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git-crecord

interactively select changes to commit or stage

Author: Andrej Shadura <andrew@shadura.me>
Date: 2022-03-20
Version: 20230226.0
Manual section:1
Manual group:Git

SYNOPSIS

git crecord [-h]

git crecord [-v] [--author=AUTHOR] [--date=DATE] [-m MESSAGE] [--amend] [-s]

DESCRIPTION

git-crecord is a Git subcommand which allows users to interactively select changes to commit or stage using a ncurses-based text user interface. It is a port of the Mercurial crecord extension originally written by Mark Edgington.

git-crecord allows you to interactively choose among the changes you have made (with line-level granularity), and commit, stage or unstage only those changes you select. After committing or staging the selected changes, the unselected changes are still present in your working copy, so you can use crecord multiple times to split large changes into several smaller changesets.

OPTIONS

--author=AUTHOR

Override the commit author. Specify an explicit author using the standard A U Thor <author@example.com> format. Otherwise AUTHOR is assumed to be a pattern and is used to search for an existing commit by that author (i.e. rev-list --all -i --author=AUTHOR); the commit author is then copied from the first such commit found.

--date=DATE

Override the author date used in the commit.

-m MESSAGE, --message=MESSAGE

Use the given MESSAGE as the commit message. If multiple -m options are given, their values are concatenated as separate paragraphs.

-C COMMIT, --reuse-message=COMMIT

Reuse the commit message and the authorship information (including the timestamp) of the given commit.

-c COMMIT, --reedit-message=COMMIT

Like -C, but invoke an editor to allow the user to edit the commit message.

--fixup=COMMIT

Automatically create the commit message by prepending "fixup!" to the commit message of the given commit.

--reset-author

When used with -C/-c/--amend options, or when committing after a conflicting cherry-pick, declare that the authorship of the resulting commit now belongs to the committer. This also renews the author timestamp.

-s, --signoff

Add Signed-off-by line by the committer at the end of the commit log message.

--amend

Amend previous commit. Replace the tip of the current branch by creating a new commit. The message from the original commit is used as the starting point, instead of an empty message, when no other message is specified from the command line via -m option. The new commit has the same parents and author as the current one.

-S KEY-ID, --gpg-sign KEY-ID

GPG-sign commits. The KEY-ID argument is optional and defaults to the committer identity.

--no-gpg-sign

Don’t sign this commit even if commit.gpgSign is set.

-v, --verbose

Be more verbose.

--debug

Show all sorts of debugging information. Implies --verbose.

-h

Show this help message and exit.

SEE ALSO

git-commit(1)