General Notes
Just a bunch of stuff I might want to use at some point in time, maybe.
Ideas for Git Bent
- bent tips: Tips on how to use the command line, and Git Bent
- maybe a
bent first time
command? That's whatsetup
is supposed to be, but maybe a different name?
- maybe a
- bent reset: Reset local files to match the git host
- Maybe
bent sync
This could have multiple options:- Overwrite local changes with what's on the git host
- Overwrite remote files with what's here locally
- stash local changes, pull remote & overwrite, then merge local changes onto remote by hand
- Maybe
- bent switch project:
- bent switch user:
- bent switch feature:
- This might just be part of bent switch version, unless there is some branch filtering
- bent install gitlab.com/User/Pakage.git
- A general purpose installer for git repos. edits bashrc with path, or something simple like that. Maybe run additional build commands like 'make'.
- JSDELIVR may be helpful with this, as a means to download code from git hosts.
Marketing Opportunities
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/57220224/git-push-with-ssh
- Specifically the ssh setup feature that walks you through & generates ssh key for you
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3065650/whats-the-simplest-way-to-list-conflicted-files-in-git
- Post our solution for finding files with conflicts
Unlikely ideas for Git Bent
- bent issues / feature request / bug report / feedback
- bent fork (go to a repo online & fork it)
- bent pull request (go online)
Bash Resources
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/64079876/should-i-compile-my-bash-library-into-fewer-files?noredirect=1#comment113314739_64079876
- A thread of very helpful comments on designing this library better (even though that's not what the question was about lol)
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5947742/how-to-change-the-output-color-of-echo-in-linux
Git Resources
- https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/ Quickly rewrite git repository history (filter-branch replacement)
- https://github.com/GitTools/GitVersion Versioning when using git, solved. GitVersion looks at your git history and works out the semantic version of the commit being built.
- https://github.com/GitTools/GitReleaseManager Tool for creating and exporting releases for software applications hosted on GitHub
- https://github.com/GitTools/GitReleaseNotes Utility which makes it really easy to generate release notes for your Git project. Works with GitHub, Jira and YouTrack. TFS Support coming soon
- https://git-scm.com/docs/gitk
- tig: https://github.com/jonas/tig
- git bfg: https://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/
- An improvement on git filter-branch
- Git bisect: http://webchick.net/node/99
- https://github.com/grdl/git-get
- https://github.com/jwiegley/git-scripts
- https://github.com/bill-auger/git-branch-status/
- Push local repo to production server: https://help.dreamhost.com/hc/en-us/articles/216445197-Pushing-your-local-Git-repository-to-a-DreamHost-server-Linux-Mac-OS-X
Other Resources
Non-Git Commands
-
ssh-keygen -l -f private_key_file
mixed withssh-add -l
can help me figure out if an ssh identity has already been added -
ssh -o BatchMode=yes git@github.com
check if I have a successful ssh connection to github-
ssh -i /c/Users/bwimbush/.ssh/id_rsa -v git@remoteserver.com 'git --version'
provides a more verbose way of looking at it
-
Git Commands
-
git rm --cached password.txt
: Remove a single file... from tracking? Does this work only work on a file that is newly tracked, or does it work on all files that have long been committed? I think it removes the file from the current commit -
git rm --cached -rf a-dir
: Remove a directory -
git ls-files -o # show untracked files
-
git ls-files -m # show tracked files with unstaged changes
-
git reset --hard $(git rev-list --max-parents=0 HEAD)
-
git clean -fdx
will clean even ignored files & directories... for deleting cached files?? -
git add --renormalize
which fixes all newlines, but first doecho "* text=auto" >> .gitattributes
-
git sneak
= commit --amend --no-edit -
git add -p
(review changes before adding them).git checkout . -p
(review changes before removing them) -
git log --all --pretty=oneline --decorate --graph --abbrev-commit
: A much better log- https://coderwall.com/p/euwpig/a-better-git-log
-
git log --graph --pretty=format:'%Cred%h%Creset -%C(yellow)%d%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)<%an>%Creset' --abbrev-commit
- add
-p
to see lines that changed - credit to @filipekiss on Twitter
-
git rebase -i
... not sure what it does-
git rebase -i HEAD~2
: If you only want to alter the last two commits (great for using fixup if the last commit was juast a fix of the commit before) - "In this case you can also use
git commit --amend
it will add current index to last commit. You can use--no-edit
to use prev commit message"
-
-
git filter-branch
-
git reset --hard commit_hash; git push -f origin [branch]
-
git bisect
-
git pull origin master --rebase --autostash
- Stash local changes
- Pulls remote so local dir is now equal to remote
- Merges the stash, overwriting the latest remote with those local changes.
- May need to resolve conflicts if any exist.
-
git checkout -b branch_name specific-commit
to restore a branch that has been deleted- I'm guessing you can checkout any commit as a branch this way?
-
git shortlog -s -n
- Shows all contributors of a git project ordered by the number of commits
- Merge a pull request from the same repo (non-fork)
- Step 1: From your project repository, bring in the changes and test.
git fetch origin git checkout -b feature-dynamic_urls origin/feature-dynamic_urls git merge version_1
- Step 2: Merge the changes and update on GitHub.
git checkout version_1 git merge --no-ff feature-dynamic_urls git push origin version_1
- Replace master branch with what's currently on disk:
git checkout -b a_temporary_branch git merge -s ours --no-commit master git commit # Add a message regarding the replacement that you just did git checkout master git merge a_temporary_branch git push #then probably delete the temporary branch? Maybe archive it? Not sure