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1 git-format-patch(1)
2 ===================
3
4 NAME
5 ----
6 git-format-patch - Prepare patches for e-mail submission
7
8
9 SYNOPSIS
10 --------
11 [verse]
12 'git format-patch' [-k] [(-o|--output-directory) <dir> | --stdout]
13 [--no-thread | --thread[=<style>]]
14 [(--attach|--inline)[=<boundary>] | --no-attach]
15 [-s | --signoff]
16 [--signature=<signature> | --no-signature]
17 [--signature-file=<file>]
18 [-n | --numbered | -N | --no-numbered]
19 [--start-number <n>] [--numbered-files]
20 [--in-reply-to=<message id>] [--suffix=.<sfx>]
21 [--ignore-if-in-upstream] [--always]
22 [--cover-from-description=<mode>]
23 [--rfc] [--subject-prefix=<subject prefix>]
24 [(--reroll-count|-v) <n>]
25 [--to=<email>] [--cc=<email>]
26 [--[no-]cover-letter] [--quiet]
27 [--[no-]encode-email-headers]
28 [--no-notes | --notes[=<ref>]]
29 [--interdiff=<previous>]
30 [--range-diff=<previous> [--creation-factor=<percent>]]
31 [--filename-max-length=<n>]
32 [--progress]
33 [<common diff options>]
34 [ <since> | <revision range> ]
35
36 DESCRIPTION
37 -----------
38
39 Prepare each non-merge commit with its "patch" in
40 one "message" per commit, formatted to resemble a UNIX mailbox.
41 The output of this command is convenient for e-mail submission or
42 for use with 'git am'.
43
44 A "message" generated by the command consists of three parts:
45
46 * A brief metadata header that begins with `From <commit>`
47 with a fixed `Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001` datestamp to help programs
48 like "file(1)" to recognize that the file is an output from this
49 command, fields that record the author identity, the author date,
50 and the title of the change (taken from the first paragraph of the
51 commit log message).
52
53 * The second and subsequent paragraphs of the commit log message.
54
55 * The "patch", which is the "diff -p --stat" output (see
56 linkgit:git-diff[1]) between the commit and its parent.
57
58 The log message and the patch is separated by a line with a
59 three-dash line.
60
61 There are two ways to specify which commits to operate on.
62
63 1. A single commit, <since>, specifies that the commits leading
64 to the tip of the current branch that are not in the history
65 that leads to the <since> to be output.
66
67 2. Generic <revision range> expression (see "SPECIFYING
68 REVISIONS" section in linkgit:gitrevisions[7]) means the
69 commits in the specified range.
70
71 The first rule takes precedence in the case of a single <commit>. To
72 apply the second rule, i.e., format everything since the beginning of
73 history up until <commit>, use the `--root` option: `git format-patch
74 --root <commit>`. If you want to format only <commit> itself, you
75 can do this with `git format-patch -1 <commit>`.
76
77 By default, each output file is numbered sequentially from 1, and uses the
78 first line of the commit message (massaged for pathname safety) as
79 the filename. With the `--numbered-files` option, the output file names
80 will only be numbers, without the first line of the commit appended.
81 The names of the output files are printed to standard
82 output, unless the `--stdout` option is specified.
83
84 If `-o` is specified, output files are created in <dir>. Otherwise
85 they are created in the current working directory. The default path
86 can be set with the `format.outputDirectory` configuration option.
87 The `-o` option takes precedence over `format.outputDirectory`.
88 To store patches in the current working directory even when
89 `format.outputDirectory` points elsewhere, use `-o .`. All directory
90 components will be created.
91
92 By default, the subject of a single patch is "[PATCH] " followed by
93 the concatenation of lines from the commit message up to the first blank
94 line (see the DISCUSSION section of linkgit:git-commit[1]).
95
96 When multiple patches are output, the subject prefix will instead be
97 "[PATCH n/m] ". To force 1/1 to be added for a single patch, use `-n`.
98 To omit patch numbers from the subject, use `-N`.
99
100 If given `--thread`, `git-format-patch` will generate `In-Reply-To` and
101 `References` headers to make the second and subsequent patch mails appear
102 as replies to the first mail; this also generates a `Message-Id` header to
103 reference.
104
105 OPTIONS
106 -------
107 :git-format-patch: 1
108 include::diff-options.txt[]
109
110 -<n>::
111 Prepare patches from the topmost <n> commits.
112
113 -o <dir>::
114 --output-directory <dir>::
115 Use <dir> to store the resulting files, instead of the
116 current working directory.
117
118 -n::
119 --numbered::
120 Name output in '[PATCH n/m]' format, even with a single patch.
121
122 -N::
123 --no-numbered::
124 Name output in '[PATCH]' format.
125
126 --start-number <n>::
127 Start numbering the patches at <n> instead of 1.
128
129 --numbered-files::
130 Output file names will be a simple number sequence
131 without the default first line of the commit appended.
132
133 -k::
134 --keep-subject::
135 Do not strip/add '[PATCH]' from the first line of the
136 commit log message.
137
138 -s::
139 --signoff::
140 Add a `Signed-off-by` trailer to the commit message, using
141 the committer identity of yourself.
142 See the signoff option in linkgit:git-commit[1] for more information.
143
144 --stdout::
145 Print all commits to the standard output in mbox format,
146 instead of creating a file for each one.
147
148 --attach[=<boundary>]::
149 Create multipart/mixed attachment, the first part of
150 which is the commit message and the patch itself in the
151 second part, with `Content-Disposition: attachment`.
152
153 --no-attach::
154 Disable the creation of an attachment, overriding the
155 configuration setting.
156
157 --inline[=<boundary>]::
158 Create multipart/mixed attachment, the first part of
159 which is the commit message and the patch itself in the
160 second part, with `Content-Disposition: inline`.
161
162 --thread[=<style>]::
163 --no-thread::
164 Controls addition of `In-Reply-To` and `References` headers to
165 make the second and subsequent mails appear as replies to the
166 first. Also controls generation of the `Message-Id` header to
167 reference.
168 +
169 The optional <style> argument can be either `shallow` or `deep`.
170 'shallow' threading makes every mail a reply to the head of the
171 series, where the head is chosen from the cover letter, the
172 `--in-reply-to`, and the first patch mail, in this order. 'deep'
173 threading makes every mail a reply to the previous one.
174 +
175 The default is `--no-thread`, unless the `format.thread` configuration
176 is set. If `--thread` is specified without a style, it defaults to the
177 style specified by `format.thread` if any, or else `shallow`.
178 +
179 Beware that the default for 'git send-email' is to thread emails
180 itself. If you want `git format-patch` to take care of threading, you
181 will want to ensure that threading is disabled for `git send-email`.
182
183 --in-reply-to=<message id>::
184 Make the first mail (or all the mails with `--no-thread`) appear as a
185 reply to the given <message id>, which avoids breaking threads to
186 provide a new patch series.
187
188 --ignore-if-in-upstream::
189 Do not include a patch that matches a commit in
190 <until>..<since>. This will examine all patches reachable
191 from <since> but not from <until> and compare them with the
192 patches being generated, and any patch that matches is
193 ignored.
194
195 --always::
196 Include patches for commits that do not introduce any change,
197 which are omitted by default.
198
199 --cover-from-description=<mode>::
200 Controls which parts of the cover letter will be automatically
201 populated using the branch's description.
202 +
203 If `<mode>` is `message` or `default`, the cover letter subject will be
204 populated with placeholder text. The body of the cover letter will be
205 populated with the branch's description. This is the default mode when
206 no configuration nor command line option is specified.
207 +
208 If `<mode>` is `subject`, the first paragraph of the branch description will
209 populate the cover letter subject. The remainder of the description will
210 populate the body of the cover letter.
211 +
212 If `<mode>` is `auto`, if the first paragraph of the branch description
213 is greater than 100 bytes, then the mode will be `message`, otherwise
214 `subject` will be used.
215 +
216 If `<mode>` is `none`, both the cover letter subject and body will be
217 populated with placeholder text.
218
219 --subject-prefix=<subject prefix>::
220 Instead of the standard '[PATCH]' prefix in the subject
221 line, instead use '[<subject prefix>]'. This
222 allows for useful naming of a patch series, and can be
223 combined with the `--numbered` option.
224
225 --filename-max-length=<n>::
226 Instead of the standard 64 bytes, chomp the generated output
227 filenames at around '<n>' bytes (too short a value will be
228 silently raised to a reasonable length). Defaults to the
229 value of the `format.filenameMaxLength` configuration
230 variable, or 64 if unconfigured.
231
232 --rfc::
233 Alias for `--subject-prefix="RFC PATCH"`. RFC means "Request For
234 Comments"; use this when sending an experimental patch for
235 discussion rather than application.
236
237 -v <n>::
238 --reroll-count=<n>::
239 Mark the series as the <n>-th iteration of the topic. The
240 output filenames have `v<n>` prepended to them, and the
241 subject prefix ("PATCH" by default, but configurable via the
242 `--subject-prefix` option) has ` v<n>` appended to it. E.g.
243 `--reroll-count=4` may produce `v4-0001-add-makefile.patch`
244 file that has "Subject: [PATCH v4 1/20] Add makefile" in it.
245 `<n>` does not have to be an integer (e.g. "--reroll-count=4.4",
246 or "--reroll-count=4rev2" are allowed), but the downside of
247 using such a reroll-count is that the range-diff/interdiff
248 with the previous version does not state exactly which
249 version the new interation is compared against.
250
251 --to=<email>::
252 Add a `To:` header to the email headers. This is in addition
253 to any configured headers, and may be used multiple times.
254 The negated form `--no-to` discards all `To:` headers added so
255 far (from config or command line).
256
257 --cc=<email>::
258 Add a `Cc:` header to the email headers. This is in addition
259 to any configured headers, and may be used multiple times.
260 The negated form `--no-cc` discards all `Cc:` headers added so
261 far (from config or command line).
262
263 --from::
264 --from=<ident>::
265 Use `ident` in the `From:` header of each commit email. If the
266 author ident of the commit is not textually identical to the
267 provided `ident`, place a `From:` header in the body of the
268 message with the original author. If no `ident` is given, use
269 the committer ident.
270 +
271 Note that this option is only useful if you are actually sending the
272 emails and want to identify yourself as the sender, but retain the
273 original author (and `git am` will correctly pick up the in-body
274 header). Note also that `git send-email` already handles this
275 transformation for you, and this option should not be used if you are
276 feeding the result to `git send-email`.
277
278 --add-header=<header>::
279 Add an arbitrary header to the email headers. This is in addition
280 to any configured headers, and may be used multiple times.
281 For example, `--add-header="Organization: git-foo"`.
282 The negated form `--no-add-header` discards *all* (`To:`,
283 `Cc:`, and custom) headers added so far from config or command
284 line.
285
286 --[no-]cover-letter::
287 In addition to the patches, generate a cover letter file
288 containing the branch description, shortlog and the overall diffstat. You can
289 fill in a description in the file before sending it out.
290
291 --encode-email-headers::
292 --no-encode-email-headers::
293 Encode email headers that have non-ASCII characters with
294 "Q-encoding" (described in RFC 2047), instead of outputting the
295 headers verbatim. Defaults to the value of the
296 `format.encodeEmailHeaders` configuration variable.
297
298 --interdiff=<previous>::
299 As a reviewer aid, insert an interdiff into the cover letter,
300 or as commentary of the lone patch of a 1-patch series, showing
301 the differences between the previous version of the patch series and
302 the series currently being formatted. `previous` is a single revision
303 naming the tip of the previous series which shares a common base with
304 the series being formatted (for example `git format-patch
305 --cover-letter --interdiff=feature/v1 -3 feature/v2`).
306
307 --range-diff=<previous>::
308 As a reviewer aid, insert a range-diff (see linkgit:git-range-diff[1])
309 into the cover letter, or as commentary of the lone patch of a
310 1-patch series, showing the differences between the previous
311 version of the patch series and the series currently being formatted.
312 `previous` can be a single revision naming the tip of the previous
313 series if it shares a common base with the series being formatted (for
314 example `git format-patch --cover-letter --range-diff=feature/v1 -3
315 feature/v2`), or a revision range if the two versions of the series are
316 disjoint (for example `git format-patch --cover-letter
317 --range-diff=feature/v1~3..feature/v1 -3 feature/v2`).
318 +
319 Note that diff options passed to the command affect how the primary
320 product of `format-patch` is generated, and they are not passed to
321 the underlying `range-diff` machinery used to generate the cover-letter
322 material (this may change in the future).
323
324 --creation-factor=<percent>::
325 Used with `--range-diff`, tweak the heuristic which matches up commits
326 between the previous and current series of patches by adjusting the
327 creation/deletion cost fudge factor. See linkgit:git-range-diff[1])
328 for details.
329
330 --notes[=<ref>]::
331 --no-notes::
332 Append the notes (see linkgit:git-notes[1]) for the commit
333 after the three-dash line.
334 +
335 The expected use case of this is to write supporting explanation for
336 the commit that does not belong to the commit log message proper,
337 and include it with the patch submission. While one can simply write
338 these explanations after `format-patch` has run but before sending,
339 keeping them as Git notes allows them to be maintained between versions
340 of the patch series (but see the discussion of the `notes.rewrite`
341 configuration options in linkgit:git-notes[1] to use this workflow).
342 +
343 The default is `--no-notes`, unless the `format.notes` configuration is
344 set.
345
346 --[no-]signature=<signature>::
347 Add a signature to each message produced. Per RFC 3676 the signature
348 is separated from the body by a line with '-- ' on it. If the
349 signature option is omitted the signature defaults to the Git version
350 number.
351
352 --signature-file=<file>::
353 Works just like --signature except the signature is read from a file.
354
355 --suffix=.<sfx>::
356 Instead of using `.patch` as the suffix for generated
357 filenames, use specified suffix. A common alternative is
358 `--suffix=.txt`. Leaving this empty will remove the `.patch`
359 suffix.
360 +
361 Note that the leading character does not have to be a dot; for example,
362 you can use `--suffix=-patch` to get `0001-description-of-my-change-patch`.
363
364 -q::
365 --quiet::
366 Do not print the names of the generated files to standard output.
367
368 --no-binary::
369 Do not output contents of changes in binary files, instead
370 display a notice that those files changed. Patches generated
371 using this option cannot be applied properly, but they are
372 still useful for code review.
373
374 --zero-commit::
375 Output an all-zero hash in each patch's From header instead
376 of the hash of the commit.
377
378 --[no-]base[=<commit>]::
379 Record the base tree information to identify the state the
380 patch series applies to. See the BASE TREE INFORMATION section
381 below for details. If <commit> is "auto", a base commit is
382 automatically chosen. The `--no-base` option overrides a
383 `format.useAutoBase` configuration.
384
385 --root::
386 Treat the revision argument as a <revision range>, even if it
387 is just a single commit (that would normally be treated as a
388 <since>). Note that root commits included in the specified
389 range are always formatted as creation patches, independently
390 of this flag.
391
392 --progress::
393 Show progress reports on stderr as patches are generated.
394
395 CONFIGURATION
396 -------------
397 You can specify extra mail header lines to be added to each message,
398 defaults for the subject prefix and file suffix, number patches when
399 outputting more than one patch, add "To:" or "Cc:" headers, configure
400 attachments, change the patch output directory, and sign off patches
401 with configuration variables.
402
403 ------------
404 [format]
405 headers = "Organization: git-foo\n"
406 subjectPrefix = CHANGE
407 suffix = .txt
408 numbered = auto
409 to = <email>
410 cc = <email>
411 attach [ = mime-boundary-string ]
412 signOff = true
413 outputDirectory = <directory>
414 coverLetter = auto
415 coverFromDescription = auto
416 ------------
417
418
419 DISCUSSION
420 ----------
421
422 The patch produced by 'git format-patch' is in UNIX mailbox format,
423 with a fixed "magic" time stamp to indicate that the file is output
424 from format-patch rather than a real mailbox, like so:
425
426 ------------
427 From 8f72bad1baf19a53459661343e21d6491c3908d3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
428 From: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
429 Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2010 11:42:54 -0700
430 Subject: [PATCH] =?UTF-8?q?[IA64]=20Put=20ia64=20config=20files=20on=20the=20?=
431 =?UTF-8?q?Uwe=20Kleine-K=C3=B6nig=20diet?=
432 MIME-Version: 1.0
433 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
434 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
435
436 arch/arm config files were slimmed down using a python script
437 (See commit c2330e286f68f1c408b4aa6515ba49d57f05beae comment)
438
439 Do the same for ia64 so we can have sleek & trim looking
440 ...
441 ------------
442
443 Typically it will be placed in a MUA's drafts folder, edited to add
444 timely commentary that should not go in the changelog after the three
445 dashes, and then sent as a message whose body, in our example, starts
446 with "arch/arm config files were...". On the receiving end, readers
447 can save interesting patches in a UNIX mailbox and apply them with
448 linkgit:git-am[1].
449
450 When a patch is part of an ongoing discussion, the patch generated by
451 'git format-patch' can be tweaked to take advantage of the 'git am
452 --scissors' feature. After your response to the discussion comes a
453 line that consists solely of "`-- >8 --`" (scissors and perforation),
454 followed by the patch with unnecessary header fields removed:
455
456 ------------
457 ...
458 > So we should do such-and-such.
459
460 Makes sense to me. How about this patch?
461
462 -- >8 --
463 Subject: [IA64] Put ia64 config files on the Uwe Kleine-König diet
464
465 arch/arm config files were slimmed down using a python script
466 ...
467 ------------
468
469 When sending a patch this way, most often you are sending your own
470 patch, so in addition to the "`From $SHA1 $magic_timestamp`" marker you
471 should omit `From:` and `Date:` lines from the patch file. The patch
472 title is likely to be different from the subject of the discussion the
473 patch is in response to, so it is likely that you would want to keep
474 the Subject: line, like the example above.
475
476 Checking for patch corruption
477 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
478 Many mailers if not set up properly will corrupt whitespace. Here are
479 two common types of corruption:
480
481 * Empty context lines that do not have _any_ whitespace.
482
483 * Non-empty context lines that have one extra whitespace at the
484 beginning.
485
486 One way to test if your MUA is set up correctly is:
487
488 * Send the patch to yourself, exactly the way you would, except
489 with To: and Cc: lines that do not contain the list and
490 maintainer address.
491
492 * Save that patch to a file in UNIX mailbox format. Call it a.patch,
493 say.
494
495 * Apply it:
496
497 $ git fetch <project> master:test-apply
498 $ git switch test-apply
499 $ git restore --source=HEAD --staged --worktree :/
500 $ git am a.patch
501
502 If it does not apply correctly, there can be various reasons.
503
504 * The patch itself does not apply cleanly. That is _bad_ but
505 does not have much to do with your MUA. You might want to rebase
506 the patch with linkgit:git-rebase[1] before regenerating it in
507 this case.
508
509 * The MUA corrupted your patch; "am" would complain that
510 the patch does not apply. Look in the .git/rebase-apply/ subdirectory and
511 see what 'patch' file contains and check for the common
512 corruption patterns mentioned above.
513
514 * While at it, check the 'info' and 'final-commit' files as well.
515 If what is in 'final-commit' is not exactly what you would want to
516 see in the commit log message, it is very likely that the
517 receiver would end up hand editing the log message when applying
518 your patch. Things like "Hi, this is my first patch.\n" in the
519 patch e-mail should come after the three-dash line that signals
520 the end of the commit message.
521
522 MUA-SPECIFIC HINTS
523 ------------------
524 Here are some hints on how to successfully submit patches inline using
525 various mailers.
526
527 GMail
528 ~~~~~
529 GMail does not have any way to turn off line wrapping in the web
530 interface, so it will mangle any emails that you send. You can however
531 use "git send-email" and send your patches through the GMail SMTP server, or
532 use any IMAP email client to connect to the google IMAP server and forward
533 the emails through that.
534
535 For hints on using 'git send-email' to send your patches through the
536 GMail SMTP server, see the EXAMPLE section of linkgit:git-send-email[1].
537
538 For hints on submission using the IMAP interface, see the EXAMPLE
539 section of linkgit:git-imap-send[1].
540
541 Thunderbird
542 ~~~~~~~~~~~
543 By default, Thunderbird will both wrap emails as well as flag
544 them as being 'format=flowed', both of which will make the
545 resulting email unusable by Git.
546
547 There are three different approaches: use an add-on to turn off line wraps,
548 configure Thunderbird to not mangle patches, or use
549 an external editor to keep Thunderbird from mangling the patches.
550
551 Approach #1 (add-on)
552 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
553
554 Install the Toggle Word Wrap add-on that is available from
555 https://addons.mozilla.org/thunderbird/addon/toggle-word-wrap/
556 It adds a menu entry "Enable Word Wrap" in the composer's "Options" menu
557 that you can tick off. Now you can compose the message as you otherwise do
558 (cut + paste, 'git format-patch' | 'git imap-send', etc), but you have to
559 insert line breaks manually in any text that you type.
560
561 Approach #2 (configuration)
562 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
563 Three steps:
564
565 1. Configure your mail server composition as plain text:
566 Edit...Account Settings...Composition & Addressing,
567 uncheck "Compose Messages in HTML".
568
569 2. Configure your general composition window to not wrap.
570 +
571 In Thunderbird 2:
572 Edit..Preferences..Composition, wrap plain text messages at 0
573 +
574 In Thunderbird 3:
575 Edit..Preferences..Advanced..Config Editor. Search for
576 "mail.wrap_long_lines".
577 Toggle it to make sure it is set to `false`. Also, search for
578 "mailnews.wraplength" and set the value to 0.
579
580 3. Disable the use of format=flowed:
581 Edit..Preferences..Advanced..Config Editor. Search for
582 "mailnews.send_plaintext_flowed".
583 Toggle it to make sure it is set to `false`.
584
585 After that is done, you should be able to compose email as you
586 otherwise would (cut + paste, 'git format-patch' | 'git imap-send', etc),
587 and the patches will not be mangled.
588
589 Approach #3 (external editor)
590 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
591
592 The following Thunderbird extensions are needed:
593 AboutConfig from http://aboutconfig.mozdev.org/ and
594 External Editor from http://globs.org/articles.php?lng=en&pg=8
595
596 1. Prepare the patch as a text file using your method of choice.
597
598 2. Before opening a compose window, use Edit->Account Settings to
599 uncheck the "Compose messages in HTML format" setting in the
600 "Composition & Addressing" panel of the account to be used to
601 send the patch.
602
603 3. In the main Thunderbird window, 'before' you open the compose
604 window for the patch, use Tools->about:config to set the
605 following to the indicated values:
606 +
607 ----------
608 mailnews.send_plaintext_flowed => false
609 mailnews.wraplength => 0
610 ----------
611
612 4. Open a compose window and click the external editor icon.
613
614 5. In the external editor window, read in the patch file and exit
615 the editor normally.
616
617 Side note: it may be possible to do step 2 with
618 about:config and the following settings but no one's tried yet.
619
620 ----------
621 mail.html_compose => false
622 mail.identity.default.compose_html => false
623 mail.identity.id?.compose_html => false
624 ----------
625
626 There is a script in contrib/thunderbird-patch-inline which can help
627 you include patches with Thunderbird in an easy way. To use it, do the
628 steps above and then use the script as the external editor.
629
630 KMail
631 ~~~~~
632 This should help you to submit patches inline using KMail.
633
634 1. Prepare the patch as a text file.
635
636 2. Click on New Mail.
637
638 3. Go under "Options" in the Composer window and be sure that
639 "Word wrap" is not set.
640
641 4. Use Message -> Insert file... and insert the patch.
642
643 5. Back in the compose window: add whatever other text you wish to the
644 message, complete the addressing and subject fields, and press send.
645
646 BASE TREE INFORMATION
647 ---------------------
648
649 The base tree information block is used for maintainers or third party
650 testers to know the exact state the patch series applies to. It consists
651 of the 'base commit', which is a well-known commit that is part of the
652 stable part of the project history everybody else works off of, and zero
653 or more 'prerequisite patches', which are well-known patches in flight
654 that is not yet part of the 'base commit' that need to be applied on top
655 of 'base commit' in topological order before the patches can be applied.
656
657 The 'base commit' is shown as "base-commit: " followed by the 40-hex of
658 the commit object name. A 'prerequisite patch' is shown as
659 "prerequisite-patch-id: " followed by the 40-hex 'patch id', which can
660 be obtained by passing the patch through the `git patch-id --stable`
661 command.
662
663 Imagine that on top of the public commit P, you applied well-known
664 patches X, Y and Z from somebody else, and then built your three-patch
665 series A, B, C, the history would be like:
666
667 ................................................
668 ---P---X---Y---Z---A---B---C
669 ................................................
670
671 With `git format-patch --base=P -3 C` (or variants thereof, e.g. with
672 `--cover-letter` or using `Z..C` instead of `-3 C` to specify the
673 range), the base tree information block is shown at the end of the
674 first message the command outputs (either the first patch, or the
675 cover letter), like this:
676
677 ------------
678 base-commit: P
679 prerequisite-patch-id: X
680 prerequisite-patch-id: Y
681 prerequisite-patch-id: Z
682 ------------
683
684 For non-linear topology, such as
685
686 ................................................
687 ---P---X---A---M---C
688 \ /
689 Y---Z---B
690 ................................................
691
692 You can also use `git format-patch --base=P -3 C` to generate patches
693 for A, B and C, and the identifiers for P, X, Y, Z are appended at the
694 end of the first message.
695
696 If set `--base=auto` in cmdline, it will automatically compute
697 the base commit as the merge base of tip commit of the remote-tracking
698 branch and revision-range specified in cmdline.
699 For a local branch, you need to make it to track a remote branch by `git branch
700 --set-upstream-to` before using this option.
701
702 EXAMPLES
703 --------
704
705 * Extract commits between revisions R1 and R2, and apply them on top of
706 the current branch using 'git am' to cherry-pick them:
707 +
708 ------------
709 $ git format-patch -k --stdout R1..R2 | git am -3 -k
710 ------------
711
712 * Extract all commits which are in the current branch but not in the
713 origin branch:
714 +
715 ------------
716 $ git format-patch origin
717 ------------
718 +
719 For each commit a separate file is created in the current directory.
720
721 * Extract all commits that lead to 'origin' since the inception of the
722 project:
723 +
724 ------------
725 $ git format-patch --root origin
726 ------------
727
728 * The same as the previous one:
729 +
730 ------------
731 $ git format-patch -M -B origin
732 ------------
733 +
734 Additionally, it detects and handles renames and complete rewrites
735 intelligently to produce a renaming patch. A renaming patch reduces
736 the amount of text output, and generally makes it easier to review.
737 Note that non-Git "patch" programs won't understand renaming patches, so
738 use it only when you know the recipient uses Git to apply your patch.
739
740 * Extract three topmost commits from the current branch and format them
741 as e-mailable patches:
742 +
743 ------------
744 $ git format-patch -3
745 ------------
746
747 CAVEATS
748 -------
749
750 Note that `format-patch` will omit merge commits from the output, even
751 if they are part of the requested range. A simple "patch" does not
752 include enough information for the receiving end to reproduce the same
753 merge commit.
754
755 SEE ALSO
756 --------
757 linkgit:git-am[1], linkgit:git-send-email[1]
758
759 GIT
760 ---
761 Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite