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Git cheatsheet
##Git Cheatsheet (survival level)
Here is a set of some of the most common things you'll need to do in your day-to-day workflow with Git.
Pro Tip 1: you can get man pages for any git command by inserting a hyphen. As in: "man git-fetch" or "man git-merge"
Pro Tip 2: install the cheat gem for a really long cheat sheet available in your terminal.
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What branch am I on? Which files are modified, which are staged, which are untracked, etc?
git status
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Get all new changes, and remote branch refs
git fetch
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Do a git fetch and (if possible) a merge on the current branch
git pull
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Push commits to to the origin/master (like an SVN commit):
git push origin master
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Push commits on a non-master branch:
git push origin your_branch_name
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See a list of local branches
git branch
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Switch to an existing branch
git checkout existing_branch_name
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Create a new branch and switch to it:
git checkout -b new_branch_name
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Merge my working branch into master (from master):
git merge working_branch_name
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Merge a large set of commits on a dev branch into master as one commit ("squash" commit):
git merge working_branch_name --squash
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Get the changes that have happened to master branch since I made my working branch:
git rebase master
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Temporarily clear my stage so I can switch to another branch ("stashing"):
git stash
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Get my stashed stuff back:
git stash apply
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See the log of commits:
git log
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See what changes were made in a given commit:
git show COMMIT_HASH
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See more detailed log information:
git whatchanged
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Get rid of all the changes I've made since last commit:
git reset --hard
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Get rid of the changes for just one file:
git checkout FILENAME
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Make HEAD point to the state of the codebase as of 2 commits ago:
git checkout HEAD^^
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Fix a conflict (w/ system's default graphical diff tool):
git mergetool
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Revert a commit:
git revert <commit hash>
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Revert a commit from a merge:
git revert -m<number of commits back in the merge to revert> <hash of merge commit>
(e.g. git revert -m1 4f76f3bbb83ffe4de74a849ad9f68707e3568e16 will revert the first commit back in the merge performed at 4f76f3bbb83ffe4de74a849ad9f68707e3568e16)
When using Git, it's very handy (read: pretty much mandatory) to have an ambient cue in your shell telling you what branch you're currently on. Use this function in your .profile/.bashrc/.bash_profile to enable you to place your Git branch in your prompt:
function parse_git_branch {
git branch --no-color 2> /dev/null | sed -e '/^[^*]/d' -e 's/* \(.*\)/(\1)/'
}
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