Special thanks to:

Warp
Warp is a modern, Rust-based terminal with AI built in so you and your team can build great software, faster.
Visit warp.dev to learn more.


Zenbu
I (Jesse) co-founded Zenbu to save your company time and money by helping you manage its SaaS subscriptions. Check it out!


A simple terminal UI for git commands
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## Sponsors

Maintenance of this project is made possible by all the contributors and sponsors. If you'd like to sponsor this project and have your avatar or company logo appear below click here. 💙

Mark LussierDean HerbertPeter BjorklundReilly WoodOliver GüntherPawan DhananjayBartłomiej DachDavid KarlssonCarsten GehlingCEUKAkos PutzXeteraHolden LucasChau TranmatejciktheAverageDev (Luca Tumedei)Zach FullerIvan ZaitsevNicholas CloudLightQuantumGabriel SaillardAliaksandr StelmachonakBurgy BenjaminJoe KlemmerLinus MetzlerTobias LütkeBen BeaumontHollyJames SantucciJeff Forcierkohane27Maciej T. NowakMichael HuggettFarzad MajidfayyazYuryAndreas KurthBraden SteffaniakJordan GillardSebastianGeorge SpanosBen HuntAlex BradnerFrantisek StankoAndy SlezakMartin KockIllarion KoperskiJesse AlamaCodacyBrettJan HeijmansKevin Nowaldsem pruijsOmar Luq Ethan LiBrian MacAskillMaxinbrJan ZenknerVictor AremuBohdan ShulhaCrisNick RadfordIgor RamazanovMichaelRomanYukiya NakagawaHikaru WadaSakari EkqvistElliott Maguiren8n - Workflow Automationkaleb allmonJosh ThomasTrolli SchmittlauchJJFrederick MorlockDarren CraineLuboš Matejčík

## Elevator Pitch Rant time: You've heard it before, git is _powerful_, but what good is that power when everything is so damn hard to do? Interactive rebasing requires you to edit a goddamn TODO file in your editor? _Are you kidding me?_ To stage part of a file you need to use a command line program to step through each hunk and if a hunk can't be split down any further but contains code you don't want to stage, you have to edit an arcane patch file _by hand_? _Are you KIDDING me?!_ Sometimes you get asked to stash your changes when switching branches only to realise that after you switch and unstash that there weren't even any conflicts and it would have been fine to just checkout the branch directly? _YOU HAVE GOT TO BE KIDDING ME!_ If you're a mere mortal like me and you're tired of hearing how powerful git is when in your daily life it's a powerful pain in your ass, lazygit might be for you. ## Table of contents - [Sponsors](#sponsors) - [Elevator Pitch](#elevator-pitch) - [Table of contents](#table-of-contents) - [Features](#features) - [Stage individual lines](#stage-individual-lines) - [Interactive Rebase](#interactive-rebase) - [Cherry-pick](#cherry-pick) - [Bisect](#bisect) - [Nuke the working tree](#nuke-the-working-tree) - [Amend an old commit](#amend-an-old-commit) - [Filter](#filter) - [Invoke a custom command](#invoke-a-custom-command) - [Worktrees](#worktrees) - [Rebase magic (custom patches)](#rebase-magic-custom-patches) - [Rebase from marked base commit](#rebase-from-marked-base-commit) - [Undo](#undo) - [Commit graph](#commit-graph) - [Compare two commits](#compare-two-commits) - [Tutorials](#tutorials) - [Installation](#installation) - [Binary Releases](#binary-releases) - [Homebrew](#homebrew) - [MacPorts](#macports) - [Void Linux](#void-linux) - [Scoop (Windows)](#scoop-windows) - [Arch Linux](#arch-linux) - [Fedora and RHEL](#fedora-and-rhel) - [Solus Linux](#solus-linux) - [Ubuntu](#ubuntu) - [Funtoo Linux](#funtoo-linux) - [Gentoo Linux](#gentoo-linux) - [FreeBSD](#freebsd) - [Termux](#termux) - [Conda](#conda) - [Go](#go) - [Chocolatey (Windows)](#chocolatey-windows) - [Winget (Windows 10 1709 or later)](#winget-windows-10-1709-or-later) - [Manual](#manual) - [Usage](#usage) - [Keybindings](#keybindings) - [Changing Directory On Exit](#changing-directory-on-exit) - [Undo/Redo](#undoredo) - [Configuration](#configuration) - [Custom Pagers](#custom-pagers) - [Custom Commands](#custom-commands) - [Git flow support](#git-flow-support) - [Contributing](#contributing) - [Debugging Locally](#debugging-locally) - [Donate](#donate) - [FAQ](#faq) - [What do the commit colors represent?](#what-do-the-commit-colors-represent) - [Shameless Plug](#shameless-plug) - [Alternatives](#alternatives) Lazygit is not my fulltime job but it is a hefty part time job so if you want to support the project please consider [sponsoring me](https://github.com/sponsors/jesseduffield) ## Features ### Stage individual lines Press space on the selected line to stage it, or press `v` to start selecting a range of lines. You can also press `a` to select the entirety of the current hunk. ![stage_lines](../assets/demo/stage_lines-compressed.gif) ### Interactive Rebase Press `i` to start an interactive rebase. Then squash (`s`), fixup (`f`), drop (`d`), edit (`e`), move up (`ctrl+i`) or move down (`ctrl+j`) any of TODO commits, before continuing the rebase by bringing up the rebase options menu with `m` and then selecting `continue`. You can also perform any these actions as a once-off (e.g. pressing `s` on a commit to squash it) without explicitly starting a rebase. This demo also uses shift+down to select a range of commits to move and fixup. ![interactive_rebase](../assets/demo/interactive_rebase-compressed.gif) ### Cherry-pick Press `shift+c` on a commit to copy it and press `shift+v` to paste (cherry-pick) it. ![cherry_pick](../assets/demo/cherry_pick-compressed.gif) ### Bisect Press `b` in the commits view to mark a commit as good/bad in order to begin a git bisect. ![bisect](../assets/demo/bisect-compressed.gif) ### Nuke the working tree For when you really want to just get rid of anything that shows up when you run `git status` (and yes that includes dirty submodules) [kidpix style](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ur7_A4JusMU), press `shift+d` to bring up the reset options menu and then select the 'nuke' option. ![Nuke working tree](../assets/demo/nuke_working_tree-compressed.gif) ### Amend an old commit Pressing `shift+a` on any commit will amend that commit with the currently staged changes (running an interactive rebase in the background). ![amend_old_commit](../assets/demo/amend_old_commit-compressed.gif) ### Filter You can filter a view with `/`. Here we filter down our branches view and then hit `enter` to view its commits. ![filter](../assets/demo/filter-compressed.gif) ### Invoke a custom command Lazygit has a very flexible [custom command system](docs/Custom_Command_Keybindings.md). In this example a custom command is defined which emulates the built-in branch checkout action. ![custom_command](../assets/demo/custom_command-compressed.gif) ### Worktrees You can create worktrees to have multiple branches going at once without the need for stashing or creating WIP commits when switching between them. Press `w` in the branches view to create a worktree from the selected branch and switch to it. ![worktree_create_from_branches](../assets/demo/worktree_create_from_branches-compressed.gif) ### Rebase magic (custom patches) You can build a custom patch from an old commit and then remove the patch from the commit, split out a new commit, apply the patch in reverse to the index, and more. In this example we have a redundant comment that we want to remove from an old commit. We hit `` on the commit to view its files, then `` on a file to focus the patch, then `` to add the comment line to our custom patch, and then `ctrl+p` to view the custom patch options; selecting to remove the patch from the current commit. Learn more in the [Rebase magic Youtube tutorial](https://youtu.be/4XaToVut_hs). ![custom_patch](../assets/demo/custom_patch-compressed.gif) ### Rebase from marked base commit Say you're on a feature branch that was itself branched off of the develop branch, and you've decided you'd rather be branching off the master branch. You need a way to rebase only the commits from your feature branch. In this demo we check to see which was the last commit on the develop branch, then press `shift+b` to mark that commit as our base commit, then press `r` on the master branch to rebase onto it, only bringing across the commits from our feature branch. Then we push our changes with `shift+p`. ![rebase_onto](../assets/demo/rebase_onto-compressed.gif) ### Undo You can undo the last action by pressing 'z' and redo with `ctrl+z`. Here we drop a couple of commits and then undo the actions. Undo uses the reflog which is specific to commits and branches so we can't undo changes to the working tree or stash. [More info](/docs/Undoing.md) ![undo](../assets/demo/undo-compressed.gif) ### Commit graph When viewing the commit graph in an enlarged window (use `+` and `_` to cycle window sizes), the commit graph is shown. Colours correspond to the commit authors, and as you navigate down the graph, the parent commits of the selected commit are highlighted. ![commit_graph](../assets/demo/commit_graph-compressed.gif) ### Compare two commits If you press `shift+w` on a commit (or branch/ref) a menu will open that allows you to mark that commit so that any other commit you select will be diffed against it. Once you've selected the second commit, you'll see the diff in the main view and if you press `` you'll see the files of the diff. You can press `shift+w` to view the diff menu again to see options like reversing the diff direction or exiting diff mode. You can also exit diff mode by pressing ``. ![diff_commits](../assets/demo/diff_commits-compressed.gif) ## Tutorials [](https://youtu.be/CPLdltN7wgE) - [15 Lazygit Features in 15 Minutes](https://youtu.be/CPLdltN7wgE) - [Basics Tutorial](https://youtu.be/VDXvbHZYeKY) - [Rebase Magic Tutorial](https://youtu.be/4XaToVut_hs) ## Installation [![Packaging status](https://repology.org/badge/vertical-allrepos/lazygit.svg)](https://repology.org/project/lazygit/versions) _Most of the above packages are maintained by third parties so be sure to vet them yourself and confirm that the maintainer is a trustworthy looking person who attends local sports games and gives back to their communities with barbeque fundraisers etc_ ### Binary Releases For Windows, Mac OS(10.12+) or Linux, you can download a binary release [here](../../releases). ### Homebrew Normally the lazygit formula can be found in the Homebrew core but we suggest you tap our formula to get the frequently updated one. It works with Linux, too. Tap: ``` brew install jesseduffield/lazygit/lazygit ``` Core: ``` brew install lazygit ``` ### MacPorts Latest version built from github releases. Tap: ``` sudo port install lazygit ``` ### Void Linux Packages for Void Linux are available in the distro repo They follow upstream latest releases ```sh sudo xbps-install -S lazygit ``` ### Scoop (Windows) You can install `lazygit` using [scoop](https://scoop.sh/). It's in the `extras` bucket: ```sh # Add the extras bucket scoop bucket add extras # Install lazygit scoop install lazygit ``` ### Arch Linux Packages for Arch Linux are available via pacman and AUR (Arch User Repository). There are two packages. The stable one which is built with the latest release and the git version which builds from the most recent commit. - Stable: `sudo pacman -S lazygit` - Development: Instruction of how to install AUR content can be found here: ### Fedora and RHEL Packages for Fedora/RHEL and CentOS Stream are available via [Copr](https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/atim/lazygit/) (Cool Other Package Repo). ```sh sudo dnf copr enable atim/lazygit -y sudo dnf install lazygit ``` ### Solus Linux ```sh sudo eopkg install lazygit ``` ### Ubuntu ```sh LAZYGIT_VERSION=$(curl -s "https://api.github.com/repos/jesseduffield/lazygit/releases/latest" | grep -Po '"tag_name": "v\K[^"]*') curl -Lo lazygit.tar.gz "https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit/releases/latest/download/lazygit_${LAZYGIT_VERSION}_Linux_x86_64.tar.gz" tar xf lazygit.tar.gz lazygit sudo install lazygit /usr/local/bin ``` Verify the correct installation of lazygit: ```sh lazygit --version ``` ### Funtoo Linux Funtoo Linux has an autogenerated lazygit package in [dev-kit](https://github.com/funtoo/dev-kit/tree/1.4-release/dev-vcs/lazygit): ```sh sudo emerge dev-vcs/lazygit ``` ### Gentoo Linux Lazygit is not (yet) in main Gentoo portage, however an ebuild is available in [GURU overlay](https://github.com/gentoo-mirror/guru/tree/master/dev-vcs/lazygit) You can either add the overlay to your system and install lazygit as usual: ```sh sudo eselect repository enable guru sudo emaint sync -r guru sudo emerge dev-vcs/lazygit ``` ### openSUSE The lazygit package is currently built in [devel:languages:go/lazygit](https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/devel:languages:go/lazygit). To install lazygit on openSUSE Tumbleweed run: ```sh sudo zypper ar https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/languages:/go/openSUSE_Factory/devel:languages:go.repo sudo zypper ref && sudo zypper in lazygit ``` To install lazygit on openSUSE Leap run: ```sh source /etc/os-release sudo zypper ar https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/languages:/go/$VERSION_ID/devel:languages:go.repo sudo zypper ref && sudo zypper in lazygit ``` ### NixOs On NixOs lazygit is packaged with nix and distributed via nixpkgs. You can try the lazygit without installing it with: ```sh nix-shell -p lazygit # or with flakes enabled nix run nixpkgs#lazygit ``` Or you can add lazygit to you configuration.nix in the environment.systemPackages section. More details can be found via NixOs search [page](https://search.nixos.org/). ### FreeBSD ```sh pkg install lazygit ``` ### Termux ```sh apt install lazygit ``` ### Conda Released versions are available for different platforms, see ```sh conda install -c conda-forge lazygit ``` ### Go ```sh go install github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit@latest ``` Please note: If you get an error claiming that lazygit cannot be found or is not defined, you may need to add `~/go/bin` to your $PATH (MacOS/Linux), or `%HOME%\go\bin` (Windows). Not to be mistaken for `C:\Go\bin` (which is for Go's own binaries, not apps like lazygit). ### Chocolatey (Windows) You can install `lazygit` using [Chocolatey](https://chocolatey.org/): ```sh choco install lazygit ``` ### Winget (Windows 10 1709 or later) You can install `lazygit` using the `winget` command in the Windows Terminal with the following command: ```powershell winget install -e --id=JesseDuffield.lazygit ``` ### Manual You'll need to [install Go](https://golang.org/doc/install) ``` git clone https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit.git cd lazygit go install ``` You can also use `go run main.go` to compile and run in one go (pun definitely intended) ## Usage Call `lazygit` in your terminal inside a git repository. ```sh $ lazygit ``` If you want, you can also add an alias for this with `echo "alias lg='lazygit'" >> ~/.zshrc` (or whichever rc file you're using). ### Keybindings You can check out the list of keybindings [here](/docs/keybindings). ### Changing Directory On Exit If you change repos in lazygit and want your shell to change directory into that repo on exiting lazygit, add this to your `~/.zshrc` (or other rc file): ``` lg() { export LAZYGIT_NEW_DIR_FILE=~/.lazygit/newdir lazygit "$@" if [ -f $LAZYGIT_NEW_DIR_FILE ]; then cd "$(cat $LAZYGIT_NEW_DIR_FILE)" rm -f $LAZYGIT_NEW_DIR_FILE > /dev/null fi } ``` Then `source ~/.zshrc` and from now on when you call `lg` and exit you'll switch directories to whatever you were in inside lazygit. To override this behaviour you can exit using `shift+Q` rather than just `q`. ### Undo/Redo See the [docs](/docs/Undoing.md) ## Configuration Check out the [configuration docs](docs/Config.md). ### Custom Pagers See the [docs](docs/Custom_Pagers.md) ### Custom Commands If lazygit is missing a feature, there's a good chance you can implement it yourself with a custom command! See the [docs](docs/Custom_Command_Keybindings.md) ### Git flow support Lazygit supports [Gitflow](https://github.com/nvie/gitflow) if you have it installed. To understand how the Gitflow model works check out Vincent Driessen's original [post](https://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/) explaining it. To view Gitflow options from within Lazygit, press `i` from within the branches view. ## Contributing We love your input! Please check out the [contributing guide](CONTRIBUTING.md). For contributor discussion about things not better discussed here in the repo, join the [discord channel](https://discord.gg/ehwFt2t4wt) Check out this [video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNavnhzZHtk) walking through the creation of a small feature in lazygit if you want an idea of where to get started. ### Debugging Locally Run `lazygit --debug` in one terminal tab and `lazygit --logs` in another to view the program and its log output side by side ## Donate If you would like to support the development of lazygit, consider [sponsoring me](https://github.com/sponsors/jesseduffield) (github is matching all donations dollar-for-dollar for 12 months) ## FAQ ### What do the commit colors represent? - Green: the commit is included in the master branch - Yellow: the commit is not included in the master branch - Red: the commit has not been pushed to the upstream branch ## Shameless Plug If you want to see what I (Jesse) am up to in terms of development, follow me on [twitter](https://twitter.com/DuffieldJesse) or check out my [blog](https://jesseduffield.com/) ## Alternatives If you find that lazygit doesn't quite satisfy your requirements, these may be a better fit: - [GitUI](https://github.com/Extrawurst/gitui) - [tig](https://github.com/jonas/tig)