Difference between revisions of "Working with Git"
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This page contains an introduction to the Git distributed version control system. For now, it is mainly useful to Bazaar users, but will be updated with general Git information over time. | This page contains an introduction to the Git distributed version control system. For now, it is mainly useful to Bazaar users, but will be updated with general Git information over time. | ||
==Cheat sheet for Bazaar users | |||
=Git commands for the novice= | |||
* git status — Returns status of your local repository. | |||
* git pull — Updates local repository from remote repository. | |||
* git pull --rebase — Updates local repository moving any local commits after any pulled commits. Good for keeping things in order when you push your commits. | |||
* git add — Add files to the list that will be commited. | |||
* git commit — Commit your changes locally (after adding). | |||
* git push — Push your locally commited changes to remote repository. | |||
* git remote -v — Shows remote repository (should be: origin https://git_to_be_determined). | |||
* git checkout filename — Reverts 'filename' to repository version. | |||
* git stash — Move changes in directory out of the way (in order to 'pull' in changes). | |||
* git stash pop — Restore changes stashed by 'git stash'. | |||
=Cheat sheet for Bazaar users= | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" |
Revision as of 09:27, 6 January 2017
This page contains an introduction to the Git distributed version control system. For now, it is mainly useful to Bazaar users, but will be updated with general Git information over time.
Git commands for the novice
- git status — Returns status of your local repository.
- git pull — Updates local repository from remote repository.
- git pull --rebase — Updates local repository moving any local commits after any pulled commits. Good for keeping things in order when you push your commits.
- git add — Add files to the list that will be commited.
- git commit — Commit your changes locally (after adding).
- git push — Push your locally commited changes to remote repository.
- git remote -v — Shows remote repository (should be: origin https://git_to_be_determined).
- git checkout filename — Reverts 'filename' to repository version.
- git stash — Move changes in directory out of the way (in order to 'pull' in changes).
- git stash pop — Restore changes stashed by 'git stash'.
Cheat sheet for Bazaar users
Bazaar command | Git command |
---|---|
bzr branch branch-url | git clone repository-url directory cd directory git checkout branch-name |
bzr checkout lp:project-name | not supported |
bzr update | not supported |
bzr pull | git pull |
bzr add file | git add file |
bzr diff | git diff HEAD |
bzr revert | git reset --hard |
bzr revert file -r revision | git checkout commit -- file |
bzr uncommit | git reset HEAD^ |
bzr uncommit ...some changes... bzr commit |
...some changes... git commit -a --amend |
bzr push location | git remote add remote-name location git push remote-name branch-name |
bzr commit | git commit -a |
bzr log -c 10 | git log -n 10 |
bzr switch branch-url | git checkout branch-name |
bzr switch -b branch-url | git checkout -b branch-name |
bzr merge branch-url | git merge branch-name |
bzr shelve --all | git stash |
bzr unshelve change-id | git stash pop |
Differences from Bazaar
Here are the most important differences between Bazaar and Git:
- Bazaar revisions are identified by sequential numbers. Git revisions (called commits in the documentation) are identified by cryptographic hashes which are strings of 40 hexadecimal numbers, though it is possible to also refer to them by a sequential number since the last tag (see
git describe
). - Bazaar is branch-oriented, while Git is repository- and commit-oriented. Repositories in Bazaar are storage locations for potentially multiple branches. Repositories in Git are collections of commits, and branches are just pointers to particular commits that are updated after each
git commit
command. Cloning a Git repository by default retrieves all of its commits and branches. - In Bazaar, you conceptually submit your work to only one place - the push branch. You can change this place at any time, but Bazaar remembers only one value for you. In Git, you can configure many remote repositories and work with code from multiple sources using a single working tree.
- By default, each branch in Bazaar has a separate working tree, while all branches in the same Git repository share the same working tree. It's possible to make Bazaar work in the latter mode as well, but it's not very well supported.
In Bazaar, if you want to try out someone else's code, you need to create a new checkout of their branch or use bzr switch
. In Git, what you do depends on where the code is located.
- If the code to try out is in a branch in the project's main repository, you update the repository (
git fetch
) and then check out the branch (git checkout origin/branch-to-try-out
). This creates a local branch calledbranch-to-try-out
. (You can use a different name as well.) - If the code is in a different repository, you first add it as a remote repository with
git remote add remote-name repository-url
, fetch it withgit fetch remote-name
and check out the relevant branch withgit checkout remote-name/branch-to-try-out
.
Another difference is that in Git, you cannot directly make changes to remote branches - you must to use git push
and git pull
. Therefore, the Subversion-like checkout mode known from Bazaar is unsupported.