git pull
has two problems:
- It merges upstream changes by default, when it's really more polite to rebase over them, unless your collaborators enjoy a commit graph that looks like bedhead.
- It only updates the branch you're currently on, which means
git push
will shout at you for being behind on branches you don't particularly care about right now.
Solve them once and for all:
git-up
might mess up your branches, or set your chest hair on fire, or be racist to your cat, I don't know. It works for me.
git-up
has a few configuration options, which use git's configuration system. Each can be set either globally or per-project. To set an option globally, append the --global
flag to git config
, which you can run anywhere:
git config --global git-up.bundler.check true
To set it within a project, run the command inside that project's directory and omit the --global
flag:
cd myproject
git config git-up.bundler.check true
If set to true
, git-up
will check your app for any new bundled gems and suggest a bundle install
if necessary.
It slows the process down slightly, and therefore defaults to false
.
If you're even lazier, you can tell git-up
to run bundle install
for you if it finds missing gems. Make sure git-up.bundler.check
is also set to true
or it won't do anything.
By default, git-up
will append the --prune
flag to the git fetch
command if your git version supports it (1.6.6 or greater), telling it to remove any remote tracking branches which no longer exist on the remote. Set this option to false
to disable it.
Normally, git-up
will only fetch remotes for which there is at least one local tracking branch. Setting this option will it git-up
always fetch from all remotes, which is useful if e.g. you use a remote to push to your CI system but never check those branches out.
If this option is set, its contents will be used by git-up
as additional arguments when it calls git rebase
. For example, setting this to --preserve-merges
will recreate your merge commits in the rebased branch.
If this option is set to false, git-up
will not rebase branches for you. Instead, it will print a message saying they are diverged and let you handle rebasing them later. This can be useful if you have a lot of in-progress work that you don't want to deal with at once, but still want to update other branches.
Runs COMMAND every time a branch is rebased or fast-forwarded, with the old head as $1 and the new head as $2. This can be used to view logs or diffs of incoming changes. For example: 'echo "changes on $1:"; git log --oneline --decorate $1..$2'