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Git

From dankwiki
Revision as of 22:37, 18 December 2019 by Dank (talk | contribs) (→‎Recipes)

Here's a good crash course for subversion users.

Hosting

  • GitHub provides pretty reasonable git hosting services; open source projects eat free.
  • github-trac is a trac extension for working with GitHub
  • Remote repacks/compressions can consume a great deal of memory. To cap the remote packing at, say, 2G, enter the remote repository and run:
git config pack.windowMemory 1000m
git config pack.packSizeLimit 2000m

Configuration

Dump your user configuration with git config -l:

[recombinator](129) $ git config -l
user.name=Nick Black
user.email=dank@qemfd.net
github.user=dankamongmen
[recombinator](0) $

Dump the system configuration, if one exists, via git config --system -l:

[recombinator](129) $ git config --system -l
color.diff=auto
color.status=auto
color.branch=auto
[recombinator](0) $

Subversion equivs

goal subversion git
Add an external repository repo at point dir/path svn propedit svn:externals dir, and add repo path git submodule add repo dir/path (there's a Submodule Tutorial)

Recipes

Create bare repo from existing files

We have existing, untracked files at workpath. We want to initialize a (possibly remote) bare repository repo with the contents of workpath.

  • In repo/, run git init --bare
  • In workpath/, run git init
  • In workpath/, run git remote add origin repo
  • In workpath/, run git add .
  • In workpath/, run git push

Prune remote branches

git remote prune origin This can be made automatic with git config remote.origin.prune true since git 1.8.5.

Hard sync to upstream

Warning: this will throw away even committed local changes! Assuming remote upstream and branch master: git reset --hard upstream/master then, to force your own fork to match: git push origin master --force Congratulations! You've just thrown away any local work.

Links