70

I have a project that contains many submodules. I want to loop over each submodule with the following command:

git submodule foreach npm install

And I want the script to continue looping over each submodule even if one submodule returns an error (non zero return code). Currently, a non-zero return code from running this command in any submodule will cause git to stop looping over the remaining submodules.

Any recommendations on how to accomplish this?

Casey Flynn
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3 Answers3

139

Just make your command always return a 0 code like so:

git submodule foreach 'npm install || :'

This is taken from the manual: git help submodule:

   foreach
       Evaluates an arbitrary shell command in each checked out submodule.
       The command has access to the variables $name, $path, $sha1 and
       $toplevel: $name is the name of the relevant submodule section in
       .gitmodules, $path is the name of the submodule directory relative
       to the superproject, $sha1 is the commit as recorded in the
       superproject, and $toplevel is the absolute path to the top-level
       of the superproject. Any submodules defined in the superproject but
       not checked out are ignored by this command. Unless given --quiet,
       foreach prints the name of each submodule before evaluating the
       command. If --recursive is given, submodules are traversed
       recursively (i.e. the given shell command is evaluated in nested
       submodules as well). A non-zero return from the command in any
       submodule causes the processing to terminate. This can be
       overridden by adding || : to the end of the command.

       As an example, git submodule foreach 'echo $path `git rev-parse
       HEAD`' will show the path and currently checked out commit for each
       submodule.

The command : from help : in bash:

:: :
    Null command.

    No effect; the command does nothing.

    Exit Status:
    Always succeeds.

Always succeeds :)

gniourf_gniourf
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5

In windows batch, you can set the return code to 0 by adding an ampersand and another command that does nothing:

git submodule foreach "npm install & echo done"

edit: originally the answer was using a semicolon to do this, which was incorrect.

Simon
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2

You could see this topic.

I don't use GIT, but if you can locate the .gitmodules files, it may be easy to loop for each submodules :

<command to find all of your submodules>|while read; do
    # ... (default use $REPLY as an item)
done

Or :

while read; do
    # ...
done <<< "$(command to find all of your submodules)"

See this reminder on how to read a command output with a loop in Bash.

Community
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Idriss Neumann
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  • Please don't "parse" `.gitmodules` using shell ... there's a way to do it and that's: `git config --file .gitmodules --get-regexp ` ... which could indeed be piped into while then. – 0xC0000022L Mar 31 '23 at 11:07
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    @0xC0000022L this answer is +10 years old ;) (since, I became very used to use git)... – Idriss Neumann Apr 01 '23 at 12:28