#!/bin/sh . git-sh-setup usage () { die "usage: git checkout [-f] [-b ] [] [...]" } old=$(git-rev-parse HEAD) new= force= branch= newbranch= while [ "$#" != "0" ]; do arg="$1" shift case "$arg" in "-b") newbranch="$1" shift [ -z "$newbranch" ] && die "git checkout: -b needs a branch name" [ -e "$GIT_DIR/refs/heads/$newbranch" ] && die "git checkout: branch $newbranch already exists" git-check-ref-format "heads/$newbranch" || die "we do not like '$newbranch' as a branch name." ;; "-f") force=1 ;; --) break ;; -*) usage ;; *) if rev=$(git-rev-parse --verify "$arg^0" 2>/dev/null) then if [ -z "$rev" ]; then echo "unknown flag $arg" exit 1 fi new="$rev" if [ -f "$GIT_DIR/refs/heads/$arg" ]; then branch="$arg" fi elif rev=$(git-rev-parse --verify "$arg^{tree}" 2>/dev/null) then # checking out selected paths from a tree-ish. new="$rev" branch= else new= branch= set x "$arg" "$@" shift fi break ;; esac done # The behaviour of the command with and without explicit path # parameters is quite different. # # Without paths, we are checking out everything in the work tree, # possibly switching branches. This is the traditional behaviour. # # With paths, we are _never_ switching branch, but checking out # the named paths from either index (when no rev is given), # or the named tree-ish (when rev is given). if test "$#" -ge 1 then if test '' != "$newbranch$force" then die "updating paths and switching branches or forcing are incompatible." fi if test '' != "$new" then # from a specific tree-ish; note that this is for # rescuing paths and is never meant to remove what # is not in the named tree-ish. git-ls-tree -r "$new" "$@" | git-update-index --index-info || exit $? fi git-checkout-index -f -u -- "$@" exit $? else # Make sure we did not fall back on $arg^{tree} codepath # since we are not checking out from an arbitrary tree-ish, # but switching branches. if test '' != "$new" then git-rev-parse --verify "$new^{commit}" >/dev/null 2>&1 || die "Cannot switch branch to a non-commit." fi fi [ -z "$new" ] && new=$old # If we don't have an old branch that we're switching to, # and we don't have a new branch name for the target we # are switching to, then we'd better just be checking out # what we already had [ -z "$branch$newbranch" ] && [ "$new" != "$old" ] && die "git checkout: you need to specify a new branch name" if [ "$force" ] then git-read-tree --reset $new && git-checkout-index -q -f -u -a else git-update-index --refresh >/dev/null git-read-tree -m -u $old $new fi # # Switch the HEAD pointer to the new branch if it we # checked out a branch head, and remove any potential # old MERGE_HEAD's (subsequent commits will clearly not # be based on them, since we re-set the index) # if [ "$?" -eq 0 ]; then if [ "$newbranch" ]; then leading=`expr "refs/heads/$newbranch" : '\(.*\)/'` && mkdir -p "$GIT_DIR/$leading" && echo $new >"$GIT_DIR/refs/heads/$newbranch" || exit branch="$newbranch" fi [ "$branch" ] && GIT_DIR="$GIT_DIR" git-symbolic-ref HEAD "refs/heads/$branch" rm -f "$GIT_DIR/MERGE_HEAD" else exit 1 fi