Git Cookbook: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 23:38, 23 April 2013
Overview
Git cheatsheet.
Staging files
Stage a file or files
$ git add [path]
Stage all files
What this won't do is stage deletes.
$ git add ./
To stage everything including deleted files:
$ git add -A
Unstaging and reverting
Unstage a file or files
This will unstage the file, but edits that have been made to the file will remain unchanged.
$ git reset [path]
Note: git reset as described above will throw this error prior to the initial commit:
fatal: Failed to resolve 'HEAD' as a valid ref.
If files have been staged prior to the initial commit, then
$ git rm --cached [path]
Reverting file edits
$ git checkout HEAD [path]
Syncing a repo with subsequent changes to the master
Scenario: Create a branch, make edits. In the meantime other work is being done by other members of the team. The time comics to push your changes out. The goal is to merge their changes into yours locally then push it all out.
- See what files have been touched:
$ git status -s
- View (unstaged) edits for a specific file:
$ git diff -- [path]
- Switch from the local branch to 'master'.
$ git co master
- Merge the updated local 'master' with the local branch, resolving any conflicts:
$ git branch * master mybranch $ git co mybranch $ git merge master
- See also
git rebase
Which does the same thing asgit mergebut in a slightly different way that is helpful to maintain a linear set of changes when merging two branches together.
Commmiting changes
$ git co myBranch $ git status -s # add any files that need to be added to the commit $ git commit -m 'commit message' # the "commit message" is required $ git push origin myBranch
See the Mediabistro wiki for instructions on how to put the changes on 'preview'.
Reports and diffs
View all branches and commit messages:
$ git log --oneline
View commit messages for a single branch:
$ git log --oneline [branchname]
View the files touched between two commits
Where you include just enough of SHA1 and SHA2 to identify the commits (usually about 4 characters).
$ git diff --name-only SHA1 SHA2
View all files modified by the commits in a single branch
$ git diff --name-status master..<branch>
View all commits for a single file
$ git log --oneline <path>
View changes in a single file between two branches
$ git diff <branch1>...<branch2> -- <path/to/file>
Create a patch file for work done in a git branch
To get all the changes after a specific commit:
$ git diff -p <commit_string> > <path/to/patchfile.patch>
Or between two specific commits (the newer one goes first):
$ git diff -p <newer_commit_string> <older_commit_string> > <path/to/patchfile.patch>
(To narrow it down to a specific file, see the 'git diff` example above.)
$ git diff -p <branch1>...<branch2> > <path/to/patchfile.patch>
Applying a patch created with "git diff"
$ patch -p1 < <path/to/patchfile.patch>
If the directory structure is different, say if you are editing myapp2/path/to/file_to_edit.py using changes made to myapp1/path/to/file_to_edit.py then enter the new path when prompted by the patch program.
Managing files
Rename a file
$ git mv <src_name> <dst_name>
Stashing files
Stash changes during a commit or checkout
$ git stash
Get a list of stashed files
$ git stash list
Apply the latest stash
$ git stash apply
Apply the stashes farther down on the stack
$ git stash apply --<index>