X-Git-Url: https://git.phdru.name/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=pep-git.txt;h=73b2ecbf1dccf834bd6a20252b97ed3de6922475;hb=e32d8a3898bc6047a8855cec051c4bcbc22fcb4e;hp=9f7eeea29faf08bcbecd3a224efe9b220606409e;hpb=c9f9df30816f59374506156638bff43794b6dc40;p=git-wiki.git diff --git a/pep-git.txt b/pep-git.txt index 9f7eeea..73b2ecb 100644 --- a/pep-git.txt +++ b/pep-git.txt @@ -75,19 +75,25 @@ Download and installation Unix users: download and install using your package manager. Microsoft Windows: download `git-for-windows -`_. +`_ or `msysGit +`_. MacOS X: use git installed with `XCode -`_ or download +`_ or download from +`MacPorts `_ or `git-osx-installer -`_. +`_ or +install git with `Homebrew `_: ``brew install git``. + +`Atlassins's SourceTree `_ is a free +Git and Mercurial GUI client for Windows or Mac. Initial configuration --------------------- This simple code is often appears in documentation, but it is important so let repeat it here. Git marks every commit with author -and commiter names/emails, so configure your real name and preferred +and committer names/emails, so configure your real name and preferred email:: $ git config --global user.name "User Name" @@ -101,13 +107,25 @@ 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:: +currently checked out branch is ``v2``. That is, it's assumed you have +done something like that:: + + $ git clone -b v2 http://git.python.org/python.git + $ cd python + $ git branch v1 origin/v1 + +The last command creates a new local branch v1 and sets +remotes/origin/v1 as its upstream remote branch. + +The same result can achieved with commands:: $ git clone -b v1 http://git.python.org/python.git $ cd python - $ git fetch origin v2:v2 - $ git checkout -b v2 + $ 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. Branches and branches @@ -146,25 +164,152 @@ To see local and remote 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 an 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. +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. 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 and checks out branch -``v1`` into the working directory. +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. + +Updating local and remote branches +---------------------------------- + +There is a major difference between + +:: + + $ git fetch REMOTE BRANCH + +and + +:: + + $ 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 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 first command is used internally by ``git pull``. + +:: + + $ git pull REMOTE BRANCH + +is equivalent to + +:: + + $ git fetch REMOTE BRANCH + $ git merge FETCH_HEAD # FETCH_HEAD is a literal here + +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 fetch origin v1:v1 # Update v1 + $ git pull --rebase origin v2 # Update the current branch v2 using + # rebase instead of merge + $ git merge v1 + +It is possible to configure git to make it fetch/pull a few branches +or all branches at once, so you can simply run + +:: + + $ git pull origin + +or even + +:: + + $ git pull + +Push +'''' + +Pushing is a bit simpler. There is only one command ``push``. When you +run + +:: + + $ git push origin v1 v2 + +git guesses (knowing upstream remote branches) that you really want + +:: + + $ 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, +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 +editing and caveats`_ below. + +It is possible to configure git to make it push a few branches or all +branches at once, so you can simply run + +:: + + $ git push origin + +or even + +:: + + $ git push + +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 +repositories git prefers pull-based workflow. + +Tags +'''' + +Git automatically fetches tags that point to commits being fetched +during fetch/pull. To fetch all tags (and commits they point to) run +``git fetch --tags origin``. To fetch some specific tags fetch them +explicitly:: + + $ git fetch origin tag NAME1 tag NAME2... + +For example:: + + $ git fetch origin tag 1.4.2 tag 2.1.7 + +Git doesn't automatically pushes tags. That allows you to have private +tags (lightweight tags are also private for a repo, they cannot be +pushed). To push tags list them explicitly:: + + $ git push origin tag 1.4.2 + $ git push origin v1 v2 tag 2.1.7 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. +documentation but it's repeated here anyway as it's very important. It is possible to recover from forced push but it's PITA for the entire team. Please avoid it. @@ -199,7 +344,7 @@ 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. +or shared repository. Undo @@ -226,15 +371,8 @@ Staging area aka index is a distinguishing feature of git. See Wiki. -Advanced configuration -====================== - -Line endings ------------- - -Git has builtin mechanisms to handle line endings. - -TODO: describe crlf configuration and .gitattributes. +Merge or rebase? +================ Null-merges @@ -246,6 +384,23 @@ Git has a builtin strategy for what Python core developers call $ git merge -s ours v1 # null-merge v1 into v2 +ReReRe +====== + +https://git-scm.com/book/en/Git-Tools-Rerere + + +Advanced configuration +====================== + +Line endings +------------ + +Git has builtin mechanisms to handle line endings. + +TODO: describe crlf configuration and .gitattributes. + + Database maintenance ====================