Workflow for gitorious and github

Initial checkout:

   1 # Fork repo on gitorious/github
   2 # Pull repo from gitorious/github
   3 # Add remote for upstream, e.g.
   4 cd Spoon-Knife
   5 git remote add upstream git://github.com/octocat/Spoon-Knife.git
   6 git fetch upstream

When needing to merge upstream changes back into master:

   1 # Make sure we're in the branch we want to be in (i.e. master)
   2 git checkout master
   3 git fetch upstream
   4 # Merge from master branch of upstream into current branch
   5 git merge upstream/master

Cookbook

Delete remote branch

git push origin :name-of-remote-branch
# OR
git push origin --delete name-of-remote-branch

Reverting changes

Amend the previous commit that has not been propogated (i.e. undo it, then start a new one with the pending changes in the index):

git commit --amend -a -m "New commit message"

Undo a commit that has not been propagated:

git reset --soft HEAD^

just changes the repository without changing the files you've edited on disk. However:

git reset --hard HEAD^

will reset both repository and revert files.

Once a commit that has been propagated, there is no way to undo. However, the following will create a new commit undoing the previous commit's changes:

git revert HEAD

Pull with rebase instead of merge

git pull --rebase

Configure a branch to always do a rebase instead of a merge:

git config branch.$BRANCH_NAME.rebase true

Enforce .gitignore

Remove files from the repository that should have been ignored by .gitignore:

git rm -r --cached .
git add .
git status
git commit -m ".gitignore is now working"

Ignore whitespace bullshit

# Ignore white space when pulling or merging
git pull -Xignore-space-change
git merge -Xignore-space-change

# Ignore white space changes when diff'ing
git diff --ignore-space-change

Rebase a branch

# Without having branch-you-want-to-rebase checked out
git rebase branch-you-want-to-rebase branch-to-rebase-from
# With having branch-you-want-to-rebase checked out
git checkout branch-you-want-to-rebase
git rebase branch-to-rebase-from

Rebase off a branch that itself had been rebased (keep the un-rebased branch around as old-branch-to-rebase-from):

git rebase --onto branch-to-rebase-from old-branch-to-rebase-from branch-you-want-to-rebase

If you want to rebase but get updated stamps (do this independently of reordering/merging commits with git rebase -i:

git rebase --ignore-date

Per-repository user settings

git config user.name 'Samat K Jain'
git config user.email 'nobody@example.com'

Cleaning

# Remove untracked files and directories, dry run. `-n` for dry run.
git clean -df -n

Interesting reading

The Git Parable: Describes building a system like git, from the ground-up

CIA's git tips & tricks sheet is interesting, and oddly similar to this one.


CategoryCheatSheet