Technical Notes

Manpages - git-check-attr.1

NAME

git-check-attr - Display gitattributes information

SYNOPSIS

git check-attr [--source <tree-ish>] [-a | --all | <attr>...] [--] <pathname>...
git check-attr --stdin [-z] [--source <tree-ish>] [-a | --all | <attr>...]

DESCRIPTION

For every pathname, this command will list if each attribute is unspecified, set, or unset as a gitattribute on that pathname.

OPTIONS

-a, –all

List all attributes that are associated with the specified paths. If this option is used, then unspecified attributes will not be included in the output.

–cached

Consider .gitattributes in the index only, ignoring the working tree.

–stdin

Read pathnames from the standard input, one per line, instead of from the command line.

-z

The output format is modified to be machine-parsable. If –stdin is also given, input paths are separated with a NUL character instead of a linefeed character.

–source=<tree-ish>

Check attributes against the specified tree-ish. It is common to specify the source tree by naming a commit, branch, or tag associated with it.

Interpret all preceding arguments as attributes and all following arguments as path names.

If none of –stdin, –all, or is used, the first argument will be treated as an attribute and the rest of the arguments as pathnames.

OUTPUT

The output is of the form: <path> COLON SP <attribute> COLON SP <info> LF

unless -z is in effect, in which case NUL is used as delimiter: <path> NUL <attribute> NUL <info> NUL

<path> is the path of a file being queried, <attribute> is an attribute being queried, and <info> can be either:

unspecified

when the attribute is not defined for the path.

unset

when the attribute is defined as false.

set

when the attribute is defined as true.

<value>

when a value has been assigned to the attribute.

Buffering happens as documented under the GIT_FLUSH option in *git*(1). The caller is responsible for avoiding deadlocks caused by overfilling an input buffer or reading from an empty output buffer.

EXAMPLES

In the examples, the following .gitattributes file is used:

*.java diff=java -crlf myAttr
NoMyAttr.java !myAttr
README caveat=unspecified

·

Listing a single attribute:

$ git check-attr diff org/example/MyClass.java
org/example/MyClass.java: diff: java

·

Listing multiple attributes for a file:

$ git check-attr crlf diff myAttr -- org/example/MyClass.java
org/example/MyClass.java: crlf: unset
org/example/MyClass.java: diff: java
org/example/MyClass.java: myAttr: set

·

Listing all attributes for a file:

$ git check-attr --all -- org/example/MyClass.java
org/example/MyClass.java: diff: java
org/example/MyClass.java: myAttr: set

·

Listing an attribute for multiple files:

$ git check-attr myAttr -- org/example/MyClass.java org/example/NoMyAttr.java
org/example/MyClass.java: myAttr: set
org/example/NoMyAttr.java: myAttr: unspecified

·

Not all values are equally unambiguous:

$ git check-attr caveat README
README: caveat: unspecified

SEE ALSO

*gitattributes*(5).

GIT

Part of the *git*(1) suite