table of contents
STG-PUSH(1) | StGit Manual | STG-PUSH(1) |
NAME¶
stg-push - Push one or more patches onto the stackSYNOPSIS¶
stg push [options] [--] [<patch1>] [<patch2>] [<patch3>..<patch4>]
DESCRIPTION¶
Push one or more patches (defaulting to the first unapplied one) onto the stack. The push operation allows patch reordering by commuting them with the three-way merge algorithm. If there are conflicts while pushing a patch, those conflicts are written to the work tree, and the command halts. Conflicts raised during the push operation have to be fixed and the git add --update command run (alternatively, you may undo the conflicting push with stg undo). The command also notifies when the patch becomes empty (fully merged upstream) or is modified (three-way merged) by the push operation.OPTIONS¶
-a, --allPush all the unapplied patches.
-n NUMBER, --number NUMBER
Push the specified number of patches.
With a negative number, push all but that many patches.
--reverse
Push the patches in reverse order.
--set-tree
Push the patches, but don’t perform a merge.
Instead, the resulting tree will be identical to the tree that the patch
previously created.
This can be useful when splitting a patch by first popping the patch and
creating a new patch with some of the changes. Pushing the original patch with
--set-tree will avoid conflicts and only the remaining changes will be
in the patch.
-k, --keep
Keep the local changes.
-m, --merged
Check for patches merged upstream.
STGIT¶
Part of the StGit suite - see stg(1)03/26/2014 | StGit |