LinuxSysAdminsDoc/Git
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readme.md

Git

Description

Git is a free and open source distributed version control system designed to handle everything from small to very large projects with speed and efficiency.

  • a very handy cheat sheet in pdf outlines the basic Git commands to help you learn git, as well as more advanced concepts such as Git branches, remote repositories, undoing changes, and much much more
  • the main git documentation is an excellent reference manual

Git System

The diagram below outlines the main gt commands and how they relate to the version control system. In our classes the local is the repository on your own computer and the remote is the corresponding repository you create on our gitea server. Nothing is stopping you from hosting your own gitea server or pushing your local repository to a third party server such as gitlab.

Git System

A remote repository is often referenced by the name origin but this naming is fully up to you. If you would push to multiple remote locations you could for example add one named gitea for our own and gitlab for your gitlab account.

git remote add gitea https://gitea.86thumbs.net/USER/REPOSITORY.git
git remote add gitlab https://gitlab.com/USER/REPOSITORY.git

Basic commands

Git clone

Clone repo located at <repo> onto local machine. Original repo can be located on the local file system or on a remote machine via HTTPS or SSH. Throughout the classes you'll first clone via HTTPS but once we'll learn about RSA you'll be able to clone, push and pull over SSH.

git clone $REPOSITORY_URL

Git config --global name & email

Before you can use git you need to identity yourself. Git uses this information in each commit so we can keep track of who did what when.

git config --global user.name "$FISTNAME $LASTNAME"
git config --global user.email "$EMAIL"

Name and email are required configuration settings but there are a lot more settings you can change to your liking. For example you can set the user interface to have colors by default by setting the following configuration.

git config --global color.ui auto

All of the possible configuration settings can be seen my running:

man git-config

Additionally you can read up on all of these settings a bit more on the documentation page online.

Git init

To initialize an existing directory as a Git repository you have to input the following command into a shell. On windows your best bet is to launch a git bash shell by right clicking in the folder. On linux you can just open a terminal, navigate to the desired directory and execute the command.

git init

If you want to create a new directory with git version control inside it you run the following command.

git init $DIR_NAME

Git status

List which files are staged, unstaged, and untracked. This gives you a good overview of the current state of you repository and hints towards which files you can or should stage.

git status

Git add

By staging files you put them in the list to be added to the next commit. You can add one or more files at the same time. Complete directories can also be added.

git add readme.md image.jpg

Git rm

Delete the file from project and stage the removal for commit. Do keep in mind that this removes the file from the next commit but the file will still exist in the previous commits.This makes it very difficult to lose files for ever.

git rm $FILENAME

Change an existing file path and stage the move.

git mv $OLDPATH $NEWPATH

Show all commit logs with indication of any paths that moved.

git log --stat -M

If you ever lose a file you can use the following command to locate when files got deleted. Remember that when is tied to a commit. Once you find the commit you can check out only that file to bring it back to your working directory.

git log --all --full-history -- "**/$FILENAME*"
git log --all --full-history -- $PATH_TO_FILE
git show $SHA -- $PATH_TO_FILE
git checkout $SHA^ -- $PATH_TO_FILE

Git commit

You commit your staged content as a new commit snapshot with the following command. The message you include in the commit is fully up to you but as a general rule of thumb it should explain what the commit does. For example: this commit "adds pictures to the asset folder" Some projects have serious commit message guidelines, others not.

git commit -m "$YOUR_COMMIT_MESSAGE"

If the identity is not correct you can fix this this the following command.

git commit --amend --reset-author

Git diff

Show unstaged changes between your index and working directory. Unstaged changes are files that have changes to them and have not been added with the git add $FILENAME command.

git diff

Git log

Show all commits in the current branchs history. This can be very handy, especially if the commit messages give a clean idea of what the commit does.

git log

More elaborate log view can be accieved with optional argument. Some handy ones are listed below.

Graphs

The --graph option draws an ASCII graph representing the branch structure of the commit history. This is commonly used in conjunction with the --oneline and --decorate commands to make it easier to see which commit belongs to which branch:

git log --graph --oneline --decorate

The image below visualizes this output.

git log with graph option

Tig

Tig is an additional program that can be used to inspect and visualize the commit history. It uses the underlying Git commands to present the user with various views, such as summarized commit log and showing the commit with the log message, diffstat, and the diff. As it's a command line program wherein you can navigate, select, etc, we can call it a tui. It comes installed by default with git in windows but on debian you have to install it manually.

sudo apt install tig

Tig allows you to browse changes in a Git repository and can additionally act as a pager for output of various Git commands. When used as a pager, it will display input from stdin and colorize it. To use tig you have to be inside a git repository and invoke the following command.

tig

tig

SHARE & UPDATE

Retrieving updates from another repository and updating local repos

=================================

add a git URL as an alias

git remote add [alias] [url]

fetch down all the branches from that Git remote

git fetch [alias]

merge a remote branch into your current branch to bring it up to date

git merge [alias]/[branch]

Transmit local branch commits to the remote repository branch

git push [alias] [branch]

git pull

fetch and merge any commits from the tracking remote branch

BRANCH & MERGE

Isolating work in branches, changing context, and integrating changes

Remote Execution

git branch

list your branches. a * will appear next to the currently active branch

git branch [branch-name]

create a new branch at the current commit

git checkout

switch to another branch and check it out into your working directory

git checkout -b|-B <new_branch> []

Specifying -b causes a new branch to be created as if git-branch(1) were called and then checked out.

If -B is given, <new_branch> is created if it doesnt exist; otherwise, it is reset. This is the transactional equivalent of

git merge [branch]

merge the specified branchs history into the current one

git log

show all commits in the current branchs history

TRACKING PATH CHANGES

Checker le satus

git status

Ajouter un element dans la branche

git add Readme.md

Commit les changement

git commit -m "First commit"

Show all commit

git checkout

Merge

git merge

Saving your uncommitted work for a quick fix then getting it back

git stash

temporarily stash your work since your last commit

git stash pop

fetch your stashed work to continue it

$ git stash pop stash@{2}

in case you want to apply a specific Stash item (not the most recent one), you can provide the index name of that item in the "pop" option

Rewriting history

git commit --amend -m "New commit message"

replace the last commit

git commit --amend --no-edit

replace the last commit without changing the commit message

git rebase -i {branch}

take the precedent commit and add it to your branch

Ignoring files

touch .gitignore && echo {what you want to ignore} >> .gitignore

create a file and specify what (extensions, directories, files) to ignore in it

git rm --cached {fileignored}

remove from the tracking index a file that should be ignored but wasnt because already tracked when the ignore rule was created