Git

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Install

sudo apt-get install git-svn git-doc git-gui tig

Writing to global ~/.gitconfig file:

git config --global user.name "Your Name Comes Here"
git config --global user.email you@yourdomain.example.com
git config --global color.diff auto
git config --global color.status auto
git config --global color.branch auto

Creating a .git in the current (project) directory:

git init

Working on a project

Initial project

Add manually files/directories e.g. with

git init
git add .
git commit

Copying existing project

Clone an existing Git repository into a to-be-created target directory:

git clone /path/to/other/repository target

Remote repositories can also be accessed with paths like

ssh://login@host/path/to/repository
git://git.software.org/trunk
http://git.software.org/trunk

Later to update the local repository according to the remote repository:

git pull

Symmetrically the remote repository owner could also get the changes we've done locally if she does:

git pull /path/to/our/target

Or we could send them ourselves if we've write access on the remote:

git push

BTW the remote can create a shortcut to us to not have to provide our full path everytime

git remote add ourshortcut /path/to/our/target

And now use directly

git remote show ourshortcut
git pull ourshortcut

Note that git pull ourshortcut ==

git fetch ourshortcut
git merge ourshortcut/master

Using a Subversion server

Getting the full project:

# git clone =>
git-svn clone http://subversion.server.com/project -T trunk -b branches -t tags
(git-gc to compress if it took a big room)

Updating the local repository according to the subversion server:

# git pull =>
git-svn rebase

Sending the local changes to the subversion server:

# git push =>
git-svn dcommit


By error I did

git commit --amend

on a synchronized git repository, so I lost remotes/trunk in the gitk view but the remote branch is still visible with git branch -r, strange...

Basic usage

Edition

Schedule a file for committing

git add <file>

Committing

git commit

Note that a modified file must be explicitly added every time, unless you use

git commit -a

Or

git commit <file>

File renaming is implicit, so you don't have to take care, just rename your files if you want (really??), but there is also the explicit commands

git mv <file>
git rm <file>

Diff/patch

Diff between working files & to-be-committed index

git diff

Diff between to-be-committed index & repository

git diff --cached

Diff between working files & repository

git diff HEAD

With specific revision or path

git diff <rev> <path>

E.g with one but last commit

git diff HEAD~1

This provides usage patches, including metadata, can be applied with

git apply

Status & revert

Status of local working files

git status

To restore (revert) a file from the last revision

git checkout <path>

You can amend your latest commit (re-edit the metadata as well as update the tree) using

git commit --amend

Or toss your latest commit away completely using

git reset HEAD^

This will not change the working tree.

To unstage a change to-be-committed (e.g. git add *)

git reset HEAD <file>

History

git log

With nice stats:

git log --stat --summary

See from which revision came the lines of a file

git blame <file>

Or search for commits affecting a specific line

git log -S"string"

You can see the contents of a file

git show rev:path/to/file

The listing of a directory

git show rev:path/to/directory

Or a commit with:

git show rev

Tags & branches

Create a tag:

git tag -a <name>

List tags and show the tag message:

git tag -l
git show <tag>

Create a branch:

git branch <branch> [<rev>]

Switch to the branch

git checkout <branch>

List branches (current is flagged by a *)

git branch

To move your tree to some older revision, use:

git checkout <rev>
git checkout <prevbranch>

Default branch is "master"

Merge

Assuming you are in the trunk and want to merge a given branch here:

git merge branch

If the merge went nice automatically, a commit is done automatically too, to avoid it:

git merge --no-commit branch

Aside from merging, sometimes you want to just pick one commit from a different branch. To apply the changes in revision rev and commit them to the current branch use:

git cherry-pick rev

Rebase

Not yet clear what's the diff with merge...

  • Find all your (committed) changes, since you branched
  • Reset your branch, so that it's an exact copy of the current master
  • Re-apply all your changes again
git checkout branch_name
git rebase master

If conflicts occur, and sooner or later they will,

# manually edit the conflicting files
git add file(s)
git rebase --continue

See also "git-mergetool"

Ignoring some files

cat > .gitignore <<EOF
*.pyc
*~
EOF
git add .gitignore

Now you can also delete all files neither tracked nor ignored with:

git clean

Misc

  • Revisions are SHA-1 hashes, not incremental numbers.
    You can refer to the latest revision by HEAD, its parent as HEAD^ and its parent as HEAD^^ = HEAD~2
    You can also just type the first digits of the hash (if it's enough to get a unique ID)
    man git-rev-parse for more details
  • The Git commands are in the form git command. You can interchangeably use the git-command form as well.
  • Setting up a public repository where you'll push your stuff
    • git --bare init --shared ??
  • Though not required, it's a good idea to begin the commit message with a single short (less than 50 character) line summarizing the change, followed by a blank line and then a more thorough description.

etckeeper

TODO