Provided by: git-restore-mtime_1.0.3-1_all 

NAME
git-restore-mtime - Restore original modification time of files based on the date of the most recent
commit that modified them
SYNOPSIS
git-restore-mtime [-h] [--quiet] [--verbose] [--force] [--merge]
[--skip-missing] [--no-directories] [--test] [--commit-time]
[--work-tree WORKDIR] [--git-dir GITDIR]
[pathspec [pathspec...]]
DESCRIPTION
Restore original modification time of files based on the date of the most recent commit that modified
them. Useful when generating release tarballs.
OPTIONS
Positional arguments:
pathspec
only modify paths (dirs or files) matching PATHSPEC, relative to current directory. Default is to
modify all non-ignored, tracked files.
Optional arguments:
-h, --help
show help message and exit
--quiet,-q
suppress informative messages and summary statistics.
--verbose,-v
print additional information for each processed file. Overwrites --quiet.
--force,-f
force execution on trees with uncommitted changes.
--merge,-m
include merge commits. Leads to more recent mtimes and more files per commit, thus with the same
mtime (which may or may not be what you want). Including merge commits may lead to less commits
being evaluated (all files are found sooner), which improves performance, sometimes
substantially. But since merge commits are usually huge, processing them may also take longer,
sometimes substantially. By default merge logs are only used for files missing from regular
commit logs.
--skip-missing,-s
do not try to find missing files. If some files were not found in regular commit logs, by default
it retries using merge commit logs for these files (if --merge was not used already). This option
disables this behavior, which may slightly improve performance, but files found only in merge
commits will not be updated.
--no-directories,-D
do not update directory mtime for files created, renamed or deleted in it. Note: just modifying a
file will not update its directory mtime.
--test,-t
test run: do not actually update any file
--commit-time,-c
use commit time instead of author time
--work-tree WORKDIR
specify where the work tree is. Default for most repositories is current directory.
--git-dir GITDIR
specify where the git repository is. Default for most repositories <work-tree>/.git
SEE ALSO
https://github.com/MestreLion/git-tools
AUTHOR
Rodrigo Silva (MestreLion) linux@rodrigosilva.com
2016-01-31 GIT-RESTORE-MTIME(1)