- README | git cherry-pick -n
--stdin
Apply the changes introduced by all commits on the master
branch that touched README to the working tree and index, so
the result can be inspected and made into a single new commit
if suitable.
The following sequence attempts to backport a patch, bails out
because the code the patch applies to has changed too much, and
then tries again, this time exercising more care about matching
up context lines.
$ git cherry-pick topic^ (1)
$ git diff (2)
$ git reset --merge ORIG_HEAD (3)
$ git cherry-pick -Xpatience topic^ (4)
1.
apply the change that would be shown by git show topic^
. In
this example, the patch does not apply cleanly, so information
about the conflict is written to the index and working tree and
no new commit results.
2.
summarize changes to be reconciled
3.
cancel the cherry-pick. In other words, return to the
pre-cherry-pick state, preserving any local modifications you had
in the working tree.
4.
try to apply the change introduced by topic^
again, spending
extra time to avoid mistakes based on incorrectly matching
context lines.
Смотри также (See also)
git-revert(1)