I'm wondering where does git stores user information. I created a repository, which both me and my friend works on. When we both commit, we can see both of us as individual authors for different revisions. while theres a .gitconfig file created using git config --global
in his home folder, I couldn't find one in mine. So where's my user information stored? Does git config --global
only affect the individual login user?
4 Answers
There are 3 default paths for the config file.
- Repository itself:
<your_git_repository>/.git/config
- User home directory:
~/.gitconfig
- System-wide directory:
$(prefix)/etc/gitconfig
The --global
option always use the home directory. Note that git
will always try to read all of them. If it finds one, it loads it, and moves to the next one. Local takes precedence over global, which takes precedence over system-wide. It uses a simple key-merging algorithm.
Reference: git-config FILES
-
-
Do you have an env var GIT_CONFIG_LOCAL? Another possibility is cited by @Bombe in his answer.– jweyrichSep 7, 2011 at 4:48
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@yair That's the prefix path specified during compilation. If you installed Git using a package manager (apt, yum, etc), it installs it globally with no prefix. If you use something like macports, brew, then it specifies a prefix like /usr/local or /opt/local. You can specify this prefix when you compile most softwares that use autotools.– jweyrichMar 17, 2014 at 17:47
If you do not store user information in your configuration files Git looks in the environment for committer information, using the variables GIT_COMMITTER_NAME
, GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL
, GIT_AUTHOR_NAME
, and GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL
. In absence of these variables, your username and host name are used to construct a value. So even without any user information stored in configuration files two users will have different committer information.
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This information (my email) gets public? When I commit to GitHub providing my email, does it become visible to anyone but GitHub servers? Nov 6, 2017 at 3:52
There are three places - system ( all users on the system at $(prefix)/etc/gitconfig
), global ( for the user at ~/.gitconfig
) and local ( for the repo at .git/config
). Any config should be in either of the three to be taken by git.
However if GIT_CONFIG
or myriad other environment variable are set, some of the values will be coming from those. If you are not able to find what you want in any of the config files, or not even able to find these files, look at all GIT_* environment variables as the last resort.
More details here:
In my case, I found my username in the ~/.git-credentials
file. Hope this helps you.
You can also list the configuration using:
git config --list