PNG  IHDR;IDATxܻn0K )(pA 7LeG{ §㻢|ذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lom$^yذag5bÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذa{ 6lذaÆ `}HFkm,mӪôô! x|'ܢ˟;E:9&ᶒ}{v]n&6 h_tڠ͵-ҫZ;Z$.Pkž)!o>}leQfJTu іچ\X=8Rن4`Vwl>nG^is"ms$ui?wbs[m6K4O.4%/bC%t Mז -lG6mrz2s%9s@-k9=)kB5\+͂Zsٲ Rn~GRC wIcIn7jJhۛNCS|j08yiHKֶۛkɈ+;SzL/F*\Ԕ#"5m2[S=gnaPeғL lذaÆ 6l^ḵaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذa; _ذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذaÆ RIENDB` git-mktag(1) ============ NAME ---- git-mktag - Creates a tag object with extra validation SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] 'git mktag' DESCRIPTION ----------- Reads a tag's contents on standard input and creates a tag object. The output is the new tag's identifier. This command is mostly equivalent to linkgit:git-hash-object[1] invoked with `-t tag -w --stdin`. I.e. both of these will create and write a tag found in `my-tag`: git mktag ` messages are promoted from warnings to errors (so e.g. a missing "tagger" line is an error). Extra headers in the object are also an error under mktag, but ignored by linkgit:git-fsck[1]. This extra check can be turned off by setting the appropriate `fsck.` variable: git -c fsck.extraHeaderEntry=ignore mktag type tag tagger followed by some 'optional' free-form message (some tags created by older Git may not have a `tagger` line). The message, when it exists, is separated by a blank line from the header. The message part may contain a signature that Git itself doesn't care about, but that can be verified with gpg. GIT --- Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite