I'm in a bit of a bind with Git
. I'm trying to execute git commit
but I need to be able to swtich between ~/.gitconfig1
and ~/.gitconfig2
Is there a command line switch - or anyway to have Git
use a different gitconfig file then the ones found at /etc/gitconfig
, ~/.gitconfig
and .git/config
?
5 Answers
I found a way to execute this - it wasn't elegant but it did work - and so far seems to be the only way to get this to work.
Git uses the HOME
path to determine where .gitconfig
is. I was able to perform something like this:
/home/marco/.silly/.gitconfig
/home/marco/.stupid/.gitconfig
/home/marco/.gitconfig
And when executing Git Commit (which is the only command that requires the .gitconfig
) I override the home path.
HOME=/home/marco/.silly/ git commit -m "silly configuration"
You can then use alias to do this easily
alias sillygit="HOME=/home/marco/.silly/ git"
sillygit commit -m "silly stuff"
-
1Nice hack. I can't seem to find any real way to do this - there's a GIT_CONFIG environment variable, but it only affects
git config
itself, in the same way as its-f,--file
option.– CascabelCommented Aug 29, 2010 at 15:38 -
For the git version 2.35.2 and above first user have to apply:
env HOME=/home/marco/.silly git config --global --add safe.directory <repo-path>
– alperCommented Apr 13, 2022 at 22:15
Mario Ceppi's alias approach can be used in a slightly more elegant way using the -c config=value
argument to git
:
$ alias sillygit="git -c user.name=Silly -c [email protected]"
$ sillygit commit
This of course assumes you don't mind keeping the differing config keys in your .bashrc
or the like instead of in your .gitconfig
, and it has the caveat of breaking shell completion.
@amirouche's comment and Emil Lundberg's answer can be combined to actually load another Git config file:
alias git="git -c 'include.path=/some/path/to/my/custom/.gitconfig'"
However, the user's ~/.gitconfig
file is still loaded. This approach only overwrites settings from the other git config files.
If you only need to use one .gitconfig
file in each workspace, instead of having to switch between configs while working in one workspace, then includeIf
may suffice, as it can be used to load custom configurations depending on workspace path elements or remote urls: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config#_conditional_includes
You can use --git-dir
git --git-dir /home/marco/silly/.git commit ...
-
--git-dir sets the repository being edited, which the questioner is specifically trying to avoid. Commented Oct 28, 2012 at 12:40
git commit-v2
(or something shorter) to!export GIT_AUTHOR_NAME="Second name"; git commit
.includeIf
, see git-scm.com/docs/git-config