Run git pull over all subdirectories
ls | xargs -I{} git -C {} pull
To do it in parallel:
ls | xargs -P10 -I{} git -C {} pull
A bit more low-tech than leo's solution:
for i in */.git; do ( echo $i; cd $i/..; git pull; ); done
This will update all Git repositories in your working directory. No need to explicitly list their names ("cms", "admin", "chart"). The "cd" command only affects a subshell (spawned using the parenthesis).
Run the following from the parent directory, plugins
in this case:
find . -type d -depth 1 -exec git --git-dir={}/.git --work-tree=$PWD/{} pull origin master \;
To clarify:
find .
searches the current directory-type d
to find directories, not files-depth 1
for a maximum depth of one sub-directory-exec {} \;
runs a custom command for every findgit --git-dir={}/.git --work-tree=$PWD/{} pull
git pulls the individual directories
To play around with find, I recommend using echo
after -exec
to preview, e.g.:
find . -type d -depth 1 -exec echo git --git-dir={}/.git --work-tree=$PWD/{} status \;
Note: if the -depth 1
option is not available, try -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1
.