On Fri, Jun 02, 2017 at 02:02:22AM -0400, Jeffrey Walton wrote: > I'm working on a test machine. It mostly needs to be a clone of > upstream. On occasion it needs to test a particular commit. > > When I attempt to test a commit it produces: > > $ git cherry-pick eb3b27a6a543 > > *** Please tell me who you are. [...] > This is a nameless test account, so there is no information to provide. > > How do I tell Git to ignore these checks? [...] > Well, they don't exist so there's nothing to set. > > The machine below its a CubieBoard used for testing. I remote into it > with test@. As a matter of policy, no check-ins occur on it. Other > than the password database and authroized_keys file, there is no > information on it to be lost or stolen. `git cherry-pick` wants to record a commit. A commit in Git always possess the information on "the committer" -- whoever recorded the commit (it might be distinct from the commit author, as is the case with cherry-picking). There's no way to not set the committer. I envision two ways to get around this situation: 1) Patch the ~/.whatevershellrc of your test account to set this information by setting and exporting the GIT_AUTHOR_NAME and GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL env. variables (and may be others -- see the "git" manual page; run `git help git`). May be even add it in /etc/skel to make all accounts create inherit it. 2) Set these parameters in the repository you're working with. While Git suggests you to pass "--global" to the `git config` invocations, it's perfectly OK to use "--local" with them (which is IIRC the default, if not supplied) to make these settings be recorded in the repository's configuration rather than in ~/.gitconfig. 3) Pass these options explicitly to Git invocations or make a shell alias which would do so, like with function git() { command git \ -c user.name='Joe Tester' \ -c user.email=tester@xxxxxxxxx \ "$@" } I'd personally go with (2).