Offline documentation
---------------------
-Git has builtin help: run ``git help TOPIC``. For example, run
+Git has builtin help: run ``git help $TOPIC``. For example, run
``git help git`` or ``git help help``.
<http://sourceforge.net/projects/git-osx-installer/files/>`_ or
install git with `Homebrew <http://brew.sh/>`_: ``brew install git``.
-`git-cola <https://git-cola.github.io/index.html>`_ is a sleek and
-powerful Git GUI written in Python and GPL licensed. Linux, Windows,
-MacOS X.
+`git-cola <https://git-cola.github.io/index.html>`_ is a Git GUI
+written in Python and GPL licensed. Linux, Windows, MacOS X.
`TortoiseGit <https://tortoisegit.org/>`_ is a Windows Shell Interface
to Git based on TortoiseSVN; open source.
$ cd python
$ git branch v1 origin/v1
+The first command clones remote repository into local directory
+`python``, creates a new local branch v2, sets remotes/origin/v2 as
+its upstream remote-tracking branch and checks it out into the working
+directory.
+
The last command creates a new local branch v1 and sets
-remotes/origin/v1 as its upstream remote branch.
+remotes/origin/v1 as its upstream remote-tracking branch.
-The same result can achieved with commands::
+The same result can be achieved with commands::
$ git clone -b v1 http://git.python.org/python.git
$ cd python
$ git checkout --track origin/v2
-The last command creates a new local branch v2, sets
-remotes/origin/v2 as its upstream remote branch and checks it out into
-the working directory.
+The last command creates a new local branch v2, sets remotes/origin/v2
+as its upstream remote-tracking branch and checks it out into the
+working directory.
Branches and branches
Git terminology can be a bit misleading. Take, for example, the term
"branch". In git it has two meanings. A branch is a directed line of
commits (possibly with merges). And a branch is a label or a pointer
-assigned to a line of commits. It is important to differentiate when
-you talk about commits and when about their labels. Lines of commits
-are by itself unnamed and are usually only lengthening and merging.
+assigned to a line of commits. It is important to distinguish when you
+talk about commits and when about their labels. Lines of commits are
+by itself unnamed and are usually only lengthening and merging.
Labels, on the other hand, can be created, moved, renamed and deleted
freely.
-Remote repository and remote branches
-=====================================
-
-Another example of slightly misleading terminology. Remote
-repositories are really remote, you access them via network (well, a
-remote repository can be on your local disk, but it's still remote
-because it's not the current repo).
+Remote repositories and remote branches
+=======================================
-Remote branches, on the other hand, are branches (pointers to commits)
-in your local repository. They are there for you to remember what
-branches and commits have been pulled from and pushed to what remote
-repos (you can pull from and push to many remotes). Remote branches
-live under ``remotes/REMOTE`` namespaces, e.g. ``remotes/origin/v2``.
+Remote-tracking branches are branches (pointers to commits) in your
+local repository. They are there for you to remember what branches and
+commits have been pulled from and pushed to what remote repos (you can
+pull from and push to many remotes). Remote-tracking branches live
+under ``remotes/$REMOTE`` namespaces, e.g. ``remotes/origin/v2``.
-To see the status of remote branches run::
+To see the status of remote-tracking branches run::
$ git branch -rv
-To see local and remote branches (and tags) pointing to commits::
+To see local and remote-tracking branches (and tags) pointing to
+commits::
$ git log --decorate
-You never do your own development on remote branches. You create a
-local branch that has a remote branch as upstream and do development
-on that local branch. On push git updates remote branches, and on pull
-git updates remote branches and fast-forwards, merges or rebases local
-branches.
+You never do your own development on remote-tracking branches. You
+create a local branch that has a remote branch as upstream and do
+development on that local branch. On push git pushes commits to the
+remote repo and updates remote-tracking branches, on pull git fetches
+commits from the remote repo, updates remote-tracking branches and
+fast-forwards, merges or rebases local branches.
When you do an initial clone like this::
$ git clone -b v1 http://git.python.org/python.git
git clones remote repository ``http://git.python.org/python.git`` to
-directory ``python``, creates remote branches, creates a local branch
-``v1``, configure it to track upstream remotes/origin/v1 branch and
-checks out ``v1`` into the working directory.
+directory ``python``, creates remote-tracking branches, creates a
+local branch ``v1``, configure it to track upstream remotes/origin/v1
+branch and checks out ``v1`` into the working directory.
-Updating local and remote branches
-----------------------------------
+Updating local and remote-tracking branches
+-------------------------------------------
There is a major difference between
::
- $ git fetch REMOTE BRANCH
+ $ git fetch $REMOTE $BRANCH
and
::
- $ git fetch REMOTE BRANCH:BRANCH
+ $ git fetch $REMOTE $BRANCH:$BRANCH
-The first command fetches commits from the named BRANCH in the REMOTE
-repository that are not in your repository and leaves the id (the
-hash) of the head commit in file .git/FETCH_HEAD. But it doesn't
-update any branch (doesn't move any pointer).
+The first command fetches commits from the named $BRANCH in the
+$REMOTE repository that are not in your repository, updates
+remote-tracking branch and leaves the id (the hash) of the head commit
+in file .git/FETCH_HEAD.
-The second command fetches commits from the named BRANCH in the REMOTE
-repository that are not in your repository and updates both the local
-branch BRANCH and its upstream remote branch. But it refuses to update
-branches in case of non-fast-forward. And it refuses to update the
-current branch.
+The second command fetches commits from the named $BRANCH in the
+$REMOTE repository that are not in your repository and updates both
+the local branch $BRANCH and its upstream remote-tracking branch. But
+it refuses to update branches in case of non-fast-forward. And it
+refuses to update the current branch.
The first command is used internally by ``git pull``.
::
- $ git pull REMOTE BRANCH
+ $ git pull $REMOTE $BRANCH
is equivalent to
::
- $ git fetch REMOTE BRANCH
- $ git merge FETCH_HEAD # FETCH_HEAD is a literal here
+ $ git fetch $REMOTE $BRANCH
+ $ git merge FETCH_HEAD
-Certainly, BRANCH in that case should be your current branch. If you
+Certainly, $BRANCH in that case should be your current branch. If you
want to merge a different branch into your current branch first update
that non-current branch and then merge::
$ git pull
+Default remote repository for fetching/pulling is origin. Default set
+of references to fetch is calculated using matching algorithm: git
+fetches all branches having the same name on both ends.
+
Push
''''
$ git push origin v1 v2
-git guesses (knowing upstream remote branches) that you really want
-
-::
+git pushes local v1 to remote v1 and local v2 to remote v2. The same
+as::
$ git push origin v1:v1 v2:v2
-Git pushes commits to the remote repo and updates remote branches. Git
-refuses to push commits that aren't fast-forwardable. You can
-force-push anyway, but please remember - you can force-push to your
-own repositories but don't force-push to public or shared repos. If
-you find git refuses to push commits that aren't fast-forwardable,
+Git pushes commits to the remote repo and updates remote-tracking
+branches. Git refuses to push commits that aren't fast-forwardable.
+You can force-push anyway, but please remember - you can force-push to
+your own repositories but don't force-push to public or shared repos.
+If you find git refuses to push commits that aren't fast-forwardable,
better fetch and merge commits from the remote repo (or rebase your
commits on top of the fetched commits), then push. Only force-push if
you know what you do and why you do it. See the section `Commit
$ git push
+Default remote repository for pushing is origin. Default set
+of references to push in git before 2.0 is calculated using matching
+algorithm: git pushes all branches having the same name on both ends.
+Default set of references to push in git 2.0+ is calculated using
+simple algorithm: git pushes the current branch back to its
+@{upstream}.
+
+To configure git before 2.0 to the new behaviour run::
+
+$ git config push.default simple
+
+To configure git 2.0+ to the old behaviour run::
+
+$ git config push.default matching
+
Git refuses to push a branch if it's the current branch in the remote
non-bare repository: git refuses to update remote working directory.
You really should push only to bare repositories. For non-bare
from the workstation to a bare repo on the remote host, ssh to the
remote host and pull from the bare repo to a non-bare deployment repo.
+That changed in git 2.3, but see `the blog post
+<https://github.com/blog/1957-git-2-3-has-been-released#push-to-deploy>`_
+for caveats; in 2.4 the push-to-deploy feature was `further improved
+<https://github.com/blog/1994-git-2-4-atomic-pushes-push-to-deploy-and-more#push-to-deploy-improvements>`_.
+
Tags
''''
``git fetch --tags origin``. To fetch some specific tags fetch them
explicitly::
- $ git fetch origin tag TAG1 tag TAG2...
+ $ git fetch origin tag $TAG1 tag $TAG2...
For example::
$ git push origin tag 1.4.2
$ git push origin v1 v2 tag 2.1.7
-Don't move tags with ``git tag -f`` after they have been published.
+Don't move tags with ``git tag -f`` or remove tags with ``git tag -d``
+after they have been published.
Commit editing and caveats
entire team. Please avoid it.
To see what commits have not been published yet compare the head of the
-branch with its upstream remote branch::
+branch with its upstream remote-tracking branch::
$ git log origin/v2..
$ git log origin/v1..v1
-For every branch that has an upstream remote branch git maintains an
-alias @{upstream} (short version @{u}), so the commands above can be
-given as::
+For every branch that has an upstream remote-tracking branch git
+maintains an alias @{upstream} (short version @{u}), so the commands
+above can be given as::
$ git log @{u}..
$ git log v1@{u}..v1
Undo
====
-TODO: describe undo strategies: git reset, git revert, git checkout,
-git reflog. "Commit early, commit often".
+Whatever you do, don't panic. Almost anything in git can be undone.
+
+git checkout: restore file's content
+------------------------------------
+
+``git checkout``, for example, can be used to restore the content of
+file(s) to that one of a commit. Like this::
-How to undo a merge
-https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/howto/revert-a-faulty-merge.html
+ git checkout HEAD~ README
+
+The commands restores the contents of README file to the last but one
+commit in the current branch. By default the commit ID is simply HEAD;
+i.e. ``git checkout README`` restores README to the latest commit.
+
+(Do not use ``git checkout`` to view a content of a file in a commit,
+use ``git cat-file -p``; e.g. ``git cat-file -p HEAD~:path/to/README``).
+
+git reset: remove (non-pushed) commits
+--------------------------------------
+
+``git reset`` moves the head of the current branch. The head can be
+moved to point to any commit but it's often used to remove a commit or
+a few (preferably, non-pushed ones) from the top of the branch - that
+is, to move the branch backward in order to undo a few (non-pushed)
+commits.
+
+``git reset`` has three modes of operation - soft, hard and mixed.
+Default is mixed. ProGit `explains
+<https://git-scm.com/book/en/Git-Tools-Reset-Demystified>`_ the
+difference very clearly. Bare repositories don't have indices or
+working trees so in a bare repo only soft reset is possible.
+
+Unstaging
+'''''''''
+
+Mixed mode reset with a path or paths can be used to unstage changes -
+that is, to remove from index changes added with ``git add`` for
+committing. See `The Book
+<https://git-scm.com/book/en/Git-Basics-Undoing-Things>`_ for details
+about unstaging and other undo tricks.
+
+git reflog: reference log
+-------------------------
+
+Removing commits with ``git reset`` or moving the head of a branch
+sounds dangerous and it is. But there is a way to undo: another
+reset back to the original commit. Git doesn't remove commits
+immediately; unreferenced commits (in git terminology they are called
+"dangling commits") stay in the database for some time (default is two
+weeks) so you can reset back to it or create a new branch pointing to
+the original commit.
+
+For every move of a branch's head - with ``git commit``, ``git
+checkout``, ``git fetch``, ``git pull``, ``git rebase``, ``git reset``
+and so on - git stores a reference log (reflog for short). For every
+move git stores where the head was. Command ``git reflog`` can be used
+to view (and manipulate) the log.
+
+In addition to the moves of the head of every branch git stores the
+moves of the HEAD - a symbolic reference that (usually) names the
+current branch. HEAD is changed with ``git checkout $BRANCH``.
+
+By default ``git reflog`` shows the moves of the HEAD, i.e. the
+command is equivalent to ``git reflog HEAD``. To show the moves of the
+head of a branch use the command ``git reflog $BRANCH``.
+
+So to undo a ``git reset`` lookup the original commit in ``git
+reflog``, verify it with ``git show`` or ``git log`` and run ``git
+reset $COMMIT_ID``. Git stores the move of the branch's head in
+reflog, so you can undo that undo later again.
+
+In a more complex situation you'd want to move some commits along with
+resetting the head of the branch. Cherry-pick them to the new branch.
+For example, if you want to reset the branch ``v2`` back to the
+original commit but preserve two commits created in the current branch
+do something like::
+
+ $ git branch save-v2 # create a new branch saving v2
+ $ git reflog # find the original place of v2
+ $ git reset $COMMIT_ID
+ $ git cherry-pick save-v2~ save-v2
+ $ git branch -D save-v2 # remove temporary branch
+
+git revert: revert a commit
+---------------------------
+
+``git revert`` reverts a commit or commits, that is, it creates a new
+commit or commits that reverts the effects of the given commits. It's
+the only way to undo published commits (``git commit --amend``, ``git
+rebase`` and ``git reset`` change the branch in non-fast-forwardable
+ways so they should only be used for non-pushed commits.)
+
+There is a problem with reverting a merge commit. ``git revert`` can
+undo the code created by the merge commit but it cannot undo the fact
+of merge. See the discussion `How to revert a faulty merge
+<https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/howto/revert-a-faulty-merge.html>`_.
+
+One thing that cannot be undone
+-------------------------------
+
+Whatever you undo, there is one thing that cannot be undone -
+overwritten uncommitted changes. Uncommitted changes don't belong to
+git so git cannot help preserving them.
+
+Most of the time git warns you when you're going to execute a command
+that overwrites uncommitted changes. Git warns you when you try to
+switch branches with ``git checkout``. It warns you when you're going
+to rebase with non-clean working tree. It refuses to pull new commits
+over non-committed files.
+
+But there are commands that do exactly that - overwrite files in the
+working tree. Commands like ``git checkout $PATHs`` or ``git reset
+--hard`` silently overwrite files including your uncommitted changes.
+
+With that in mind you can understand the stance "commit early, commit
+often". Commit as often as possible. Commit on every save in your
+editor or IDE. You can edit your commits before pushing - change,
+reorder, combine, remove. But save your changes in git database,
+either commit changes or at least stash them with ``git stash``.
Merge or rebase?
--rebase`` or even configure automatic setup of rebase for every new
branch::
- $ git config branch.autosetuprebase true
+ $ git config branch.autosetuprebase always
and configure rebase for existing branches::
- $ git config branch.NAME.rebase true
+ $ git config branch.$NAME.rebase true
For example::
+ $ git config branch.v1.rebase true
$ git config branch.v2.rebase true
After that ``git pull origin v2`` becomes equivalent to ``git pull
In case when merge is preferred it is recommended to create new
commits in a separate feature or topic branch while using rebase to
update the mainline branch. When the topic branch is ready merge it
-into mainline. To avoid a tedious task of resolving conflicts you can
-merge the topic branch to the mainline from time to time and switch
-back to the topic branch to continue working on it. The entire
-workflow would be something like::
+into mainline. To avoid a tedious task of resolving large number of
+conflicts at once you can merge the topic branch to the mainline from
+time to time and switch back to the topic branch to continue working
+on it. The entire workflow would be something like::
- $ git checkout -b issue-42 # create and switch to a new branch
+ $ git checkout -b issue-42 # create a new issue branch and switch to it
...edit/test/commit...
$ git checkout v2
$ git pull --rebase origin v2 # update v2 from the upstream
When the topic branch is deleted only the label is removed, commits
are stayed in the database, they are now merged into v2::
- o--o--o--o--o--M--< v2 - it is the mainline branch
+ o--o--o--o--o--M--< v2 - the mainline branch
\ /
- --*--*--* - it is the topic branch, now unnamed
+ --*--*--* - the topic branch, now unnamed
The topic branch is deleted to avoid cluttering branch namespace with
small topic branches. Information on what issue was fixed or what
Null-merges
===========
-Git has a builtin strategy for what Python core developers call
+Git has a builtin merge strategy for what Python core developers call
"null-merge"::
$ git merge -s ours v1 # null-merge v1 into v2
-ReReRe
-======
+Advanced configuration
+======================
-https://git-scm.com/book/en/Git-Tools-Rerere
+Line endings
+------------
+
+Git has builtin mechanisms to handle line endings between platforms
+with different EOL styles. To allow git to do CRLF conversion assign
+``text`` attribute to files using `.gitattributes
+<https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/gitattributes.html>`_.
+For files that have to have specific line ending assign ``eol``
+attribute. For binary files the attribute is, naturally, ``binary``.
+
+For example::
+
+ $ cat .gitattributes
+ *.py text
+ *.txt text
+ *.png binary
+ /readme.txt eol=CRLF
+
+To check what attributes git uses for files use ``git check-attr``
+command.
Advanced topics
Wiki.
-Advanced configuration
-======================
-
-Line endings
-------------
-
-Git has builtin mechanisms to handle line endings.
+ReReRe
+======
-TODO: describe crlf configuration and .gitattributes.
+https://git-scm.com/book/en/Git-Tools-Rerere
Database maintenance
TODO: dangling objects, git gc, git repack.
+https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2007-12/msg00165.html
+
+http://vcscompare.blogspot.ru/2008/06/git-repack-parameters.html
+
Tips and tricks
===============
TODO: sticky options; example: git grep -O.
+TODO: tricky options; example: git log -p3.
+
TODO: bash/zsh completion, bash/zsh prompt.
+https://git.kernel.org/cgit/git/git.git/tree/contrib/completion
git on server
TODO: anonymous access; git over ssh; gitolite; gitweb; cgit; gitlab.
+http://gitolite.com/gitolite/index.html
+
+https://git.kernel.org/cgit/git/git.git/tree/gitweb
+
+http://git.zx2c4.com/cgit/
From Mercurial to git
=====================