[man] viewer = konqueror viewer = woman
git-help - Display help information about Git
git help [-a|--all] [--[no-]verbose] [--[no-]external-commands] [--[no-]aliases] git help [[-i|--info] [-m|--man] [-w|--web]] [<command>|<doc>] git help [-g|--guides] git help [-c|--config] git help [--user-interfaces] git help [--developer-interfaces]
With no options and no <command>
or <doc>
given, the synopsis of the git
command and a list of the most commonly used Git commands are printed on the standard output.
If the option --all
or -a
is given, all available commands are printed on the standard output.
If the option --guides
or -g
is given, a list of the Git concept guides is also printed on the standard output.
If a command or other documentation is given, the relevant manual page will be brought up. The man
program is used by default for this purpose, but this can be overridden by other options or configuration variables.
If an alias is given, git shows the definition of the alias on standard output. To get the manual page for the aliased command, use git <command> --help
.
Note that git --help ...
is identical to git help ...
because the former is internally converted into the latter.
To display the git[1] man page, use git help git
.
This page can be displayed with git help help
or git help --help
Prints all the available commands on the standard output.
When used with --all
, exclude the listing of external "git-*" commands found in the $PATH
.
When used with --all
, exclude the listing of configured aliases.
When used with --all
print description for all recognized commands. This is the default.
List all available configuration variables. This is a short summary of the list in git-config[1].
Prints a list of the Git concept guides on the standard output.
Prints a list of the repository, command and file interfaces documentation on the standard output.
In-repository file interfaces such as .git/info/exclude
are documented here (see gitrepository-layout[5]), as well as in-tree configuration such as .mailmap
(see gitmailmap[5]).
This section of the documentation also covers general or widespread user-interface conventions (e.g. gitcli[7]), and pseudo-configuration such as the file-based .git/hooks/*
interface described in githooks[5].
Print list of file formats, protocols and other developer interfaces documentation on the standard output.
Display manual page for the command in the info
format. The info
program will be used for that purpose.
Display manual page for the command in the man
format. This option may be used to override a value set in the help.format
configuration variable.
By default the man
program will be used to display the manual page, but the man.viewer
configuration variable may be used to choose other display programs (see below).
Display manual page for the command in the web
(HTML) format. A web browser will be used for that purpose.
The web browser can be specified using the configuration variable help.browser
, or web.browser
if the former is not set. If none of these config variables is set, the git web--browse
helper script (called by git help
) will pick a suitable default. See git-web--browse[1] for more information about this.
If no command-line option is passed, the help.format
configuration variable will be checked. The following values are supported for this variable; they make git help
behave as their corresponding command- line option:
"man" corresponds to -m|--man
,
"info" corresponds to -i|--info
,
"web" or "html" correspond to -w|--web
.
The help.browser
, web.browser
and browser.<tool>.path
will also be checked if the web
format is chosen (either by command-line option or configuration variable). See -w|--web
in the OPTIONS section above and git-web--browse[1].
The man.viewer
configuration variable will be checked if the man
format is chosen. The following values are currently supported:
"man": use the man
program as usual,
"woman": use emacsclient
to launch the "woman" mode in emacs (this only works starting with emacsclient versions 22),
"konqueror": use kfmclient
to open the man page in a new konqueror tab (see Note about konqueror
below).
Values for other tools can be used if there is a corresponding man.<tool>.cmd
configuration entry (see below).
Multiple values may be given to the man.viewer
configuration variable. Their corresponding programs will be tried in the order listed in the configuration file.
For example, this configuration:
[man] viewer = konqueror viewer = woman
will try to use konqueror first. But this may fail (for example, if DISPLAY is not set) and in that case emacs' woman mode will be tried.
If everything fails, or if no viewer is configured, the viewer specified in the GIT_MAN_VIEWER
environment variable will be tried. If that fails too, the man
program will be tried anyway.
You can explicitly provide a full path to your preferred man viewer by setting the configuration variable man.<tool>.path
. For example, you can configure the absolute path to konqueror by setting man.konqueror.path
. Otherwise, git help
assumes the tool is available in PATH.
When the man viewer, specified by the man.viewer
configuration variables, is not among the supported ones, then the corresponding man.<tool>.cmd
configuration variable will be looked up. If this variable exists then the specified tool will be treated as a custom command and a shell eval will be used to run the command with the man page passed as arguments.
When konqueror
is specified in the man.viewer
configuration variable, we launch kfmclient
to try to open the man page on an already opened konqueror in a new tab if possible.
For consistency, we also try such a trick if man.konqueror.path
is set to something like A_PATH_TO/konqueror
. That means we will try to launch A_PATH_TO/kfmclient
instead.
If you really want to use konqueror
, then you can use something like the following:
[man] viewer = konq [man "konq"] cmd = A_PATH_TO/konqueror
Note that all these configuration variables should probably be set using the --global
flag, for example like this:
$ git config --global help.format web $ git config --global web.browser firefox
as they are probably more user specific than repository specific. See git-config[1] for more information about this.
© 2012–2023 Scott Chacon and others
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://git-scm.com/docs/git-help