It's Magit! A Git porcelain inside Emacs.
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Magit is an interface to the version control system
Git, implemented as an
Emacs package.
Magit aspires to be a complete Git porcelain. While we cannot
(yet) claim that Magit wraps and improves upon each and every Git
command, it is complete enough to allow even experienced Git users
to perform almost all of their daily version control tasks directly
from within Emacs. While many fine Git clients exist, only Magit
and Git itself deserve to be called porcelains.
If you are new to Magit, then either one of the following two
articles should help understanding how it differs from other Git
clients.
If you are completely new to Magit, then this article is a good
visual introduction.
Almost everything that you see in Magit can be acted on by pressing
some key, but that’s not obvious from just seeing how Magit looks.
The screenshots and accompanying text of this article explain how to
perform a variety of actions on Magit’s output.
Magit differs significantly from other Git interfaces, and its
advantages are not immediately obvious simply from looking at a few
screenshots as presented in the preceding article.
This article discusses Magit’s properties in somewhat more abstract
terms.
If you prefer video introductions,
head over to that page, where find a collection of such introductions
and other videos about Magit, by various creators.
Magit has many users and very few maintainers, so we kindly ask to read
the appropriate guidelines before getting in contact. — Thanks!
TL;DR We now use discussions for feature requests (not issues) and prefer
if you ask the community for support instead of the overworked maintainers.
Please also consider to contribute by supporting other users or by making
a monetary donation. — Thanks!
Magit was started by Marius Vollmer, and is now maintained by
Jonas Bernoulli and Kyle Meyer. Former maintainers are
Nicolas Dudebout, Noam Postavsky,
Peter J. Weisberg, Phil Jackson, Rémi Vanicat and
Yann Hodique. Many more people have contributed code,
suggested features or made monetary contributions.
Thanks to all of you, may (the history of) the source be with you!