This prompt is a port of the "Informative git prompt for zsh" which you can find here
A bash
prompt that displays information about the current git repository.
In particular the branch name, difference with remote branch, number of files
staged, changed, etc.
(an original idea from this blog post).
gitstatus.sh
added by AKS.
The prompt may look like the following:
(master↑3|✚1)
: on branchmaster
, ahead of remote by 3 commits, 1 file changed but not staged(status|●2)
: on branchstatus
, 2 files staged(master|✚7…)
: on branchmaster
, 7 files changed, some files untracked(master|✖2✚3)
: on branchmaster
, 2 conflicts, 3 files changed(master|⚑2)
: on branchmaster
, 2 stash entries(experimental↓2↑3|✔)
: on branchexperimental
; your branch has diverged by 3 commits, remote by 2 commits; the repository is otherwise clean(:70c2952|✔)
: not on any branch; parent commit has hash70c2952
; the repository is otherwise clean
By default, the general appearance of the prompt is::
(<branch> <branch tracking>|<local status>)
The symbols are as follows:
- Local Status Symbols
✔
: repository clean●n
: there aren
staged files✖n
: there aren
unmerged files✚n
: there aren
changed but unstaged files…n
: there aren
untracked files⚑n
: there aren
stash entries
- Branch Tracking Symbols
↑n
: ahead of remote byn
commits↓n
: behind remote byn
commits↓m↑n
: branches diverged, other bym
commits, yours byn
commits
- Branch Symbol:
When the branch name starts with a colon:
, it means it's actually a hash, not a branch (although it should be pretty clear, unless you name your branches like hashes :-)
- Clone this repository to your homedir
e.g.
git clone https://github.com/magicmonty/bash-git-prompt.git .bash-git-prompt
- Source the file
gitprompt.sh
from your~/.bashrc
config file:
# some other config in .bashrc
# gitprompt configuration
# Set config variables first
GIT_PROMPT_ONLY_IN_REPO=1
# as last entry source the gitprompt script
source ~/.bash-git-prompt/gitprompt.sh
- Go in a git repository and test it!
-
The default colors and some variables for tweaking the prompt are defined within
gitprompt.sh
, but may be overridden by copyinggit-prompt-colors.sh
to your home directory at~/.git-prompt-colors.sh
. This file may also be found in the same directory asgitprompt.sh
, but without the leading.
. -
You can use
GIT_PROMPT_START_USER
,GIT_PROMPT_START_ROOT
,GIT_PROMPT_END_USER
andGIT_PROMPT_END_ROOT
in your.git-prompt-colors.sh
to tweak your prompt. You can also override the start and end of the prompt by settingGIT_PROMPT_START
andGIT_PROMPT_END
before you source thegitprompt.sh
-
The current git repo information is obtained by the script
gitstatus.sh
orgitstatus.py
. Both scripts do the same thing, but the bash script is a tad more quick, and is used by default. If you prefer the python script (possibly because you have enhanced it), simply delete or change the name ofgitstatus.sh
. -
You can define
prompt_callback
function to tweak your prompt dynamically.
function prompt_callback {
if [ `jobs | wc -l` -ne 0 ]; then
echo -n " jobs:\j"
fi
}
-
If you want to show the git prompt only, if you are in a git repository you can set
GIT_PROMPT_ONLY_IN_REPO=1
before sourcing the gitprompt script -
You can show an additional indicator at the start of the prompt, which shows the result of the last executed command by setting
GIT_PROMPT_SHOW_LAST_COMMAND_INDICATOR=1
before sourcing the gitprompt script -
It is now possible to disable the fetching of the remote repository either globally by setting
GIT_PROMPT_FETCH_REMOTE_STATUS=0
in your .bashrc or on a per repository basis by creating a file named.bash-git-rc
with the contentFETCH_REMOTE_STATUS=0
in the root of your git repository. -
You can get help on the git prompt with the function
git_prompt_help
. Examples are available withgit_prompt_examples
.
Enjoy!