101 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
101 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
---
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comments: false
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---
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# Getting Started
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----------
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## Instantiating Repositories
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* Create a new repository by instantiating it through
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```bash
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git init
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```
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* Copy an existing project by cloning the repository through
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```bash
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git clone <url>
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```
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## Central Repos
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* To instantiate a central repository a `--bare` flag is required.
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* Bare repositories don't allow file editing or committing changes.
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* Create a bare repo with
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```bash
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git init --bare project-name.git
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```
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## Instantiate workflow with clone
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1. Create a project in your user namespace.
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- Choose to import from 'Any Repo by URL' and use <https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/training-examples.git>.
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1. Create a '`Workspace`' directory in your home directory.
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1. Clone the '`training-examples`' project.
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## Commands
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```
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mkdir ~/workspace
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cd ~/workspace
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git clone git@gitlab.example.com:<username>/training-examples.git
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cd training-examples
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```
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## Git concepts
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**Untracked files**
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New files that Git has not been told to track previously.
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**Working area**
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Files that have been modified but are not committed.
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**Staging area**
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Modified files that have been marked to go in the next commit.
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## Committing Workflow
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1. Edit '`edit_this_file.rb`' in '`training-examples`'
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1. See it listed as a changed file (working area)
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1. View the differences
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1. Stage the file
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1. Commit
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1. Push the commit to the remote
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1. View the git log
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## Commands
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```
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# Edit `edit_this_file.rb`
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git status
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git diff
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git add <file>
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git commit -m 'My change'
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git push origin master
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git log
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```
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----------
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## Note
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* git fetch vs pull
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* Pull is git fetch + git merge
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