Most git commands respond to -h anywhere in the command line, or at least as a first and lone argument, by printing the usage information. For aliases, we can provide a little more information that might be useful in interpreting/understanding the following output by prepending a line telling that the command is an alias, and for what. When one invokes a simple alias, such as "cp = cherry-pick" with -h, this results in $ git cp -h 'cp' is aliased to 'cherry-pick' usage: git cherry-pick [<options>] <commit-ish>... ... When the alias consists of more than one word, this provides the additional benefit of informing the user which options are implicit in using the alias, e.g. with "cp = cherry-pick -n": $ git cp -h 'cp' is aliased to 'cherry-pick -n' usage: git cherry-pick [<options>] <commit-ish>... ... For shell commands, we cannot know how it responds to -h, but printing this line to stderr should not hurt, and can help in figuring out what is happening in a case like $ git sc -h 'sc' is aliased to '!somecommand' somecommand: invalid option '-h' Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Rasmus Villemoes <rv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- git.c | 3 +++ 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+) diff --git a/git.c b/git.c index a6f4b44af5..0211c2d4c0 100644 --- a/git.c +++ b/git.c @@ -318,6 +318,9 @@ static int handle_alias(int *argcp, const char ***argv) alias_command = (*argv)[0]; alias_string = alias_lookup(alias_command); if (alias_string) { + if (*argcp > 1 && !strcmp((*argv)[1], "-h")) + fprintf_ln(stderr, _("'%s' is aliased to '%s'"), + alias_command, alias_string); if (alias_string[0] == '!') { struct child_process child = CHILD_PROCESS_INIT; int nongit_ok; -- 2.19.1.4.g721af0fda3