git-mailinfo(1) - man - phpman

Look up a command

 

Markdown Format | JSON API | MCP Server Tool | Cheat Sheet


TLDR: git-mailinfo (tldr-pages)

Extract patch and authorship information from a single email message.

  • Extract the patch and author data from an email message
    git mailinfo {{message|patch}}
  • Extract but remove leading and trailing whitespace
    git mailinfo -k {{message|patch}}
  • Remove everything from the body before a scissors line (e.g. "-->* --") and retrieve the message or patch
    git mailinfo --scissors {{message|patch}}
git-mailinfo(1)
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION OPTIONS GIT
GIT-MAILINFO(1)                              Git Manual                              GIT-MAILINFO(1)



NAME
       git-mailinfo - Extracts patch and authorship from a single e-mail message

SYNOPSIS
       git mailinfo [-k|-b] [-u | --encoding=<encoding> | -n]
                      [--[no-]scissors] [--quoted-cr=<action>]
                      <msg> <patch>


DESCRIPTION
       Reads a single e-mail message from the standard input, and writes the commit log message in
       <msg> file, and the patches in <patch> file. The author name, e-mail and e-mail subject are
       written out to the standard output to be used by git am to create a commit. It is usually not
       necessary to use this command directly. See git-am(1) instead.

OPTIONS
       -k
           Usually the program removes email cruft from the Subject: header line to extract the
           title line for the commit log message. This option prevents this munging, and is most
           useful when used to read back git format-patch -k output.

           Specifically, the following are removed until none of them remain:

           •   Leading and trailing whitespace.

           •   Leading Re:, re:, and :.

           •   Leading bracketed strings (between [ and ], usually [PATCH]).

           Finally, runs of whitespace are normalized to a single ASCII space character.

       -b
           When -k is not in effect, all leading strings bracketed with [ and ] pairs are stripped.
           This option limits the stripping to only the pairs whose bracketed string contains the
           word "PATCH".

       -u
           The commit log message, author name and author email are taken from the e-mail, and after
           minimally decoding MIME transfer encoding, re-coded in the charset specified by
           i18n.commitEncoding (defaulting to UTF-8) by transliterating them. This used to be
           optional but now it is the default.

           Note that the patch is always used as-is without charset conversion, even with this flag.

       --encoding=<encoding>
           Similar to -u. But when re-coding, the charset specified here is used instead of the one
           specified by i18n.commitEncoding or UTF-8.

       -n
           Disable all charset re-coding of the metadata.

       -m, --message-id
           Copy the Message-ID header at the end of the commit message. This is useful in order to
           associate commits with mailing list discussions.

       --scissors
           Remove everything in body before a scissors line (e.g. "-- >8 --"). The line represents
           scissors and perforation marks, and is used to request the reader to cut the message at
           that line. If that line appears in the body of the message before the patch, everything
           before it (including the scissors line itself) is ignored when this option is used.

           This is useful if you want to begin your message in a discussion thread with comments and
           suggestions on the message you are responding to, and to conclude it with a patch
           submission, separating the discussion and the beginning of the proposed commit log
           message with a scissors line.

           This can be enabled by default with the configuration option mailinfo.scissors.

       --no-scissors
           Ignore scissors lines. Useful for overriding mailinfo.scissors settings.

       --quoted-cr=<action>
           Action when processes email messages sent with base64 or quoted-printable encoding, and
           the decoded lines end with a CRLF instead of a simple LF.

           The valid actions are:

           •   nowarn: Git will do nothing when such a CRLF is found.

           •   warn: Git will issue a warning for each message if such a CRLF is found.

           •   strip: Git will convert those CRLF to LF.

           The default action could be set by configuration option mailinfo.quotedCR. If no such
           configuration option has been set, warn will be used.

       <msg>
           The commit log message extracted from e-mail, usually except the title line which comes
           from e-mail Subject.

       <patch>
           The patch extracted from e-mail.

GIT
       Part of the git(1) suite



Git 2.34.1                                   02/26/2026                              GIT-MAILINFO(1)

Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong Under GNU General Public License
2026-06-02 17:35 @216.73.216.151 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top