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7.4 KiB
Markdown
304 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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obj: application
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wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Git
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repo: https://github.com/git/git
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website: https://git-scm.com
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rev: 2024-12-04
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---
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# Git
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Git is the version control system (VCS) designed and developed by Linus Torvalds, the creator of the [Linux](../linux/Linux.md) kernel. Git is now used to maintain AUR packages, as well as many other projects, including sources for the [Linux](../linux/Linux.md) kernel.
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There is a commit naming scheme called [gitmoji](gitmoji.md)
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To control a git repo graphically [GitHub Desktop](../applications/development/GitHub%20Desktop.md) can be used.
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## Configuration
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Git can be configured with a `.gitconfig` file or via the command line.
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In order to use Git you need to set at least a name and [email](../internet/eMail.md):
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```shell
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git config --global user.name "John Doe"
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git config --global user.email "johndoe@example.com"
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```
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## Usage
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A Git repository is contained in a `.git` directory, which holds the revision history and other metadata. The directory tracked by the repository, by default the parent directory, is called the working directory. Changes in the working tree need to be staged before they can be recorded (committed) to the repository. Git also lets you restore, previously committed, working tree files.
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### Git repository
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Initialize a repository
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```shell
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git init
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git init --bare
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git init -b main
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```
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Clone an existing repository
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```shell
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git clone repository
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git clone repository folder
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git clone --recursive repository
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git clone --bare repository
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git clone --sparse repository
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git clone -b master repository
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```
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See status of tracked and untracked files:
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```shell
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git status
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```
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Rename a file or folder:
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```shell
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git mv old new
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```
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See Commits:
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```shell
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git log
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git log --graph --oneline --decorate
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# Graph of all branches
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git log --graph --all
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# Extended graph
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git log --graph
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```
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### Commits
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Git allows commits and tags to be signed using [GnuPG](../cryptography/GPG.md).
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```shell
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git config --global commit.gpgSign true`
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```
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See how a file come together over commits and authors:
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```shell
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git blame file
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# Ignore code movements
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git blame -C -C -C file
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```
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Add files to version control:
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```shell
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git add file
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# Add everything
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git add -A
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```
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Commit changes:
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```shell
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git commit -m "message"
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# Signed commit
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git commit -s -m "message"
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# Fix last commit with new changes
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git commit --amend
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```
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See commit changes:
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```shell
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git show commit
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# See only changed filenames or status
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git show --name-only commit
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git show --name-status commit
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# Show commit statistics
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git show --stat commit
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# Show patch of commit
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git show -p commit
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git show --patch commit
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```
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Revert changes:
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```shell
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git revert <commit>
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# Signed revert commit
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git revert -s <commit>
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# Revert to the fourth last commit from HEAD
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git revert HEAD~3
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```
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Bring back old revisions of files:
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```shell
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git restore file
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# Restore state before two commits from master
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git restore --source master~2 Makefile
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```
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## Branching
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Fixes and new features are usually tested in branches. When changes are satisfactory they can merged back into the default (master) branch.
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Create a branch, whose name accurately reflects its purpose:
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```shell
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git branch help-section-addition
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```
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List branches:
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```shell
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git branch
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git branch --all
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git branch --remotes
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```
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Switch branches:
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```shell
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git checkout <ref>
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# Switch to ref and create new branch
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git checkout -B <branch> <ref>
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```
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Merge a branch back to the master branch:
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```shell
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git checkout master
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git merge branch
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```
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The changes will be merged if they do not conflict. Otherwise, Git will print an error message, and annotate files in the working tree to record the conflicts. The annotations can be displayed with `git diff`. Conflicts are resolved by editing the files to remove the annotations, and committing the final version.
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Any conflicts will look something like this:
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```
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Here are lines that are either unchanged from the common
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ancestor, or cleanly resolved because only one side changed,
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or cleanly resolved because both sides changed the same way.
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<<<<<<< yours:sample.txt
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Conflict resolution is hard;
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let's go shopping.
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=======
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Git makes conflict resolution easy.
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>>>>>>> theirs:sample.txt
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And here is another line that is cleanly resolved or unmodified.
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```
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Continue the merge after resolving merge conflicts:
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```shell
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git merge --continue
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```
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When done with a branch, delete it with:
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```shell
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git branch -d branch
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# Also delete on remote
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git push -d <remote_name> <branchname>
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```
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## Remotes
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Working with remotes:
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```shell
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git remote [-v | --verbose]
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git remote add [-t <branch>] [-m <master>] [-f] <name> <URL>
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git remote rename <old> <new>
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git remote remove <name>
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git remote set-head <name> (-a | --auto | -d | --delete | <branch>)
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git remote set-branches [--add] <name> <branch>...
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git remote get-url [--push] [--all] <name>
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git remote set-url [--push] <name> <newurl> [<oldurl>]
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git remote set-url --add [--push] <name> <newurl>
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git remote set-url --delete [--push] <name> <URL>
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git remote [-v | --verbose] show [-n] <name>...
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git remote prune [-n | --dry-run] <name>...
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git remote [-v | --verbose] update [-p | --prune] [(<group> | <remote>)...]
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```
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Pull from a reposity:
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```shell
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git pull
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# Rebase instead of merge (append your commit if remote is newer)
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git pull --rebase
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```
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Push to a repository:
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```shell
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git push
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git push --force
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git push remote branch
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```
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## Tagging
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Tag commits for versioning:
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```shell
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git tag 2.14 <commit>
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# Signed Tag
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git tag -s 2.14
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# Tag with message
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git tag -a 2.14 -m "Version 2.14"
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```
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List tags:
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```shell
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git tag -l
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```
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Delete a tag:
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```shell
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git tag -d 2.08
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```
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Update remote tags:
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```shell
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git push --tags
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```
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## Patches & Diffs
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Show differences:
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```shell
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# Show uncommited changes
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git diff
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# Output a summary of file creations, renames and mode changes since a given commit:
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git diff --summary commit
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# Output a difference by word instead of line
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git diff --word-diff
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# Output a statistic of changes
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git diff --stat commit
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# Compare a single file between two branches or commits:
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git diff branch_1..branch_2 [--] path/to/file
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# Compare changes between commits
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git range-diff <commit> <commit>
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```
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Generate a patch file:
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```shell
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git format-patch <revision range>
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```
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Apply patch files to repository:
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```shell
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git apply patch
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# Revert patch
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git apply --reverse patch
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# Another way to apply patches
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git am < patch
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git am --signoff < patch
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git am --continue < patch
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git am --abort < patch
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```
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## .gitignore
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A `.gitignore` file specifies intentionally untracked files that Git should ignore. Files already tracked by Git are not affected.
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This file contains pattern on each line which exclude files from git versioning.
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## Git Hooks
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Git hooks are custom scripts that run automatically in response to certain Git events or actions. These hooks are useful for automating tasks like code quality checks, running tests, enforcing commit message conventions, and more. Git hooks can be executed at different points in the Git workflow, such as before or after a commit, push, or merge.
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Git hooks are stored in the `.git/hooks` directory of your repository. By default, this directory contains example scripts with the `.sample` extension. You can customize these scripts by removing the `.sample` extension and editing them as needed.
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Hooks only apply to your local repository. If a hook script fails it prevents the associated action as well.
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### Common Git Hooks
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- pre-commit
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- prepare-commit-msg
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- commit-msg
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- post-commit
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- post-checkout
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- pre-rebase
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