X-Git-Url: https://git.madduck.net/code/myrepos.git/blobdiff_plain/75e00b8bfd7e8661c706e7f5c497ede9fa20b2af..bdb2e6d37714e82fddeb435a9768b4fbbe31037f:/doc/index.mdwn?ds=inline diff --git a/doc/index.mdwn b/doc/index.mdwn index 01a3e78..b5a2511 100644 --- a/doc/index.mdwn +++ b/doc/index.mdwn @@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ That sets up a `~/.mrconfig` file listing your repositories. Now you can run `mr update` in your home directory, and it'll update every one of your repositories that you've registered with myrepos. -Want to update repositories in parallel? `mr update -j5` will run 5 +Want to update repositories in parallel? `mr -j5 update` will run 5 concurrent jobs! If you run `mr update` inside a repository, it'll only act on that @@ -40,8 +40,7 @@ run for any repository. It's like a `Makefile` for repositories. checkout = git@github.com:joeyh/foo.git update = git pull --rebase -You can make up your own commands too, and add them to a single repository, -or even globally so `mr` can use them in all repositories. +You can make up your own commands too: [bar] # This repository has an upstream, which I've forked; @@ -56,9 +55,11 @@ or even globally so `mr` can use them in all repositories. git merge upstream/master git push origin master +You can even define commands globally, so `mr` can use them in all repositories. + [DEFAULT] - # Teach mr how to `mr reup` to update with rebasing. - git_reup = git pull --rebase + # Teach mr how to `mr gc` in git repos. + git_gc = git gc "$@" This only scratches the surface of the ways you can use myrepos to automate and mange your repositories!