I tried to put a series of GIT commands that I always use continuously togeter as batch files so that I don\'t repeat myself too much. For example, I have this batch file ca
I'm not sure if this is true for all Windows git packages, but at least some use a git.cmd
script as a wrapper around the actual git executables (for example git.exe
). So when you're batch file uses a git
command, Windows is actually running another batch file.
Unfortunately, when one batch file invokes another, by default it 'jumps' to the invoked batch file, never to return (this is for compatibility with ancient MS-DOS command processors or something).
You can solve this problem in a couple ways:
invoke git
in your batch files using the call
command to run the git.cmd
batch file and return back to yours:
call git checkout %2
call git fetch origin
rem etc...
invoke git
in your batch file using the .exe
extension explicitly to avoid the git.cmd
batch file altogether. For this to work, you might need to make sure that you have your path and other environment variables set the way git.exe
expects (that seems to be what git.cmd
does in msysgit):
git.exe checkout %2
rem etc...
Assuming you are using msysGit as your Git client you might actually want to use Bash scripts for this. You could place a bash function in your ~/.bashrc
(~ is usually your C:\Users\- see here) as follows
update_repo_branch() {
if [ $# != "2" ]; then
echo "Usage: update_repo_branch REPO BRANCH" 1>&2
return 1
fi
cd $1
git checkout $2
git fetch origin
git merge origin/$2
}
You can then run update_repo_branch myrepo cool-branch
from the mysysGit shell.
Of course, this won't be accessible from cmd.exe. You will only be able to use it within the msysGit cygwin shell.
As i see from your example you're actually trying to sync your local branch 'branchname' with origin/branchname
For this you don't need any additional scripting, you just have to use git pull
instead of sequence git checkout branchname; git fetch origin; git merge origin/branchname
take a look at the docs about tracking branches in git and their benefits.
generally speaking if you have a repo layout like this:
git branch -a
...
master
dev1
dev2
remotes/origin/master
remotes/origin/dev1
remotes/origin/dev2
And your dev1 and dev2 branches are tracking branches for origin/dev1 and origin/dev2 correspondingly then you just need to execute in repository:
git pull
This command will effectively sync up all you local tracking branches with remote ones.
for more see here:
Git pull docs
Git remote branches and tracking branches (Progit book)