+
+Quick start
+===========
+
+Download and installation
+-------------------------
+
+Unix users: download and install using your package manager.
+
+Microsoft Windows: download `git-for-windows
+<https://git-for-windows.github.io/>`_.
+
+MacOS X: use git installed with `XCode
+<https://developer.apple.com/xcode/downloads/>`_ or download
+`git-osx-installer
+<http://sourceforge.net/projects/git-osx-installer/files/>`_.
+
+Initial configuration
+---------------------
+
+This simple code is often appears in documentation, but it is
+important so let repeat it here::
+
+ $ git config --global user.name "User Name"
+ $ git config --global user.email user.name@example.org
+
+Put your real name and preferred email.
+
+
+Examples in this PEP
+====================
+
+Examples of git commands in this PEP use the following approach. It is
+supposed that you, the user, works with a local repository named
+``python`` that has an upstream remote repo named ``origin``. Your
+local repo has two branches ``v1`` and ``v2``. For most examples the
+currently checked out branch is ``v2``. That is, it's assumed you did
+something like that::
+
+ $ git clone -b v1 http://git.python.org/python.git
+ $ cd python
+ $ git fetch origin v2:v2
+ $ git checkout -b v2
+
+
+Commit editing and caveats
+==========================
+
+A warning not to edit published (pushed) commits also appears in
+documentation but it's also repeated here as it's very important.
+
+It is possible to recover from forced push but it's PITA for the
+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::
+
+ $ 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::
+
+ $ git log @{u}..
+ $ git log v1@{u}..v1
+
+To see the status of all branches::
+
+ $ git branch -avv
+
+To compare the status of local branches with a remote repo::
+
+ $ git remote show origin
+
+Read `how to recover from upstream rebase
+<https://git-scm.com/docs/git-rebase#_recovering_from_upstream_rebase>`_.
+It is in ``git help rebase``.
+
+On the other hand don't be too afraid about commit editing. You can
+safely edit, remove, reorder, combine and split commits that hasn't
+been pushed yet. You can even push commits to your own (backup) repo,
+edit them later and force-push edited commits to replace what has
+already been pushed. Not a problem until commits are in a public
+repository.
+
+