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Intro Workshop

This repository serves as an introduction to GitHub and Git.

What is Git?

Git is an example of a version control system. A version control system is a tool for managing a collection of program code that provides you with reversibility, concurrency, and annotation. Version control systems work a lot like Dropbox or Google Docs: they allow multiple people to work on the same files at the same time, and to view or “roll back” to previous versions.

What is GitHub?

GitHub is a site that will host a copy of your coding project in the cloud, enabling multiple people to collaborate (using git). Git is what you use (the language) to do version control; GitHub is a place where repositories of code can be stored.

Installing git and GitHub on your computer

For MacOS:

  • Paste the following into your terminal/command line interface to download Homebrew:
/bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/HEAD/install.sh)"
  • Once homebrew has been successfully installed, paste the following into your terminal/command line interface to download and install Git:
brew install git

For Windows:

  • Download Git for Windows. Most likely, you will want to select the "64-bit Git for Windows Setup." version.

  • Once the .exe file has been downloaded onto your machine, open it and select "Yes" when prompted to allow changes to be made to your device

  • Select "Next" on all the optional changes git allows you to make (AKA retaining default options).

  • Upon selecting all options/preferences, the .exe will complete its installation steps. Once prompted, select "Finish" to complete the install

Configuring your GitHub account on your local machine

  • Verify your email address in the link sent by GitHub.

  • Go into your terminal/PowerShell/command line application and paste the following code:

git config --global user.name "Your_username_here"
git config --global user.email "[email protected]"
  • Perform a test of your connection to GitHub from your local machine by entering the following commands in the command line to clone this repo:
cd Desktop/
git clone https://github.com/forsyth-lab/Intro_Workshop.git

If the commands are successful, our lab's GitHub introductory repo will be downloaded to your desktop, signifying your GitHub account is successfully connected to your local machine.

Authenticating with the Command line

This step is to gain read/write/execute access for your local machine to asess repositories on GitHub. There are two ways, HTTPs and SSH, and both have a different way of authenticating.

HTTPs - Authenticate with a personal access token.

  • In the upper-right corner of your GitHub account in the browser, click your profile photo, then click Settings.

  • In the left sidebar, click Developer settings.

  • In the left sidebar, click Personal access tokens.

  • Click Tokens (Classic).

    • Click Generate new token and select Generate new token (Classic).
  • Give your token a descriptive name in the Note field.

  • For expiration, select the “Expiration” menu and choose the No Expiration option (disregard the warning, but be sure not to share this token with anyone or anywhere non-secure).

  • Select the scopes you'd like to grant this token. For purposes of working on code in the lab, it will be most beneficial to select everything except delete:packages and delete_repo as these are dangerous user capabilities.

    • To note, a token with no assigned scopes can only access public information. For more information, see "Available scopes".
  • Click Generate token.

    • IMPORTANT NOTE: once this token has been generated, it will display only once on your screen and not be viewable again. As such, copy and store it in a secure location (e.g., password protected document, bit-locker, etc.) to be accessed when GitHub credentials will be first required (either in pushing/pulling this repo in the steps below, or another repo on which you plan to work).

SSH - Generate an SSH public/private keypair

A more secured method. Access the github help page for more information.

Committing a test push/pull to the Intro Workshop repo

On Mac:

  1. Open Terminal or your command line interface of choice.

  2. Navigate to the directory where you want to create the file and add text. For example, if you want to create the file inside the "Intro_Workshop/Workshop_Push_Directory" directory on your Desktop, you can use the following command:

    cd ~/Full/Path/To/Intro_Workshop/Workshop_Push_Directory
  3. Pull any changes made by others to the GitHub repository:

    git pull
  4. It is likely at this point that you will be prompted to enter your credentials - though it is possible you may not encounter this prompt until step 9, regardless when you are prompted for:

    • Username for 'https://github.com' Enter your github username here
    • Password for 'https://github.com' Enter the token you created here
      • At this point, since UW provides access to GitHub Enterprise and our organization uses single sign on (SSO), you will likely encounter something to the effect of "Permission denied. Could not read from remote repository", followed by a link to an SSO authorization. Copy and paste this link into your browser of choice, and agree to the terms and conditions of the SSO.
      • Once completed, you should be able to successfully perform the git pull action from step 3, albeit being prompted for your credentials once more.

On Windows:

  1. Open Command Prompt or PowerShell.

  2. Navigate to the directory where you want to create the file and add text. For example, if you want to create the file inside the "Intro_Workshop/Workshop_Push_Directory" directory on your Desktop, you can use the following command in Command Prompt:

    cd C:\Users\YourUsername\Desktop\Intro_Workshop\Workshop_Push_Directory
  3. It is likely at this point that you will be prompted to enter your credentials - though it is possible you may not encounter this prompt until step 9, regardless when you are prompted for:

    • Username for 'https://github.com': Enter your github username here
    • Password for 'https://github.com': Enter the token you created here
      • At this point, since UW provides access to GitHub Enterprise and our organization uses single sign on (SSO), you will likely encounter something to the effect of "Permission denied. Could not read from remote repository", followed by a link to an SSO authorization. Copy and paste this link into your browser of choice, and agree to the terms and conditions of the SSO.
      • Once completed, you should be able to successfully perform the git pull action from step 3, albeit being prompted for your credentials once more.

Create the file using the following command:

  1. Directly in the terminal

    a. Creating a new empty file (optional)

    For mac:

    touch your_name_test.txt

    For windows:

    New-Item your_name_test.txt

    b. Making edits

    vim your_name_test.txt
    

    or

    nano your_name_test.txt

    or

    vi your_name_test.txt
  2. Use any text editor of your choice (e.g Visual Studios, Sublime, Notepad...)

    # Basic Vim Commands
    Enter INSERT mode = click the letter "i"
    Get out of INSERT mode = click "esc"
    Save & Quit = click esc then type ":wq" and click "Enter"
    Exit = click esc then type ":x" click "Enter"
    
    # Basic Nano commands
    Save = click "ctrl" and the letter "O" at the same time,
    then click "enter".
    Exit = click "ctrl" then type "x"
    

Commit a test change:

  1. Stage the changes:

    git add .
  2. Commit the changes:

    git commit -m "Add a line of text to your_name_test.txt"
  3. Push the changes to the GitHub repository:

    git push

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