2017-11-23 20:21:57 +01:00
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# How Git is different
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Whether you're new to Git or have experience with another version control
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system (VCS), it's a good idea to learn a bit about how Git works. We recommend
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this excellent presentation *[Understanding Git][understanding-git]* from
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Nelson Elhage and Anders Kaseorg and the [Git Basics][gitbook-basics] chapter
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from *Pro Git* by Scott Chacon and Ben Straub.
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Here are the top things to know:
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2020-08-11 01:47:54 +02:00
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- **Git works on snapshots.** Unlike other version control systems (e.g.,
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2017-11-23 20:21:57 +01:00
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Subversion, Perforce, Bazaar), which track files and changes to those files
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made over time, Git tracks *snapshots* of your project. Each time you commit
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or otherwise make a change to your repository, Git takes a snapshot of your
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project and stores a reference to that snapshot. If a file hasn't changed,
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Git creates a link to the identical file rather than storing it again.
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2020-08-11 01:47:54 +02:00
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- **Most Git operations are local.** Git is a distributed version control
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system, so once you've cloned a repository, you have a complete copy of that
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repository's *entire history*. Staging, committing, branching, and browsing
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history are all things you can do locally without network access and without
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immediately affecting any remote repositories. To make or receive changes
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from remote repositories, you need to `git fetch`, `git pull`, or `git push`.
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- **Nearly all Git actions add information to the Git database**, rather than
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removing it. As such, it's hard to make Git perform actions that you can't
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undo. However, Git can't undo what it doesn't know about, so it's a good
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practice to frequently commit your changes and frequently push your commits to
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your remote repository.
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- **Git is designed for lightweight branching and merging.** Branches are
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simply references to snapshots. It's okay and expected to make a lot of
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branches, even throwaway and experimental ones.
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- **Git stores all data as objects, of which there are four types:** blob
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(file), tree (directory), commit (revision), and tag. Each of these objects
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2019-02-22 22:01:45 +01:00
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is named by a unique hash, the SHA-1 hash of its contents. Most of the time
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you'll refer to objects by their truncated hash or more human-readable
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reference like `HEAD` (the current branch). Blobs and trees represent files
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and directories. Tags are named references to other objects. A commit object
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includes: tree id, zero or more parents as commit ids, an author (name,
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email, date), a committer (name, email, date), and a log message. A Git
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repository is a collection of mutable pointers to these objects called
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**refs**.
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- **Cloning a repository creates a working copy.** Every working copy has a
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`.git` subdirectory, which contains its own Git repository. The `.git`
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subdirectory also tracks the *index*, a staging area for changes that will
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become part of the next commit. All files outside of `.git` is the *working
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tree*.
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- **Files tracked with Git have possible three states: committed, modified, and
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staged.** Committed files are those safely stored in your local `.git`
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repository/database. Staged files have changes and have been marked for
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inclusion in the next commit; they are part of the index. Modified files have
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changes but have not yet been marked for inclusion in the next commit; they
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have not been added to the index.
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2020-08-11 01:47:54 +02:00
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- **Git commit workflow is as follows.** Edit files in your *working tree*. Add
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to the *index* (that is *stage*) with `git add`. *Commit* to the HEAD of the
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current branch with `git commit`.
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[gitbook-basics]: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Getting-Started-Git-Basics
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2020-03-27 01:32:21 +01:00
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[understanding-git]: https://web.mit.edu/nelhage/Public/git-slides-2009.pdf
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