debcommit - commit changes to a package
debcommit [
options] [
--all |
files to commit]
debcommit generates a commit message based on new text in
debian/changelog, and commits the change to a package's repository. It
must be run in a working copy for the package. Supported version control
systems are:
cvs,
git,
hg (mercurial),
svk,
svn (Subversion),
baz,
bzr,
tla (arch),
darcs.
-
-c, --changelog path
- Specify an alternate location for the changelog. By default
debian/changelog is used.
-
-r, --release
- Commit a release of the package. The version number is
determined from debian/changelog, and is used to tag the package in the
repository.
Note that svn/svk tagging conventions vary, so debcommit uses
svnpath(1) to determine where the tag should be placed in the
repository.
-
-R, --release-use-changelog
- When used in conjunction with --release, if there
are uncommitted changes to the changelog then derive the commit message
from those changes rather than using the default message.
-
-m text, --message text
- Specify a commit message to use. Useful if the program
cannot determine a commit message on its own based on debian/changelog, or
if you want to override the default message.
-
-n, --noact
- Do not actually do anything, but do print the commands that
would be run.
-
-d, --diff
- Instead of committing, do print the diff of what would have
been committed if this option were not given. A typical usage scenario of
this option is the generation of patches against the current working copy
(e.g. when you don't have commit access right).
-
-C, --confirm
- Display the generated commit message and ask for
confirmation before committing it. It is also possible to edit the message
at this stage; in this case, the confirmation prompt will be re-displayed
after the editing has been performed.
-
-e, --edit
- Edit the generated commit message in your favorite editor
before committing it.
-
-a, --all
- Commit all files. This is the default operation when using
a VCS other than git.
-
-s, --strip-message,
--no-strip-message
- If this option is set and the commit message has been
derived from the changelog, the characters "* " will be stripped
from the beginning of the message.
This option is set by default and ignored if more than one line of the
message begins with "[*+-] ".
-
--sign-commit, --no-sign-commit
- If this option is set, then the commits that debcommit
creates will be signed using gnupg. Currently this is only supported by
git, hg, and bzr.
-
--sign-tags, --no-sign-tags
- If this option is set, then tags that debcommit creates
will be signed using gnupg. Currently this is only supported by git.
- --changelog-info
- If this option is set, the commit author and date will be
determined from the Maintainer and Date field of the first paragraph in
debian/changelog. This is mainly useful when using
debchange(1) with the --no-mainttrailer option.
The two configuration files
/etc/devscripts.conf and
~/.devscripts
are sourced by a shell in that order to set configuration variables. Command
line options can be used to override configuration file settings. Environment
variable settings are ignored for this purpose. The currently recognised
variables are:
- DEBCOMMIT_STRIP_MESSAGE
- If this is set to no, then it is the same as the
--no-strip-message command line parameter being used. The default
is yes.
- DEBCOMMIT_SIGN_TAGS
- If this is set to yes, then it is the same as the
--sign-tags command line parameter being used. The default is
no.
- DEBCOMMIT_SIGN_COMMITS
- If this is set to yes, then it is the same as the
--sign-commit command line parameter being used. The default is
no.
- DEBCOMMIT_RELEASE_USE_CHANGELOG
- If this is set to yes, then it is the same as the
--release-use-changelog command line parameter being used. The
default is no.
- DEBSIGN_KEYID
- This is the key id used for signing tags. If not set, a
default will be chosen by the revision control system.
-
tla / baz
- If the commit message contains more than 72 characters, a
summary will be created containing as many full words from the message as
will fit within 72 characters, followed by an ellipsis.
Each of the features described below is applicable only if the commit message
has been automatically determined from the changelog.
- git
- If only a single change is detected in the changelog,
debcommit will unfold it to a single line and behave as if
--strip-message was used.
Otherwise, the first change will be unfolded and stripped to form a summary
line and a commit message formed using the summary line followed by a
blank line and the changes as extracted from the changelog.
debcommit will then spawn an editor so that the message may be
fine-tuned before committing.
-
hg / darcs
- The first change detected in the changelog will be unfolded
to form a single line summary. If multiple changes were detected then an
editor will be spawned to allow the message to be fine-tuned.
- bzr
- If the changelog entry used for the commit message closes
any bugs then --fixes options to "bzr commit" will be
generated to associate the revision and the bugs.
This code is copyright by Joey Hess <
[email protected]>, all rights
reserved. This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. You are free to
redistribute this code under the terms of the GNU General Public License,
version 2 or later.
Joey Hess <
[email protected]>
debchange(1),
svnpath(1)