stg-new - Man Page

Create a new patch at top of the stack

Synopsis

stg new [OPTIONS] [patchname] [-- <path>...]
stg new [OPTIONS] [--name <patchname>] [-- <path>...]

Description

Create a new, empty patch on the current stack. The new patch is created on top of the currently applied patches, and is made the new top of the stack. Uncommitted changes in the work tree are not included in the patch — that is handled by stg-refresh.

The given patch name must be unique in the stack. If no name is given, one is generated from the first line of the patch’s commit message.

Patch names follow the rules for Git references with the additional constraint that patch names may not contain the / character. See git-check-ref-format(1) for details.

Patch names may start with a leading -. When specifying such a patch name on the command line, the leading - may be escaped with a single backslash as in \-patch-name to disambiguate the patch name from command line options.

An editor will be launched to edit the commit message to be used for the patch, unless the --message flag already specified one. The patchdescr.tmpl template file (if available) is used to pre-fill the editor.

Options

-n <name>, --name=<name>

Alternative to the [patchname] argument for specifying the name of the new patch. This option allows the patch name to start with an unescaped leading -.

-r,  --refresh

Refresh the new patch with changes from work tree. New patches are empty by default, but with this option the new patch will capture outstanding changes in the work tree as if stg-refresh(1) was run. Use --index to refresh from the index instead of the work tree.

-i,  --index

Instead of refreshing the patch with the current contents of the worktree, use the current contents of the index.

-F,  --force

Force refresh with staged and unstaged changes.

By default, if there are staged changes in the index along with unstaged changes in the work tree, the command will abort. This option forces the command to proceed using both the staged and unstaged changes.

--submodules

Include submodules in patch content

--no-submodules

Exclude submodules in patch content

-e,  --edit

Invoke editor for patch description

-d,  --diff

Show diff when editing patch description

-m <message>, --message=<message>

Use message instead of invoking the editor

-f <path>, --file=<path>

Use the contents of file instead of invoking the editor. Use "-" to read from stdin.

--no-verify

Disable commit-msg hook

-s[=<value>], --signoff[=<value>]

Add "Signed-off-by" message trailer.

The value is optional and defaults to the committer name and email. This option may be provided multiple times.

--ack[=<value>]

Add "Acked-by" message trailer.

The value is optional and defaults to the committer’s name and email. This option may be provided multiple times.

--review[=<value>]

Add "Reviewed-by" message trailer.

The value is optional and defaults to the committer’s name and email. This option may be provided multiple times.

--author=<name-and-email>

Set the author "name <email>"

--authname=<name>

Set the author name

--authemail=<email>

Set the author email

--authdate=<date>

Set the date the patch was authored.

Use "now" to use the current time and date.

--committer-date-is-author-date

Instead of using the current time as the committer date, use the author date of the commit as the committer date.

--save-template=<file>

Instead of running the command, just write the patch description to FILE, and exit. (If FILE is "-", write to stdout.)

When driving StGit from another program, it may be useful to first call a command with --save-template, then let the user edit the message, and then call the same command with --file.

Stgit

Part of the StGit suite - see stg(1)

Referenced By

stg(1).

04/09/2024 StGit 2.4.6 StGit Manual