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NAME

       stg-push - Push one or more patches onto the stack

SYNOPSIS

       stg push [options] [<patch1>] [<patch2>] [<patch3>..<patch4>]

DESCRIPTION

       Push one or more patches (defaulting to the first unapplied one) onto
       the stack. The push operation allows patch reordering by commuting them
       with the three-way merge algorithm. If there are conflicts while
       pushing a patch, those conflicts are written to the work tree, and the
       command halts. Conflicts raised during the push operation have to be
       fixed and the git add --update command run (alternatively, you may undo
       the conflicting push with stg undo).

       The command also notifies when the patch becomes empty (fully merged
       upstream) or is modified (three-way merged) by the push operation.

OPTIONS

       -a, --all
           Push all the unapplied patches.

       -n NUMBER, --number NUMBER
           Push the specified number of patches.

       --reverse
           Push the patches in reverse order.

       --set-tree
           Push the patches, but don’t perform a merge. Instead, the resulting
           tree will be identical to the tree that the patch previously
           created.

           This can be useful when splitting a patch by first popping the
           patch and creating a new patch with some of the changes. Pushing
           the original patch with --set-tree will avoid conflicts and only
           the remaining changes will be in the patch.

       -k, --keep
           Keep the local changes.

       -m, --merged
           Check for patches merged upstream.

STGIT

       Part of the StGit suite - see linkman:stg[1]