How to perform an automatic commit with predefined message using Magit?











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I have a repository of org files which I mostly use for note taking and tracking, and I track it using git. I want to add a shortcut that would quickly commit all current content of the repository (both changed, new and deleted files) as a new commit with a predefined commit message (say "update"). How can I achieve this programmatically with magit?



Thanks in advance!










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    up vote
    5
    down vote

    favorite
    2












    I have a repository of org files which I mostly use for note taking and tracking, and I track it using git. I want to add a shortcut that would quickly commit all current content of the repository (both changed, new and deleted files) as a new commit with a predefined commit message (say "update"). How can I achieve this programmatically with magit?



    Thanks in advance!










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      5
      down vote

      favorite
      2









      up vote
      5
      down vote

      favorite
      2






      2





      I have a repository of org files which I mostly use for note taking and tracking, and I track it using git. I want to add a shortcut that would quickly commit all current content of the repository (both changed, new and deleted files) as a new commit with a predefined commit message (say "update"). How can I achieve this programmatically with magit?



      Thanks in advance!










      share|improve this question















      I have a repository of org files which I mostly use for note taking and tracking, and I track it using git. I want to add a shortcut that would quickly commit all current content of the repository (both changed, new and deleted files) as a new commit with a predefined commit message (say "update"). How can I achieve this programmatically with magit?



      Thanks in advance!







      magit






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      edited Nov 27 at 11:00









      tarsius

      15.9k23981




      15.9k23981










      asked Nov 27 at 7:29









      vmalloc

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      1433






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          8
          down vote



          accepted










          There are two parts to this task.





          1. Figuring out how to do this on the command line.



            $ git add .
            $ git commit -m "the message"



          2. Figuring out what Magit functions can be used to call Git commands.



            You can either use commands or you can use low-level functions. I would recommend doing the latter, but looking at the definitions of the former might help locating the latter. The manual section named Calling Git would also come in handy.



            Looking at that page you will learn that you should probably use magit-call-git and/or magit-run-git. The difference is that the latter also refreshes the current Magit buffer and the status buffer and doing that twice would be wasteful. So either use each function once or the latter twice and call magit-refresh explicitly.



            (magit-call-git "add" ".")
            (magit-call-git "commit" "-m" "the message")
            (magit-refresh)



          Now wrap that in a command and bind a key to it. You might even want to add the command to the commit popup by Customizing [this] Existing Popup.






          share|improve this answer























          • Since I had trouble with this at first, if anyone wants to make a keybinding which executes multiple commands, you could do some eval magic, or use progn.
            – Nathaniel Pisarski
            Nov 27 at 13:13










          • Part 1 can be collapsed to git commit -a -m "the message"
            – Andrew Swann
            yesterday











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          8
          down vote



          accepted










          There are two parts to this task.





          1. Figuring out how to do this on the command line.



            $ git add .
            $ git commit -m "the message"



          2. Figuring out what Magit functions can be used to call Git commands.



            You can either use commands or you can use low-level functions. I would recommend doing the latter, but looking at the definitions of the former might help locating the latter. The manual section named Calling Git would also come in handy.



            Looking at that page you will learn that you should probably use magit-call-git and/or magit-run-git. The difference is that the latter also refreshes the current Magit buffer and the status buffer and doing that twice would be wasteful. So either use each function once or the latter twice and call magit-refresh explicitly.



            (magit-call-git "add" ".")
            (magit-call-git "commit" "-m" "the message")
            (magit-refresh)



          Now wrap that in a command and bind a key to it. You might even want to add the command to the commit popup by Customizing [this] Existing Popup.






          share|improve this answer























          • Since I had trouble with this at first, if anyone wants to make a keybinding which executes multiple commands, you could do some eval magic, or use progn.
            – Nathaniel Pisarski
            Nov 27 at 13:13










          • Part 1 can be collapsed to git commit -a -m "the message"
            – Andrew Swann
            yesterday















          up vote
          8
          down vote



          accepted










          There are two parts to this task.





          1. Figuring out how to do this on the command line.



            $ git add .
            $ git commit -m "the message"



          2. Figuring out what Magit functions can be used to call Git commands.



            You can either use commands or you can use low-level functions. I would recommend doing the latter, but looking at the definitions of the former might help locating the latter. The manual section named Calling Git would also come in handy.



            Looking at that page you will learn that you should probably use magit-call-git and/or magit-run-git. The difference is that the latter also refreshes the current Magit buffer and the status buffer and doing that twice would be wasteful. So either use each function once or the latter twice and call magit-refresh explicitly.



            (magit-call-git "add" ".")
            (magit-call-git "commit" "-m" "the message")
            (magit-refresh)



          Now wrap that in a command and bind a key to it. You might even want to add the command to the commit popup by Customizing [this] Existing Popup.






          share|improve this answer























          • Since I had trouble with this at first, if anyone wants to make a keybinding which executes multiple commands, you could do some eval magic, or use progn.
            – Nathaniel Pisarski
            Nov 27 at 13:13










          • Part 1 can be collapsed to git commit -a -m "the message"
            – Andrew Swann
            yesterday













          up vote
          8
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          8
          down vote



          accepted






          There are two parts to this task.





          1. Figuring out how to do this on the command line.



            $ git add .
            $ git commit -m "the message"



          2. Figuring out what Magit functions can be used to call Git commands.



            You can either use commands or you can use low-level functions. I would recommend doing the latter, but looking at the definitions of the former might help locating the latter. The manual section named Calling Git would also come in handy.



            Looking at that page you will learn that you should probably use magit-call-git and/or magit-run-git. The difference is that the latter also refreshes the current Magit buffer and the status buffer and doing that twice would be wasteful. So either use each function once or the latter twice and call magit-refresh explicitly.



            (magit-call-git "add" ".")
            (magit-call-git "commit" "-m" "the message")
            (magit-refresh)



          Now wrap that in a command and bind a key to it. You might even want to add the command to the commit popup by Customizing [this] Existing Popup.






          share|improve this answer














          There are two parts to this task.





          1. Figuring out how to do this on the command line.



            $ git add .
            $ git commit -m "the message"



          2. Figuring out what Magit functions can be used to call Git commands.



            You can either use commands or you can use low-level functions. I would recommend doing the latter, but looking at the definitions of the former might help locating the latter. The manual section named Calling Git would also come in handy.



            Looking at that page you will learn that you should probably use magit-call-git and/or magit-run-git. The difference is that the latter also refreshes the current Magit buffer and the status buffer and doing that twice would be wasteful. So either use each function once or the latter twice and call magit-refresh explicitly.



            (magit-call-git "add" ".")
            (magit-call-git "commit" "-m" "the message")
            (magit-refresh)



          Now wrap that in a command and bind a key to it. You might even want to add the command to the commit popup by Customizing [this] Existing Popup.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 27 at 11:00

























          answered Nov 27 at 10:14









          tarsius

          15.9k23981




          15.9k23981












          • Since I had trouble with this at first, if anyone wants to make a keybinding which executes multiple commands, you could do some eval magic, or use progn.
            – Nathaniel Pisarski
            Nov 27 at 13:13










          • Part 1 can be collapsed to git commit -a -m "the message"
            – Andrew Swann
            yesterday


















          • Since I had trouble with this at first, if anyone wants to make a keybinding which executes multiple commands, you could do some eval magic, or use progn.
            – Nathaniel Pisarski
            Nov 27 at 13:13










          • Part 1 can be collapsed to git commit -a -m "the message"
            – Andrew Swann
            yesterday
















          Since I had trouble with this at first, if anyone wants to make a keybinding which executes multiple commands, you could do some eval magic, or use progn.
          – Nathaniel Pisarski
          Nov 27 at 13:13




          Since I had trouble with this at first, if anyone wants to make a keybinding which executes multiple commands, you could do some eval magic, or use progn.
          – Nathaniel Pisarski
          Nov 27 at 13:13












          Part 1 can be collapsed to git commit -a -m "the message"
          – Andrew Swann
          yesterday




          Part 1 can be collapsed to git commit -a -m "the message"
          – Andrew Swann
          yesterday


















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