TL;DR
You can do this by deleting your tag and recreating it while spoofing the date and author:
> git tag -d <tag-name>
> [GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=<original-commit-date>] \
> [GIT_AUTHOR_NAME=<original-author-name>] \
> git tag <tag-name> [commit]
Whole story:
Building on Sungram's answer (originally proposed as an edit):
1. Accepted answer
This is an improvement over Andy and Eric Hu's answers.
Their answers will create a new tag object that references the old tag object and both are going to have the same name.
To illustrate this, consider the following:
> git tag tag1 tag1 -f -a # accepted answer
> git rev-list --objects -g --no-walk --all
[ example output: ]
6bdcc347fca041a5138f89fdf5276b3ebf9095d5
260ab7928d986472895b8c55e54569b3f3cb9517 tag1
a5797673f610914a45ef7ac051e3ee831a6e7c25 tag1
f22d6308c3cd330a3b0d86b9bf05562faf6b6f17
> git show tag1
tag tag1
Tagger: [tagger]
Date: [date of updated tag]
[Updated description]
tag tag1
Tagger: [tagger]
Date: [date of original tag]
[Original description]
[tagged commit details]
2. Sungram's improvement
Using <tag name>^{}
as the second argument of git tag
will instead delete all previous tags with the same name.
Consider the continuation of the previous terminal session:
> git tag tag1 tag1^{} -f -a # suggested improvement
> git rev-list --objects -g --no-walk --all
[ example output: ]
6bdcc347fca041a5138f89fdf5276b3ebf9095d5
75f02acacfd7d91d55b5bcfdfb1f00aebeed15e3 tag1
f22d6308c3cd330a3b0d86b9bf05562faf6b6f17
> git show tag1
tag tag1
Tagger: [tagger]
Date: [date of updated tag]
[Updated description]
[tagged commit details]
3. Save the date
Lastly, if you want to keep the date of the original tag as the date of the updated tag, use some awk (or similar) magic or just paste the date you want instead. The following is a substitute for the second example (otherwise the original date would be lost due to overriding):
> GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="$(git show tag1 | # get info about the tag cascade including the date original of the original tag
> awk '{
> if ($1 == "Date:") {
> print substr($0, index($0,$3))
> }
> }' | # extract all the dates from the info
> tail -2 | head -1)" `# get the second to last date, as the last one is the commit date` \
> git tag tag1 tag1^{} -a -f # finally, update the tag message, but save the date of the old one
>
> git rev-list --objects -g --no-walk --all
6bdcc347fca041a5138f89fdf5276b3ebf9095d5
e18c178f2a548b37799b100ab90ca785af1fede0 tag1
f22d6308c3cd330a3b0d86b9bf05562faf6b6f17
> git show tag1
tag tag1
Tagger: [tagger]
Date: [date of original tag]
[Updated description]
[tagged commit details]
References:
4. DIY
Alternatively to updating the tags, you can just delete them and create them again. As it turns out updating just adds a new tag and makes it point to the old one, or alternatively, just implicitly deletes the old one and creates a new one to point to the same commit anyway.
You can achieve this by issuing:
> git tag -d <tag-name>
> [GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=<original-commit-date>] \
> [GIT_AUTHOR_NAME=<original-author-name>] \
> git tag <tag-name> [commit]
Here [optional]
is an optional field; <required>
is a required field.
Of course, you can add any flags after the git tag
command that you normally would.
git tag -m "A message" --edit v1.0
would be enough. See my answer belowfatal: tag 'v6.6.2' already exists
using2.17.0
.