The currently accepted answer is technically correct, you can't directly tell Git to push all your stashes to a remote, and then pull everything into your local stashes on another computer.
And while the currently top-upvoted answer should work, I didn't like that it creates a bunch of temporary branches, and that it requires manually checking out the stash commit and saving it as a stash, which can lead to issues like this comment mentioned, and leads to a duplicate On (no branch): On testing:
. Surely there must be a better way!
So while you can't directly push stashes, a stash is just a commit (actually two commits), and per the git push
man page you can push commits:
The <src>
is often the name of the branch you would want to push, but it can be any arbitrary "SHA-1 expression"...
I chose to push the stashes to refs/stashes/*
so that I wouldn't clutter up my remote with extra branches. So I can do that with:
git push origin stash@{0}:refs/stashes/$(git rev-parse --short stash@{0})
(The rev-parse
command gets the short hash of the stash, which will be unique for the repo.)
Next, I need to fetch the stash from the other computer. Git only fetches branches by default, so I need to fetch the stashes specifically:
git fetch origin refs/stashes/*:refs/stashes/*
Now to convert the stash commit back into an actual stash. As mentioned, while I could just check out the stash commit, reset, and stash as usual, I don't like that it requires extra steps, or that it might not maintain the index state for the stash. I was looking online for a way to do that automatically, but my search-fu failed me. Finally I looked through the man page for git stash
, where I found this:
create
Create a stash (which is a regular commit object) and return its object name, without storing it anywhere in the ref namespace. This is intended to be useful for scripts. It is probably not the command you want to use; see "save" above.
store
Store a given stash created via git stash create (which is a dangling merge commit) in the stash ref, updating the stash reflog. This is intended to be useful for scripts. It is probably not the command you want to use; see "save" above.
Since I already have the commit, store
sounds like what I want. So I can do:
git stash store --message "$(git show --no-patch --format=format:%s <SHA>)" <SHA>
Replacing <SHA>
with the stash that was just fetched.
(The git show
command gets the commit message from the stash commit, to use as the message for the stash log.)
The stash now shows up as normal in my local repo:
$ git stash list
stash@{0}: On master: temp
...
To clean up the remote, the stashes can be deleted from the remote like so:
git push origin :refs/stashes/<SHA>
This method also has the benefit of being idempotent: if you run the push
command again, it will report Everything up-to-date
. The fetch
command can also be safely run repeatedly. While the stash store
will skip storing the stash if it is the same as the most recent stash, it doesn't prevent duplicates of older stashes. This can be worked around though, as I do in my git-rstash
script, see below.
For completion, you can also easily push all stashes (with bash):
for i in $(seq 0 $(expr $(git rev-list --walk-reflogs --count stash) - 1))
do
git push origin stash@{$i}:refs/stashes/$(git rev-parse --short stash@{$i})
done
or import all fetched stashes:
for stash in $(ls .git/refs/stashes)
do
git stash store --message "$(git show --no-patch --format=format:%s $stash)" $stash
done
I've created a bash script that can be called as a subcommand (e.g. git rstash push 0
) so I don't have to remember all this. git-rstash
can be found here.