Popular Git commands and how they are used.¶
- git config –global user.name “Sam Smith”
git config –global user.email sam@example.com : It configures the author name and email to be used with the commits.
- git init: Initializes a git repository locally.
- git clone username@host/path_to_repo : Creates a copy of the remote repository to your local machine.
- git add * : adds all the unstaged files to the staging area.
- git add <filename> : adds a specific unstaged file to the staging area.
- git commit -m “Commit message”: commits changes to the head of the local repository instead of the remote.
- git commit -a :adds all the files that are in the staging area and all any file changed since then.
- git push origin master : pushes the changes made to the remote repository.
- git status: list all the files you have made changes to.
- git remote add origin <server> : adds the a link to the remote repository to be able to make changes to it.
- git remote -v : list all the currently configured remote repositories.
- git checkout -b <branchname> : creates a branch and switches to it.
- git checkout <branchname> : switches in between branches.
- git branch : lists all the branches in your repository and tells you the branch you are currently working on.
- git branch -a: List all remote or local branches
- git branch -d <branchname> : deletes the feature branch.
- git push origin <branchname> : pushes your branch to remote repository.
- git push –all origin : Pushes all your local branches to the remote repository.
- git push origin : <branchname> : Deletes a branch in your remote repository.
- git pull : fetch and merge changes in your remote repository to your working repository.
- git merge <branchname> : To merge work in another branch to your working branch.
- git rm : Removes files from your index and your working directory so they will not be tracked.
- git diff: Generates patch files or statistics of differences between paths or files in your git repository, or your index or your working directory.
- git archive : Creates a tar or zip file including the contents of a single tree from your repository.
- git gc: Garbage collector for your repository. Optimizes your repository.
- git fsck: Does an integrity check of the Git file system, identifying corrupted objects.
- git prune : Removes objects that are no longer pointed to by any object in any reachable branch.
Updates from remote repository
- git diff : Views all the merge conflict.
- git diff –base <filename> : view the conflicts against a base file.
- git diff <sourcebranch> <targetbranch> : previews changes before merging.
- git add <filename> : After resolving the merge conflicts mark the file.
- git tag 1.0.0 <commitID> : You can use a a tag to mark a significant change like a release.
- git push –tags origin : Pushes all the local tags to the remote repository.
- git log : It lists all the commits.
undoing local changes
- git checkout – <filename> : replaces the changes in your local tree to the local content in the head.
- git fetch origin, git reset –hard origin/master : Instead, to drop all your local changes and commits, fetch the latest history from the server and point your local master branch at it, do this.
- git reset –hard HEAD : Resets your index and working directory to the state of your last commit.
- git grep “folder” : searches the working directory.