Difference between revisions of "Git/Git"

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File status
File status
*staged: Files are ready to be committed.
*<tt>staged</tt>: Files are ready to be committed.
*unstaged: Files with changes that have not been prepared to be committed.
*<tt>unstaged</tt>: Files with changes that have not been prepared to be committed.
*untracked: Files aren't tracked by Git yet. This usually indicates a newly created file.
*<tt>untracked</tt>: Files aren't tracked by Git yet. This usually indicates a newly created file.
*deleted: File has been deleted and is waiting to be removed from Git.
*<tt>deleted</tt>: File has been deleted and is waiting to be removed from Git.


:HEAD - is a pointer that holds your position within all your different commits. By default HEAD points to your most recent commit, so it can be used as a quick way to reference that commit without having to look up the SHA.
:HEAD - is a pointer that holds your position within all your different commits. By default HEAD points to your most recent commit, so it can be used as a quick way to reference that commit without having to look up the SHA.

Revision as of 18:53, 25 July 2020

Install

sudo apt-get install git

Terminology

Git’s collaboration model is based on repository-to-repository interaction. In principle you push or pull commits from one repository to another.

Staging Area - a place where we can group files together before we "commit" them to Git.
Commit - is a snapshot of our repository. This way if we ever need to look back at the changes we've made (or if someone else does), we will see a nice timeline of all changes.

File status

  • staged: Files are ready to be committed.
  • unstaged: Files with changes that have not been prepared to be committed.
  • untracked: Files aren't tracked by Git yet. This usually indicates a newly created file.
  • deleted: File has been deleted and is waiting to be removed from Git.
HEAD - is a pointer that holds your position within all your different commits. By default HEAD points to your most recent commit, so it can be used as a quick way to reference that commit without having to look up the SHA.
Branching - are what naturally happens when you want to work on multiple features at the same time. You wouldn't want to end up with a master branch which has Feature A half done and Feature B half done. Rather you'd separate the code base into two "snapshots" (branches) and work on and commit to them separately. As soon as one was ready, you might merge this branch back into the master branch and push it to the remote server.
Commands - are only relevant to directory that is tracked, it means it has .git/ tracking directory. Each time you use git commit changes are recorded in that directory.

Git settings

Specify your username and user email as these details are used each time you commit changes

# Global commit name
git config --global user.email "piotr@example.com"
git config --global user.name  "Piotr"
git config --system core.editor "/bin/vim"

# Local to repository commit name
git config user.email "vagrant@vagrant.local"
git config user.name  "vagrant"
# or
git config user.email "$(id -un)@$(hostname -f)"
git config user.name  "$(id -un)"

# Unset configuration
git config --global --unset http.proxy

# Global system config file. It can contain per user settings.
git config --global --list # list configuration, also can use --local or --system
/etc/gitconfig


ENVIRONMENT AND CONFIGURATION VARIABLES

man git-commit
#ENVIRONMENT AND CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
#       The editor used to edit the commit log message will be chosen from the GIT_EDITOR environment variable, the
#       core.editor configuration variable, the VISUAL environment variable, or the EDITOR environment variable (in
#       that order). See git-var(1) for details.

Commands

git init

Initialize repository by

git init


This creates 3 local repositories:

  • your working directory (represented in blue in image )
  • Staging area (brown)
  • Local repository (green)


They represent the life-cycle of working with git. every file exists in blue, if you add the file you tell git that you want to keep tracking the file, so every modification will be saved in brown and if you commit that change this modification will remain forever and you could get it back whenever you want. Because it will be saved in green . Purple (purple repository) represent Github or Gitlab remote repositories.

ClipCapIt-200305-080141.PNG

Useful operations

Fetch the reference to the pull request based on its ID number, creating a new branch in the process

git clone https://github.com/ecomm-integration-ballerina/kubernetes-cluster.git
git fetch origin pull/<PR-id>/head:<branch-name>
git fetch origin pull/6/head:update-to-u18 # 6 it's PR id #6 here
 $ git branch 
* master
  update-to-u18

Update remote repository reference

List your existing remotes in order to get the name of the remote you want to change.

git remote -v
origin  https://github.com/USERNAME/REPOSITORY.git (fetch)
origin  https://github.com/USERNAME/REPOSITORY.git (push)

Change your remote's URL from HTTPS to SSH with the git remote set-url command. This command also accepts https:// url.

git remote set-url origin git@github.com:USERNAME/REPOSITORY.git

Git clone

git clone git@github.com/yourLogin/repository.git #clones using ssh loaded in ssh-add -l
git clone http://github.com/{project}/repository.git #clones using http/s, will prompt for username and password that exists in Github.

It will clone/add another project within already existing projects. It's a way to develop projects avoiding to create softlinks between projects.

git submodule add git@github.com/yourLogin/repository-submodule.git

It will recursively clones a project and update subprojects(submodules)

git clone --recursive git@github.com/yourLogin/repository.git

Move a repository from GitLab to other GitLab

Let's assume you did clone a repo to your local machine. Notice you created --bare repository (can only push/fetch can't commit)

git clone --bare git@old-github.com/yourLogin/repository.git

Then you create an empty repo in the new GitLab called yourRepoName, so you can upload/push to it

cd repository.git
git remote remove origin
#add new remote GitLab repository before push
git remote add newgitlab git@new-github.com/yourLogin/yourRepoName.git 
git push --mirror newgitlab        #push all branches and tags to new remote

This process also allows to change the project/repository name although you do not need to.

Create bare repository, central storage, GitLab repo

git init --bare project.git  #this will create a folder called project.git (bare repository)

--bare flag creates a repository that doesn’t have a working directory, making it impossible to edit files and commit changes. Ultimately it creates the central repository for developers to push/commit their changes. GitLab new projects are created this way, become remote repository. Think of --bare as a way to mark a repository as a storage facility, opposed to a development environment.

Putting the Bare Repository on a Server

In preparation, you create a copy of project folder and place them in project.git pre-setup --bare folder

piotr@vmgitlab:~/git$ git clone --bare project project.git #project.git is ready to be moved to the server

Create a repository/project directory on the server. Need to be own by git:git user and group.

sudo -u git mkdir /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/your_gitlab_user

Assuming that /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/ (GitLab Omnibus) exists on that server, you can set up your new repository by copying your bare repository over:

                   local
                   user 
scp -r project.git piotr@vmgitlab.home:project.git  #copy repo to the server
sudo mv ~/project.git /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/piotrek #move to the right GitLab repo store path

Default remote repo path used by GitLab Omnibus installation

 git:x:998:998::/var/opt/gitlab:/bin/sh
 git user home path               GitLab repos store   
   |                             /
 /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/piotrek 
                                         | 
                          this is a namespace equals a username or group project name
                          all projects .git folders are stored here
sudo chown -R git:git /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/piotrek/ #each file need to be owned by git:git

Add repo to GitLab, below command for Omnibus Installation. It will search, add and process all git repositories.

piotr@vmgitlab:~$ sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:import:repos
Processing piotrek/project.git
 * Created gittest (piotrek/project.git)  <- repo has been added
Processing piotrek/ansible.git
 * ansible (piotrek/ansible.git) exists
Processing piotrek/ansible.wiki.git
 * Skipping wiki repo

You will find the new project on the web interface of GitLab where it can be cloned from.

Stage files

Add files to a staging area for changes to be tracked

git add aaa.txt
git add .             # prior to 2.0 - . means current directory and all subdirectories
git add -A            # prior to 2.0 - add all files, even file deletions are included
git add '*.txt'       # add files using a wildcard, notice that quotes are required
git reset <filename>  # remove a file from staging area, the file and its changes will not be tracked

# New behaviour in Git 2.0
# To add content for the whole tree, run:
git add --all :/ # -A

# To restrict the command to the current directory, run:
git add --all . # -A

Commit changes

The files are in the Staging Area, are not in a repository yet. To store our staged changes we run:

git commit -m "Description of what we changed"

Add local repository to remote GitHub server

               creates repo    on remote GitHub
               name            server and repository 
git remote add origin          https://vmgitlab.home/yourgitspace/gitrepo.git  #uses https connection
git remote add origin          git@vmgitlab.home:piotrek/ansible.git #SSH connection; this need to be created in first place via Gitlab, create/add new project
                                                                     #Gitlab Omnibus server path for repos is  /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/piotrek
                                                                     #containing relevant directories: ansible.git and ansible.wiki.git
git remote -v    #shows remote 'origin' repo path
   origin	git@vmgitlab.home:piotrek/ansible.git (fetch)
   origin	git@vmgitlab.home:piotrek/ansible.git (push)

Push commits (code) to a remote server

$ git remote -v    #shows remote repository that locally is called 'origin'
origin	git@gitlab.com:pio2pio/python27-la.git (fetch)
origin	git@gitlab.com:pio2pio/python27-la.git (push)

When we want to push our code the first time, we need to configure the upstream server (think as: a source of the sources)

git push --set-upstream origin master  #push commits to origin remote repository of the master branch
git push             -u origin master  #-u is short version of --set-upstream

Next time using git push will be sufficient.

Pull and rebase

It happens sometimes that you both work on the same branch and your colleague has committed a code a head of you then you committed just after him. So you ended up with the code that cannot be pushed up as your branch is behind the remote repo commits. If you try to pull, the newest changes will override your code. In this situation you can 'rebase'

git pull --rebase

What it does, is pulling the new code and applies your code on the top of it and creates a new commit. Your previous local commit will be deleted.

Resources

Updating a local repo from a Remote Repository

Fetch changes from the remote repository

git fetch doesn’t touch a working tree at all but updates tracking system allowing you to decide what you want to do next

git fetch    #download changes to local repo from remote 'origin/master' branch
git diff master origin/master   #compare local 'master' branch with remote 'origin/master' branch
git merge origin/master  #while working on 'master' (after a git checkout master) merge in the changes that you’ve just got from 'origin'

Pull changes and automagicly merge

git pull origin master      #from the 'origin' remote repository its master branch
git stash        # to stash your not committed changes before pull
git stash apply  # to re-apply your changes after your pull

Preview changes of your staged files

git diff --staged

Working with branches

Git has 2 types of branches:

Local branches -what you see when you type git branch, e.g. to use an abbreviated example I have here:

      $ git branch
        debian
        server
      * master

Remote-tracking branches -what you see when you type git branch -r, e.g.:

      $ git branch -r
      cognac/master
      origin/albert
      origin/ant

The names of tracking branches are made up of the name of a "remote" (e.g. origin, cognac) followed by "/" and then the name of a branch in that remote repository.

These are stored locally:

  • .git/refs/heads/ [for local branches]
  • .git/refs/remotes/ [for tracking branches]

Recovering files (from staging area, HEAD, or other)

Retrieve file from the staging area

git checkout directory/file.txt

Retrieve a file from the latest commit

git checkout HEAD -- directory/file.txt

Retrieve a file from a previous commit

 git checkout HEAD^ -- directory/file.txt #or git checkout 13bd00 -- directory/file.txt

It’s important to note that this stages the file, too!

permanently remove few commits from remote branch

You git reset --hard your local branch to remove changes from working tree and index, and you git push --force your revised local branch to the remote. (other solution here, involving deleting the remote branch, and re-pushing it)


Undoing changes in a local branch

Undo a merge that hasn't been pushed yet

Make your local master branch look identical to origin/master. It is possible that origin/master may be ahead of your local master just previous to the merge by some commits, in that case this might not give the desired results

(master)$ git reset --hard origin/master

The ref ORIG_HEAD will point to the original commit from before the merge, --merge doesn't touch uncommitted changes

(master)$ git reset --merge ORIG_HEAD

With newer Git versions, if you have not committed the merge yet and you have a merge conflict:

git merge --abort

Resetting branch pointer without changing files

This command will move the current branch pointer back by one commit

git reset HEAD~1

You can check the result by running git show which will give you the details of the most recent commit on the branch. Running it before and after resetting the branch pointer should show how it moved to the previous commit. Note that the files stay in the state of your undone commit and will therefore be marked as modified (or added, deleted) again. I think of this command as moving changes from the last commit back to the staging area. Resetting branch pointer and files

Set back the current branch by one commit and undo all changes from that commit

git reset --hard HEAD~1

This will completely wipe out the most recent commit from the current branch. I am not sure if the actual commit data is also deleted, but it will definitely no longer be part of the current branch and your repository should look exactly like one commit ago.

Amending the most recent commit

There is a flag for the commit command itself that allows you to pack changes on top of the most recent one. Instead of creating a new commit, Git will replace the most recent one. The new comment message will override the previous one.

git commit --amend -m "New commit"

Remove files

git rm '*.txt'
git rm -r folder_of_cats   #remove folders recursively
git commit -am "Delete stuff"    #-a auto removes deleted files within commit

Merge other branch with the current active branch

You always merging into the current 'checked out branch'. So, if you currently working in 'master-vpc' branch

git merge aws-subnet

will write code from 'aws-subnet' branch to your 'master-vpc' branch.

Preview changes before merging

Current branch is 'master-vpc'. So to preview changes before importing/merging 'aws-subnet' branch into the current use this command:

git diff aws-subnet

git worktree

Check out a different branch in your repository, in a seperate directory. It looks like and is used like a regular git repository, but it allows you to have multiple active working trees in the same repository at the same time.


Add worktree
git worktree add ../another-directory

This will create a new worktree in another-directory, which is a sibling of the current directory. At the same time it will also create a new branch with the same name as the directory.


Specifying branch name
git worktree add -b new-branch ../another-directory
git worktree add ../another-directory existing-branch|commit


Remove the worktree

git worktree remove ../another-directory


All your commited changes will be present in the main repository, as if you had done the work there.

Git diff - preview a file changes

Compare 2 branches


The diff command does not work on symbolic links, you need you point to the hard file.


Changes between commits, ^ - last commit, ^^ - 2 commits and so on

git diff HEAD^ HEAD main.c
git diff (working directory and staging)
git diff --cached (staging and repo)
git diff HEAD (working dir and repo)
git diff 225bb (?)
git diff HEAD 225bb (?)
git diff MY-PROGS/TEST.PROG.A (?)

Navigate with Space (next page), Enter (next line), B (previous page), Q (quit)


Show all historical commits against the file

git log -- [filename]
git log --follow -p -- [filename]   #show content/diff


Show the file content/diff commits history

gitk [filename]


Preview a file between branches

git diff mybranch branch_to_compare -- folder/file_to_compare.txt


Show a file form a different branch

git show origin/branchName:path/to/file

Search through commits logs

git log --grep="string" #will look for a string in every commit comment
git log --graph --decorate  #will show branches as a tree

Resolve git conflicts

When you get into conflicts your index is locked so you cannot change the current branch until cnflicts are resolved.

The files with conflicts will be changed and markers added on:

<<<<<<< HEAD:file.txt  #this is a delimiter
Hello world                    #this top part shows current branch file content
=======                #this is delimiter 
Goodbye                        #bottom part whows content of the file from master branch
>>>>>>> master         #this is delimiter to delete

You can edit the file keep or remove the offending lines to resolve the conflict. Then remember to add the file to commit using git add folder/file.txt

You can also setup vimdiff (multi-window comparision) as the default git merge tool, plus disable a prompt when running git mergetool

git config merge.tool vimdiff
git config merge.conflictstyle diff3
git config mergetool.prompt false

Git config - configuration

Git comes with a tool called git config that lets you get and set configuration variables that control all aspects of how Git looks and operates. These variables can be stored in three different places:

  • /etc/gitconfig contains values for every user on the system and all their repositories. Option --system reads this file
  • ~/.gitconfig or ~/.config/git/config specific to your user, --global option writes to this file
  • .git/config config file in the Git directory of whatever repository you’re currently using: option --local is specific to that single repository.

Each level overrides values in the previous level, so values in <.git/config trump those in /etc/gitconfig.

On Windows systems, Git looks for the .gitconfig file in the $HOME directory (C:\Users\$USER for most people). It also still looks for /etc/gitconfig, although it’s relative to the MSys root, which is wherever you decide to install Git on your Windows system when you run the installer. If you are using Git for Windows 2.x or later, there is also a system-level config file at C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Git\config on Windows XP, and in C:\ProgramData\Git\config on Windows Vista and newer. This config file can only be changed by git config -f <file> as an admin.

Set all branches to be tracked

#!/bin/bash
for branch in `git branch -a | grep remotes | grep -v HEAD | grep -v master `; do
   git branch --track ${branch#remotes/origin/} $branch
done

Download/fetch all tracking branches

git fetch

List all your repositories

Replace $GHUB_TOKEN with authorization token.

alias ghrepos="curl -s -i -H 'Authorization: token $GHUB_TOKEN' \>
                https://api.github.com/user/repos | grep -o 'https://github.com[^\"]*.git'"

Keep empty directory in a repository

Although it's not supported by design to track an empty directories you can add empty .gitkeep file more as convention but this can be any empty file.

Tags

Add tag in your local branch

$ git tag version1   #add
$ git tag            #list all tags
$ git push version1  #push only a particular tag
$ git push --tags    #push all tags to remote

Delete a tag locally then remove from remote repo

git tag --delete version1
git push origin :refs/tags/version1

Resources