I'm using Git on Windows, installed through GitExtensions with MSysGit (latest) having selected "do not modify my Windows prompt" during installation.
Now, I would like to be able to modify the default prompt (which by default shows just the branch name to also show me how much time, and how many local commits since I last pushed to origin
(or specifically origin/master
, whichever is easier).
So say instead of: me@myPC /c/myRepo (master)
I would see something along the lines of: me@myPC /c/myRepo (master) 5 | 10:20
meaning I have last pushed 10h 20min ago and I have made 5 local commits since.
Before you mention it, I am aware there are ways of doing it with PowerShell, but I don't want to use it. I want my standard git bash we all know and love.
I found a few solutions to that, with modifying PS1
variable in .bashrc
file, but (excuse my poor Unix konwledge) they seem to be not working, (for example accepted answer to this question).
So there you have it. Is this possible?
The
__git_ps1
function is defined in/git/config/completion/git-completion.bash
from within mingw bash. You should be able to copy this function to your own .bashrc and edit it as you choose.FWIW I chose to skip __git_ps1 and to my own thing with color. Here's the prompt code from my .bashrc:
The expression in PROMPT_COMMAND gets evaluated each time the prompt is printed.
To do what you want, you would probably have to parse the reflog with something like awk or perl and append that after the branch name. I usually rely on gitk to visualize the information you're looking for.
If you run GitPortable for Windows you may want to do this trick taken from this site
Write
$ nano ~/.bashrc
in gitportable console. After you have done editing write$ source ~/.bashrc
to reload settings. My installation saves a file in C:\apps\GitPortable\Data\home folder.step 1. Copy these two files to your home folder, you may find them under %PROGRAMFILES%\Git\etc\;
step 2. Config your PS1 in your bash profile like
.bashrc
, for example:The default git-completion script supports part of what you are after. If you set GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM="verbose git" in the /etc/profile file then it will add the number of commits ahead of your upstream branch into the prompt. You may need to set the prompt as below to include a
(%s)
in the git specific part:For the time part - thats new to me. But the git-bash should handle any unix version you may have found. Just edit /etc/profile as administrator (its actually
%PROGRAMFILES%\Git\etc\profile
or create a ~/.profile file containing the following:with these environment variables set, the default msysGit prompt looks like this if you have a dirty tree with 1 commit ahead of origin: