Reputation: 102865
Is there a way to execute Git commands against a repository without being in that repository?
For example something like this: git /home/repo log
?
Please do not tell me to cd
to it. I'm doing this via an exec
call.
Upvotes: 258
Views: 86602
Reputation: 6137
Use -C
as the first argument to git:
git -C /home/repo log
Per the docs, the effect of this is:
-C <path>
Run as if git was started in
<path>
instead of the current working directory. ...
This is almost equivalent to --git-dir
and --work-tree
without appending the usual .git
folder. However, the options --git-dir
and --work-tree
do not exist to access the repository from outside the work tree; they are used to move the .git
somewhere else, and they are much more complicated to use in some cases.
For instance, to get the log of /home/repo/subdir
only:
git -C /home/repo/subdir log .
or
git -C /home/repo log subdir
It is not possible to use log .
with --git-dir
or --work-tree
. The path must be processed to extract the subpath relative to the top of the work tree, and even in that case, git will not recognize it as a path if you do not use the --
option, so the only possible way is:
git --git-dir /home/repo/.git log -- subdir
Furthermore, --work-tree
does not work at all with the log
subcommand with my version (git 1.9.1). It is just ignored:
git --git-dir /home/repo/.git --work-tree /home/repo/subdir log -- subdir
git --git-dir /home/repo/.git --work-tree /home/repo/whatever log -- subdir
I do not even understand if this is a bug or a feature... as usual with many git design choices.
Upvotes: 424
Reputation: 71
For any git command, you can do:
git --git-dir=<PATH-TO-REPO>/.git --work-tree=<PATH-TO-REPO> <git-command>
For example, if you want to do a git status:
git --git-dir=/home/myrepo/.git --work-tree=/home/myrepo/ status
or if you want to check the branch the repo is in:
git --git-dir=/home/myrepo/.git --work-tree=/home/myrepo/ rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 34427
Try:
git --git-dir=/home/repo/.git log
It is important to give the path all the way up to the .git directory of your repository. Otherwise you will get only an error message that says something like:
fatal: Not a git repository
Upvotes: 118
Reputation: 857
I have tried many times! I finally got it!
git -C dir --no-pager log --format='%an' -1 filename
do remember, please don't add .git to your
-C dir
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 4121
This is similar to @max's answer. Unfortunately, --git-dir didn't do what I needed. edit In retrospect, another [previous] answer I hadn't read suggested using --work-tree
. I'm not sure whether using environment or flags is more appropriate so I'll leave my answer in case someone finds use in it, but I'll be switching to use --work-tree
/ --git-dir
.
There's two repos, one inside the other but not a submodule; the outer repo ignores it:
tools (outer repo)
gcc/4.9.2 (inner repo)
What I wanted was the output of git rev-parse --show-prefix
relative to the outer repo. Here's what I came up with (bash syntax; split across lines for readability):
prefix_dir=$(cd ..; git rev-parse --show-toplevel)
prefix_dir=$(GIT_WORK_TREE=${prefix_dir} git rev-parse --show-prefix)
When executed from within 4.9.2 it produces the string gcc/4.9.2
.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 3172
In fact you need to use --git-dir and --work-tree together. Here is an example:
local [] Desktop: mkdir git
local [] Desktop: cd git
local [] git: touch README.txt
local [] git: git init
Initialized empty Git repository in /Users/albert/Desktop/git/.git/
local [] git: cd ..
local [] Desktop: git --work-tree=git --git-dir=git/.git add .
local [] Desktop: git --work-tree=git --git-dir=git/.git commit -a -m 'initial commit, called from outside the git directory'
[master (root-commit) ee951b1] initial commit, called from outside the git directory
0 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 README.txt
local [] Desktop: cd git
local [] git: git log --pretty=oneline
ee951b161053e0e0948f9e2a36bfbb60f9c87abe initial commit, called from outside the git di
Upvotes: 18