Both my office and home computers have Git Bash for Windows from the very same source (Git for Windows, that came with TortoiseGit), but Git Bash's prompt differs on both machines:
/c/path (branch)
all green (this is, how I would like it to have),Up until now I was told, that this is PS1
variable, kept in ~/.bashrc
file. However, on both machines, this files is missing (executing notepad ~/.bashrc
opens up empty Notepad).
I'm lost here. If ~/.bashrc
doesn't exists, then from where Git Bash "knows", that it should display current branch, in a green prompt? And why the same doesn't happen on second machine?
EDIT: I also tried to compare c:\Program Files\Git\etc\
folder contents for both machines and contents of Git Bash.vbs
file. There identical on both computers so I even more have no idea, how it can be, that Git Bash's prompt differs on both computers (and how to fix this).
Several answers (like this, this and this) has suggested me, that I should look for .bash_profile
and .bash_prompt
files. Unfortunately, these two also are missing on both my computers.
Exactly what file decides about that under Windows 7? Where else should I look for, and what PS1
variable's value should be, to have current branch shown in green prompt on both machines?
Git on Windows almost always uses a bash shell. So, it's not Git setting the prompt as much as Bash does.
There are two ways to set prompts in Bash. One is the PS1
command which is fairly flexible, but is limited to a particular set of escape character sequences. Unfortunately, Git information isn't one of those escape sequences (although I suspect it'll come someday). You can use the second way to set the prompt by setting the PROMPT_COMMAND
environment variable. If this is set, the $PROMPT_COMMAND
is executed and used as the prompt instead of the PS1
environment variable.
When you install the standard Git with BASH, you're Git prompt is defined under the /etc/profile
file. By the way, etc
is a directory under where you've installed Git which is usually under %PROGRAMFILES%
unless you changed it when you installed Git.
Under the /etc/profile
script in line #156 in my version, you see the PS1
command being set and using $(__git_ps1)
in $PS1
as a means of executing an external command in the prompt. (A third way I didn't mention previously).
The __git_ps1
is a shell function. You'll also notice a bit above (line #154 in my version) that /etc/git-completion.bash
is being sourced in as well as /etc/git-prompt.sh
. It's /etc/git-prompt.sh
that defines the __git_ps1
function (Line #273 in my version) is defined. You'll notice that the __git_ps1
function pulls in several other functions defined in /etc/git-prompt.sh
.
So, in a very Rube Goldberg manner, the Git prompt is being defined in /etc/profile
via defining $PS1
which pulls in /etc/git-prompt.sh
which defines a __git_ps1
function that pulls in the __git_ps1_show_upstream
function and the __git_ps1_colorize_gitstring
function. Then, $PS1
uses the $(...)
string as part of pulling in the __git_ps1
function into PS1
.
You can define your own $HOME/.bash_profile
to override the way the prompt is set to define your own prompt. And, when you do that, you can also use the __git_ps1
Bash function in your own prompt.
Or, you can simply decide not to touch anything, and just back away very slowly. After all, you may have actual work to do.