4.4 KiB
git
This file contains tips and tricks to remember and documents some of my findings.
Table of contents
glossary
| term | description |
|---|---|
| head | pointer to branch (usually latest commit, unless detached=pointer to specific commit) currently checked out locally |
| index | keeps track of staged/cached (with git add) changes |
| working tree | local file working directory |
^ |
one commit back (in history), use <[HEAD|branch|commit_hash]>^ |
~<n> |
n commits back (in history), use <[HEAD|branch|commit]~2 |
branches
create a branch
To create a branch use subcommand branch or checkout with flag -b:
# create new branch ('base-branch' is optional)
git branch <branch-name> <base-branch>
git checkout -b <branch-name> <base-branch>
# switch branch ('checkout -b' combines the 'branch' and 'switch' subcommands)
git switch <branch-name>
delete a branch
To delete a branch locally use git branch -d <branch name>.
To delete a branch on the remote repository use git push -d <remote> <branch name>.
submodules
To fetch submodules of a cloned repository use:
# do it manually
git submodule init
git submodule update
# do it all at once
git clone --recurse-submodules
# if repo is already cloned
git submodule update --init --recursive
update reference
To update a parent repositories reference to a submodule add the modules path and commit:
git add <path/to/submodule>
git commit -m <commit-message>
stash
If the current tree is dirty, one can use git stash to temporarily save the changes and reset the tree to the last commit.
Afterwards the changes can be reapplied with git stash pop.
This can be useful if for example one would like to create a new branch for the current changes.
fixup
Use the argument --fixup with the subcommand commit to fix a commit.
Afterwards use rebase --autosquash to apply the fixup.
git add ... # Stage a fix
git commit --fixup=a0b1c2d3 # Perform the commit to fix broken a0b1c2d3
git rebase -i --autosquash a0b1c2d3~1 # Now merge fixup commit into broken commit
removing files from the index
To remove files from the index without deleting them on disk, use:
git rm --cached <file-name>
This is helpful if one accidentally committed autogenerated files.
philosophies
Important things to always remember: - do renaming in seperate commit - don't merge conflicts with directories
merge
When following the philosophie of merging, one merges the target branch into ones working, solves all conflicts, tests the result and then merges the working branch into the target branch. This is done with
# merges 'target-branch' into curret branch
git merge <target-branch>
# proceeds after solving merge conflict
git merge --continue
rebase
When following the philosophie of rebasing, one rebases the feature branch onto the target branch. This is done with
# rebase to (newest commit of) a branch
git rebase <target-branch>
# or rebase to a specific commit
git rebase <commit-hash>
# proceeds after solving rebase conflict
git rebase --continue
This is only necessary, if the 'main' branch progressed in the mean time, otherwise one just merges the feature branch into the 'main' branch.
squash
"Squashing" commits (combining several commits into one commit) is done with an interactive rebase (git rebase -i).
Replace the pick with squash or just s for all commits to be combined.
Afterwards a force push is needed (git push --force-with-lease)
tags
Tags are labels for specific commits, for example to mark a tested commit as release. A tag can be created with the following command:
# annotated (unsigned) tag
# the commit hash can be omitted to just use the commit HEAD points to
git tag -a <tag-name> <commit-hash>
Tags remain local and are not synced with push by default.
To upload tags with push, add the flag --tags:
git push --tags