SYNOPSIS
git mktag
DESCRIPTION
Reads a tag’s contents on standard input and creates a tag object. The output is the new tag’s <object> identifier.
This command is mostly equivalent to git-hash-object(1)
invoked with -t tag -w --stdin
. I.e. both of these will create and
write a tag found in my-tag
:
git mktag <my-tag
git hash-object -t tag -w --stdin <my-tag
The difference is that mktag will die before writing the tag if the tag doesn’t pass a git-fsck(1) check.
The "fsck" check done by mktag is stricter than what git-fsck(1)
would run by default in that all fsck.<msg-id>
messages are promoted
from warnings to errors (so e.g. a missing "tagger" line is an error).
Extra headers in the object are also an error under mktag, but ignored
by git-fsck(1). This extra check can be turned off by setting
the appropriate fsck.<msg-id>
variable:
git -c fsck.extraHeaderEntry=ignore mktag <my-tag-with-headers
OPTIONS
- --strict
-
By default mktag turns on the equivalent of git-fsck(1)
--strict
mode. Use--no-strict
to disable it.
Tag Format
A tag signature file, to be fed to this command’s standard input, has a very simple fixed format: four lines of
object <hash>
type <typename>
tag <tagname>
tagger <tagger>
followed by some optional free-form message (some tags created
by older Git may not have a tagger
line). The message, when it
exists, is separated by a blank line from the header. The
message part may contain a signature that Git itself doesn’t
care about, but that can be verified with gpg.
GIT
Part of the git(1) suite