X-Git-Url: https://git.phdru.name/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=pep-git.txt;h=90f7a3ac73fdf62986cfbde08455c18a20680fed;hb=e9f0eb9877ceacfc1589c79885bcab0d0a390647;hp=6365fb8c0825bedc7ebe0c2f2b48666f73d8ed91;hpb=0e2710589d8649fc39f27185072001dd5aa56ce0;p=git-wiki.git diff --git a/pep-git.txt b/pep-git.txt index 6365fb8..90f7a3a 100644 --- a/pep-git.txt +++ b/pep-git.txt @@ -118,10 +118,15 @@ done something like that:: $ 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 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. -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 @@ -376,8 +381,21 @@ or shared repository. 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``, for example, can be used to restore the content of +file(s) to that one of a commit. Like this:: + + git checkout HEAD~ README + +The commands restores the contente of README file to the last but one +commit in the current branch. By default a commit ID is simple 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``). + +TODO: describe undo strategies: git reset, git reflog, git revert. +"Commit early, commit often". How to undo a merge https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/howto/revert-a-faulty-merge.html @@ -408,6 +426,7 @@ and configure rebase for existing branches:: 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 @@ -416,12 +435,12 @@ 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 @@ -432,9 +451,9 @@ workflow would be something like:: 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 @@ -444,7 +463,7 @@ feature was implemented should be in the commit messages. 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 @@ -485,6 +504,7 @@ Database maintenance ==================== TODO: dangling objects, git gc, git repack. +https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2007-12/msg00165.html Tips and tricks @@ -492,7 +512,10 @@ 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 @@ -500,6 +523,11 @@ 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 =====================