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NAMEgit-bugreport - Collect information for user to file a bug report SYNOPSISgit bugreport [(-o | --output-directory) <path>] DESCRIPTIONCollects information about the user’s machine, Git client, and repository state, in addition to a form requesting information about the behavior the user observed, and stores it in a single text file which the user can then share, for example to the Git mailing list, in order to report an observed bug. The following information is requested from the user: •Reproduction steps
•Expected behavior
•Actual behavior
The following information is captured automatically: •git version --build-options
•uname sysname, release, version, and machine
strings
•Compiler-specific info string
•A list of enabled hooks
•$SHELL
Additional information may be gathered into a separate zip archive using the --diagnose option, and can be attached alongside the bugreport document to provide additional context to readers. This tool is invoked via the typical Git setup process, which means that in some cases, it might not be able to launch - for example, if a relevant config file is unreadable. In this kind of scenario, it may be helpful to manually gather the kind of information listed above when manually asking for help. OPTIONS-o <path>, --output-directory <path> Place the resulting bug report file in
<path> instead of the current directory.
-s <format>, --suffix <format>, --no-suffix Specify an alternate suffix for the bugreport name, to
create a file named git-bugreport-<formatted-suffix>. This should
take the form of a strftime(3) format string; the current local time will be
used. --no-suffix disables the suffix and the file is just named
git-bugreport without any disambiguation measure.
--no-diagnose, --diagnose[=<mode>] Create a zip archive of supplemental information about
the user’s machine, Git client, and repository state. The archive is
written to the same output directory as the bug report and is named
git-diagnostics-<formatted-suffix>.
Without mode specified, the diagnostic archive will contain the default set of statistics reported by git diagnose. An optional mode value may be specified to change which information is included in the archive. See git-diagnose(1) for the list of valid values for mode and details about their usage. GITPart of the git(1) suite
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