Content from Automated Version Control
Last updated on 2024-06-20 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- What is version control and why should I use it?
Objectives
- Understand the benefits of an automated version control system.
- Understand the basics of how automated version control systems work.
We’ll start by exploring how version control can be used to keep track of what one person did and when. Even if you aren’t collaborating with other people, automated version control is much better than this situation:
We’ve all been in this situation before: it seems unnecessary to have multiple nearly-identical versions of the same document. Some word processors let us deal with this a little better, such as Microsoft Word’s Track Changes, Google Docs’ version history, or LibreOffice’s Recording and Displaying Changes.
Version control systems start with a base version of the document and then record changes you make each step of the way. You can think of it as a recording of your progress: you can rewind to start at the base document and play back each change you made, eventually arriving at your more recent version.
Once you think of changes as separate from the document itself, you can then think about “playing back” different sets of changes on the base document, ultimately resulting in different versions of that document. For example, two users can make independent sets of changes on the same document.
Unless multiple users make changes to the same section of the document - a conflict - you can incorporate two sets of changes into the same base document.
A version control system is a tool that keeps track of these changes for us, effectively creating different versions of our files. It allows us to decide which changes will be made to the next version (each record of these changes is called a commit), and keeps useful metadata about them. The complete history of commits for a particular project and their metadata make up a repository. Repositories can be kept in sync across different computers, facilitating collaboration among different people.
The Long History of Version Control Systems
Automated version control systems are nothing new. Tools like RCS, CVS, or Subversion have been around since the early 1980s and are used by many large companies. However, many of these are now considered legacy systems (i.e., outdated) due to various limitations in their capabilities. More modern systems, such as Git and Mercurial, are distributed, meaning that they do not need a centralized server to host the repository. These modern systems also include powerful merging tools that make it possible for multiple authors to work on the same files concurrently.
Paper Writing
Imagine you drafted an excellent paragraph for a paper you are writing, but later ruin it. How would you retrieve the excellent version of your conclusion? Is it even possible?
Imagine you have 5 co-authors. How would you manage the changes and comments they make to your paper? If you use LibreOffice Writer or Microsoft Word, what happens if you accept changes made using the
Track Changes
option? Do you have a history of those changes?
Recovering the excellent version is only possible if you created a copy of the old version of the paper. The danger of losing good versions often leads to the problematic workflow illustrated in the PhD Comics cartoon at the top of this page.
Collaborative writing with traditional word processors is cumbersome. Either every collaborator has to work on a document sequentially (slowing down the process of writing), or you have to send out a version to all collaborators and manually merge their comments into your document. The ‘track changes’ or ‘record changes’ option can highlight changes for you and simplifies merging, but as soon as you accept changes you will lose their history. You will then no longer know who suggested that change, why it was suggested, or when it was merged into the rest of the document. Even online word processors like Google Docs or Microsoft Office Online do not fully resolve these problems.
Key Points
- Version control is like an unlimited ‘undo’.
- Version control also allows many people to work in parallel.
Content from Setting Up Git
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How do I get set up to use Git?
Objectives
- Configure
git
the first time it is used on a computer. - Understand the meaning of the
--global
configuration flag.
When we use Git on a new computer for the first time, we need to configure a few things. Below are a few examples of configurations we will set as we get started with Git:
- our name and email address,
- what our preferred text editor is,
- and that we want to use these settings globally (i.e. for every project).
On a command line, Git commands are written as
git verb options
, where verb
is what we
actually want to do and options
is additional optional
information which may be needed for the verb
. So here is
how Alfredo sets up his new laptop:
BASH
$ git config --global user.name "Alfredo Linguini"
$ git config --global user.email "a.linguini@ratatouille.fr"
Please use your own name and email address instead of Alfredo’s. This user name and email will be associated with your subsequent Git activity, which means that any changes pushed to GitHub, BitBucket, GitLab or another Git host server after this lesson will include this information.
For this lesson, we will be interacting with GitHub and so the email address used should be the same as the one used when setting up your GitHub account. If you are concerned about privacy, please review GitHub’s instructions for keeping your email address private.
Keeping your email private
If you elect to use a private email address with GitHub, then use
GitHub’s no-reply email address for the user.email
value.
It looks like ID+username@users.noreply.github.com
. You can
look up your own address in your GitHub email settings.
Line Endings
As with other keys, when you hit Enter or ↵ or on Macs, Return on your keyboard, your computer encodes this input as a character. Different operating systems use different character(s) to represent the end of a line. (You may also hear these referred to as newlines or line breaks.) Because Git uses these characters to compare files, it may cause unexpected issues when editing a file on different machines. Though it is beyond the scope of this lesson, you can read more about this issue in the Pro Git book.
You can change the way Git recognizes and encodes line endings using
the core.autocrlf
command to git config
. The
following settings are recommended:
On macOS and Linux:
And on Windows:
Alfredo also has to set his favorite text editor, following this table:
Editor | Configuration command |
---|---|
Atom | $ git config --global core.editor "atom --wait" |
nano | $ git config --global core.editor "nano -w" |
BBEdit (Mac, with command line tools) | $ git config --global core.editor "bbedit -w" |
Sublime Text (Mac) | $ git config --global core.editor "/Applications/Sublime\ Text.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl -n -w" |
Sublime Text (Win, 32-bit install) | $ git config --global core.editor "'c:/program files (x86)/sublime text 3/sublime_text.exe' -w" |
Sublime Text (Win, 64-bit install) | $ git config --global core.editor "'c:/program files/sublime text 3/sublime_text.exe' -w" |
Notepad (Win) | $ git config --global core.editor "c:/Windows/System32/notepad.exe" |
Notepad++ (Win, 32-bit install) | $ git config --global core.editor "'c:/program files (x86)/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin" |
Notepad++ (Win, 64-bit install) | $ git config --global core.editor "'c:/program files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin" |
Kate (Linux) | $ git config --global core.editor "kate" |
Gedit (Linux) | $ git config --global core.editor "gedit --wait --new-window" |
Scratch (Linux) | $ git config --global core.editor "scratch-text-editor" |
Emacs | $ git config --global core.editor "emacs" |
Vim | $ git config --global core.editor "vim" |
VS Code | $ git config --global core.editor "code --wait" |
It is possible to reconfigure the text editor for Git whenever you want to change it.
Exiting Vim
Note that Vim is the default editor for many programs. If you haven’t
used Vim before and wish to exit a session without saving your changes,
press Esc then type :q!
and hit Enter
or ↵ or on Macs, Return. If you want to save your
changes and quit, press Esc then type :wq
and
hit Enter or ↵ or on Macs, Return.
Git (2.28+) allows configuration of the name of the branch created
when you initialize any new repository. Alfredo decides to use that
feature to set it to main
so it matches the cloud service
he will eventually use.
Default Git branch naming
Source file changes are associated with a “branch.” For new learners
in this lesson, it’s enough to know that branches exist, and this lesson
uses one branch.
By default, Git will create a branch called master
when you
create a new repository with git init
(as explained in the
next Episode). This term evokes the racist practice of human slavery and
the software development
community has moved to adopt more inclusive language.
In 2020, most Git code hosting services transitioned to using
main
as the default branch. As an example, any new
repository that is opened in GitHub and GitLab default to
main
. However, Git has not yet made the same change. As a
result, local repositories must be manually configured have the same
main branch name as most cloud services.
For versions of Git prior to 2.28, the change can be made on an
individual repository level. The command for this is in the next
episode. Note that if this value is unset in your local Git
configuration, the init.defaultBranch
value defaults to
master
.
The five commands we just ran above only need to be run once: the
flag --global
tells Git to use the settings for every
project, in your user account, on this computer.
Let’s review those settings and test our core.editor
right away:
Let’s close the file without making any additional changes. Remember, since typos in the config file will cause issues, it’s safer to view the configuration with:
And if necessary, change your configuration using the same commands to choose another editor or update your email address. This can be done as many times as you want.
Proxy
In some networks you need to use a proxy. If this is the case, you may also need to tell Git about the proxy:
To disable the proxy, use
Git Help and Manual
Always remember that if you forget the subcommands or options of a
git
command, you can access the relevant list of options
typing git <command> -h
or access the corresponding
Git manual by typing git <command> --help
, e.g.:
While viewing the manual, remember the :
is a prompt
waiting for commands and you can press Q to exit the
manual.
More generally, you can get the list of available git
commands and further resources of the Git manual typing:
Key Points
- Use
git config
with the--global
option to configure a user name, email address, editor, and other preferences once per machine.
Content from Creating a Repository
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- Where does Git store information?
Objectives
- Create a local Git repository.
- Describe the purpose of the
.git
directory.
Once Git is configured, we can start using it.
We will help Alfredo with his new project, create a repository with all his recipes.
First, let’s create a new directory in the Desktop
folder for our work and then change the current working directory to the
newly created one:
Then we tell Git to make recipes
a repository -- a place where Git can
store versions of our files:
It is important to note that git init
will create a
repository that can include subdirectories and their files—there is no
need to create separate repositories nested within the
recipes
repository, whether subdirectories are present from
the beginning or added later. Also, note that the creation of the
recipes
directory and its initialization as a repository
are completely separate processes.
If we use ls
to show the directory’s contents, it
appears that nothing has changed:
But if we add the -a
flag to show everything, we can see
that Git has created a hidden directory within recipes
called .git
:
OUTPUT
. .. .git
Git uses this special subdirectory to store all the information about
the project, including the tracked files and sub-directories located
within the project’s directory. If we ever delete the .git
subdirectory, we will lose the project’s history.
We can now start using one of the most important git commands, which
is particularly helpful to beginners. git status
tells us
the status of our project, and better, a list of changes in the project
and options on what to do with those changes. We can use it as often as
we want, whenever we want to understand what is going on.
OUTPUT
On branch main
No commits yet
nothing to commit (create/copy files and use "git add" to track)
If you are using a different version of git
, the exact
wording of the output might be slightly different.
Places to Create Git Repositories
Along with tracking information about recipes (the project we have
already created), Alfredo would also like to track information about
desserts specifically. Alfredo creates a desserts
project
inside his recipes
project with the following sequence of
commands:
BASH
$ cd ~/Desktop # return to Desktop directory
$ cd recipes # go into recipes directory, which is already a Git repository
$ ls -a # ensure the .git subdirectory is still present in the recipes directory
$ mkdir desserts # make a sub-directory recipes/desserts
$ cd desserts # go into desserts subdirectory
$ git init # make the desserts subdirectory a Git repository
$ ls -a # ensure the .git subdirectory is present indicating we have created a new Git repository
Is the git init
command, run inside the
desserts
subdirectory, required for tracking files stored
in the desserts
subdirectory?
No. Alfredo does not need to make the desserts
subdirectory a Git repository because the recipes
repository will track all files, sub-directories, and subdirectory files
under the recipes
directory. Thus, in order to track all
information about desserts, Alfredo only needed to add the
desserts
subdirectory to the recipes
directory.
Additionally, Git repositories can interfere with each other if they
are “nested”: the outer repository will try to version-control the inner
repository. Therefore, it’s best to create each new Git repository in a
separate directory. To be sure that there is no conflicting repository
in the directory, check the output of git status
. If it
looks like the following, you are good to go to create a new repository
as shown above:
OUTPUT
fatal: Not a git repository (or any of the parent directories): .git
Correcting git init
Mistakes
Jimmy explains to Alfredo how a nested repository is redundant and
may cause confusion down the road. Alfredo would like to go back to a
single git repository. How can Alfredo undo his last
git init
in the desserts
subdirectory?
Background
Removing files from a Git repository needs to be done with caution. But we have not learned yet how to tell Git to track a particular file; we will learn this in the next episode. Files that are not tracked by Git can easily be removed like any other “ordinary” files with
Similarly a directory can be removed using
rm -r dirname
. If the files or folder being removed in this
fashion are tracked by Git, then their removal becomes another change
that we will need to track, as we will see in the next episode.
Solution
Git keeps all of its files in the .git
directory. To
recover from this little mistake, Alfredo can remove the
.git
folder in the desserts subdirectory by running the
following command from inside the recipes
directory:
But be careful! Running this command in the wrong directory will
remove the entire Git history of a project you might want to keep. In
general, deleting files and directories using rm
from the
command line cannot be reversed. Therefore, always check your current
directory using the command pwd
.
Key Points
-
git init
initializes a repository. - Git stores all of its repository data in the
.git
directory.
Content from Tracking Changes
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How do I record changes in Git?
- How do I check the status of my version control repository?
- How do I record notes about what changes I made and why?
Objectives
- Go through the modify-add-commit cycle for one or more files.
- Explain where information is stored at each stage of that cycle.
- Distinguish between descriptive and non-descriptive commit messages.
First let’s make sure we’re still in the right directory. You should
be in the recipes
directory.
Let’s create a file called guacamole.md
that contains
the basic structure to have a recipe. We’ll use nano
to
edit the file; you can use whatever editor you like. In particular, this
does not have to be the core.editor
you set globally
earlier. But remember, the bash command to create or edit a new file
will depend on the editor you choose (it might not be
nano
). For a refresher on text editors, check out “Which
Editor?” in The Unix Shell
lesson.
Type the text below into the guacamole.md
file:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
## Instructions
Let’s first verify that the file was properly created by running the
list command (ls
):
OUTPUT
guacamole.md
guacamole.md
contains three lines, which we can see by
running:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
## Instructions
If we check the status of our project again, Git tells us that it’s noticed the new file:
OUTPUT
On branch main
No commits yet
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
guacamole.md
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
The “untracked files” message means that there’s a file in the
directory that Git isn’t keeping track of. We can tell Git to track a
file using git add
:
and then check that the right thing happened:
OUTPUT
On branch main
No commits yet
Changes to be committed:
(use "git rm --cached <file>..." to unstage)
new file: guacamole.md
Git now knows that it’s supposed to keep track of
guacamole.md
, but it hasn’t recorded these changes as a
commit yet. To get it to do that, we need to run one more command:
OUTPUT
[main (root-commit) f22b25e] Create a template for recipe
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
create mode 100644 guacamole.md
When we run git commit
, Git takes everything we have
told it to save by using git add
and stores a copy
permanently inside the special .git
directory. This
permanent copy is called a commit
(or revision) and its short
identifier is f22b25e
. Your commit may have another
identifier.
We use the -m
flag (for “message”) to record a short,
descriptive, and specific comment that will help us remember later on
what we did and why. If we just run git commit
without the
-m
option, Git will launch nano
(or whatever
other editor we configured as core.editor
) so that we can
write a longer message.
Good commit
messages start with a brief (<50 characters) statement about the
changes made in the commit. Generally, the message should complete the
sentence “If applied, this commit will”
If we run git status
now:
OUTPUT
On branch main
nothing to commit, working tree clean
it tells us everything is up to date. If we want to know what we’ve
done recently, we can ask Git to show us the project’s history using
git log
:
OUTPUT
commit f22b25e3233b4645dabd0d81e651fe074bd8e73b
Author: Alfredo Linguini <a.linguini@ratatouille.fr>
Date: Thu Aug 22 09:51:46 2013 -0400
Create a template for recipe
git log
lists all commits made to a repository in
reverse chronological order. The listing for each commit includes the
commit’s full identifier (which starts with the same characters as the
short identifier printed by the git commit
command
earlier), the commit’s author, when it was created, and the log message
Git was given when the commit was created.
Where Are My Changes?
If we run ls
at this point, we will still see just one
file called guacamole.md
. That’s because Git saves
information about files’ history in the special .git
directory mentioned earlier so that our filesystem doesn’t become
cluttered (and so that we can’t accidentally edit or delete an old
version).
Now suppose Alfredo adds more information to the file. (Again, we’ll
edit with nano
and then cat
the file to show
its contents; you may use a different editor, and don’t need to
cat
.)
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lemon
* salt
## Instructions
When we run git status
now, it tells us that a file it
already knows about has been modified:
OUTPUT
On branch main
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git restore <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
modified: guacamole.md
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
The last line is the key phrase: “no changes added to commit”. We
have changed this file, but we haven’t told Git we will want to save
those changes (which we do with git add
) nor have we saved
them (which we do with git commit
). So let’s do that now.
It is good practice to always review our changes before saving them. We
do this using git diff
. This shows us the differences
between the current state of the file and the most recently saved
version:
OUTPUT
diff --git a/guacamole.md b/guacamole.md
index df0654a..315bf3a 100644
--- a/guacamole.md
+++ b/guacamole.md
@@ -1,3 +1,6 @@
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
+* avocado
+* lemon
+* salt
## Instructions
The output is cryptic because it is actually a series of commands for
tools like editors and patch
telling them how to
reconstruct one file given the other. If we break it down into
pieces:
- The first line tells us that Git is producing output similar to the
Unix
diff
command comparing the old and new versions of the file. - The second line tells exactly which versions of the file Git is
comparing;
df0654a
and315bf3a
are unique computer-generated labels for those versions. - The third and fourth lines once again show the name of the file being changed.
- The remaining lines are the most interesting, they show us the
actual differences and the lines on which they occur. In particular, the
+
marker in the first column shows where we added a line.
After reviewing our change, it’s time to commit it:
OUTPUT
On branch main
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git restore <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
modified: guacamole.md
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
Whoops: Git won’t commit because we didn’t use git add
first. Let’s fix that:
OUTPUT
[main 34961b1] Add basic guacamole's ingredient
1 file changed, 3 insertions(+)
Git insists that we add files to the set we want to commit before actually committing anything. This allows us to commit our changes in stages and capture changes in logical portions rather than only large batches. For example, suppose we’re adding a few citations to relevant research to our thesis. We might want to commit those additions, and the corresponding bibliography entries, but not commit some of our work drafting the conclusion (which we haven’t finished yet).
To allow for this, Git has a special staging area where it keeps track of things that have been added to the current changeset but not yet committed.
Staging Area
If you think of Git as taking snapshots of changes over the life of a
project, git add
specifies what will go in a
snapshot (putting things in the staging area), and
git commit
then actually takes the snapshot, and
makes a permanent record of it (as a commit). If you don’t have anything
staged when you type git commit
, Git will prompt you to use
git commit -a
or git commit --all
, which is
kind of like gathering everyone to take a group photo! However,
it’s almost always better to explicitly add things to the staging area,
because you might commit changes you forgot you made. (Going back to the
group photo simile, you might get an extra with incomplete makeup
walking on the stage for the picture because you used -a
!)
Try to stage things manually, or you might find yourself searching for
“git undo commit” more than you would like!
Let’s watch as our changes to a file move from our editor to the staging area and into long-term storage. First, we’ll improve our recipe by changing ‘lemon’ to ‘lime’:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
OUTPUT
diff --git a/guacamole.md b/guacamole.md
index 315bf3a..b36abfd 100644
--- a/guacamole.md
+++ b/guacamole.md
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
-* lemon
+* lime
* salt
## Instructions
So far, so good: we’ve replaced one line (shown with a -
in the first column) with a new line (shown with a +
in the
first column). Now let’s put that change in the staging area and see
what git diff
reports:
There is no output: as far as Git can tell, there’s no difference between what it’s been asked to save permanently and what’s currently in the directory. However, if we do this:
OUTPUT
diff --git a/guacamole.md b/guacamole.md
index 315bf3a..b36abfd 100644
--- a/guacamole.md
+++ b/guacamole.md
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
-* lemon
+* lime
* salt
## Instructions
it shows us the difference between the last committed change and what’s in the staging area. Let’s save our changes:
OUTPUT
[main 005937f] Modify guacamole to the traditional recipe
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
check our status:
OUTPUT
On branch main
nothing to commit, working tree clean
and look at the history of what we’ve done so far:
OUTPUT
commit 005937fbe2a98fb83f0ade869025dc2636b4dad5 (HEAD -> main)
Author: Alfredo Linguini <a.linguini@ratatouille.fr>
Date: Thu Aug 22 10:14:07 2013 -0400
Modify guacamole to the traditional recipe
commit 34961b159c27df3b475cfe4415d94a6d1fcd064d
Author: Alfredo Linguini <a.linguini@ratatouille.fr>
Date: Thu Aug 22 10:07:21 2013 -0400
Add basic guacamole's ingredients
commit f22b25e3233b4645dabd0d81e651fe074bd8e73b
Author: Alfredo Linguini <a.linguini@ratatouille.fr>
Date: Thu Aug 22 09:51:46 2013 -0400
Create a template for recipe
Word-based diffing
Sometimes, e.g. in the case of the text documents a line-wise diff is
too coarse. That is where the --color-words
option of
git diff
comes in very useful as it highlights the changed
words using colors.
Paging the Log
When the output of git log
is too long to fit in your
screen, git
uses a program to split it into pages of the
size of your screen. When this “pager” is called, you will notice that
the last line in your screen is a :
, instead of your usual
prompt.
- To get out of the pager, press Q.
- To move to the next page, press Spacebar.
- To search for
some_word
in all pages, press / and typesome_word
. Navigate through matches pressing N.
Limit Log Size
To avoid having git log
cover your entire terminal
screen, you can limit the number of commits that Git lists by using
-N
, where N
is the number of commits that you
want to view. For example, if you only want information from the last
commit you can use:
OUTPUT
commit 005937fbe2a98fb83f0ade869025dc2636b4dad5 (HEAD -> main)
Author: Alfredo Linguini <a.linguini@ratatouille.fr>
Date: Thu Aug 22 10:14:07 2013 -0400
Modify guacamole to the traditional recipe
You can also reduce the quantity of information using the
--oneline
option:
OUTPUT
005937f (HEAD -> main) Modify guacamole to the traditional recipe
34961b1 Add basic guacamole's ingredients
f22b25e Create a template for recipe
You can also combine the --oneline
option with others.
One useful combination adds --graph
to display the commit
history as a text-based graph and to indicate which commits are
associated with the current HEAD
, the current branch
main
, or other
Git references:
OUTPUT
* 005937f (HEAD -> main) Modify guacamole to the traditional recipe
* 34961b1 Add basic guacamole's ingredients
* f22b25e Create a template for recipe
Directories
Two important facts you should know about directories in Git.
- Git does not track directories on their own, only files within them. Try it for yourself:
Note, our newly created empty directory cakes
does not
appear in the list of untracked files even if we explicitly add it
(via git add
) to our repository. This is the
reason why you will sometimes see .gitkeep
files in
otherwise empty directories. Unlike .gitignore
, these files
are not special and their sole purpose is to populate a directory so
that Git adds it to the repository. In fact, you can name such files
anything you like.
- If you create a directory in your Git repository and populate it with files, you can add all files in the directory at once by:
Try it for yourself:
Before moving on, we will commit these changes.
To recap, when we want to add changes to our repository, we first
need to add the changed files to the staging area (git add
)
and then commit the staged changes to the repository
(git commit
):
Choosing a Commit Message
Which of the following commit messages would be most appropriate for
the last commit made to guacamole.md
?
- “Changes”
- “Changed lemon for lime”
- “Guacamole modified to the traditional recipe”
Answer 1 is not descriptive enough, and the purpose of the commit is unclear; and answer 2 is redundant to using “git diff” to see what changed in this commit; but answer 3 is good: short, descriptive, and imperative.
Committing Changes to Git
Which command(s) below would save the changes of
myfile.txt
to my local Git repository?
- Would only create a commit if files have already been staged.
- Would try to create a new repository.
- Is correct: first add the file to the staging area, then commit.
- Would try to commit a file “my recent changes” with the message myfile.txt.
Committing Multiple Files
The staging area can hold changes from any number of files that you want to commit as a single snapshot.
- Add some text to
guacamole.md
noting the rough price of the ingredients. - Create a new file
groceries.md
with a list of products and their prices for different markets. - Add changes from both files to the staging area, and commit those changes.
First we make our changes to the guacamole.md
and
groceries.md
files:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado (1.35)
* lime (0.64)
* salt (2)
OUTPUT
# Market A
* avocado: 1.35 per unit.
* lime: 0.64 per unit
* salt: 2 per kg
Now you can add both files to the staging area. We can do that in one line:
Or with multiple commands:
Now the files are ready to commit. You can check that using
git status
. If you are ready to commit use:
OUTPUT
[main cc127c2]
Write prices for ingredients and their source
2 files changed, 7 insertions(+)
create mode 100644 groceries.md
bio
Repository
- Create a new Git repository on your computer called
bio
. - Write a three-line biography for yourself in a file called
me.txt
, commit your changes - Modify one line, add a fourth line
- Display the differences between its updated state and its original state.
If needed, move out of the recipes
folder:
Create a new folder called bio
and ‘move’ into it:
Initialise git:
Create your biography file me.txt
using
nano
or another text editor. Once in place, add and commit
it to the repository:
Modify the file as described (modify one line, add a fourth line). To
display the differences between its updated state and its original
state, use git diff
:
Key Points
-
git status
shows the status of a repository. - Files can be stored in a project’s working directory (which users see), the staging area (where the next commit is being built up) and the local repository (where commits are permanently recorded).
-
git add
puts files in the staging area. -
git commit
saves the staged content as a new commit in the local repository. - Write a commit message that accurately describes your changes.
Content from Exploring History
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How can I identify old versions of files?
- How do I review my changes?
- How can I recover old versions of files?
Objectives
- Explain what the HEAD of a repository is and how to use it.
- Identify and use Git commit numbers.
- Compare various versions of tracked files.
- Restore old versions of files.
As we saw in the previous episode, we can refer to commits by their
identifiers. You can refer to the most recent commit of the
working directory by using the identifier HEAD
.
We’ve been adding small changes at a time to
guacamole.md
, so it’s easy to track our progress by
looking, so let’s do that using our HEAD
s. Before we start,
let’s make a change to guacamole.md
, adding yet another
line.
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
An ill-considered change
Now, let’s see what we get.
OUTPUT
diff --git a/guacamole.md b/guacamole.md
index b36abfd..0848c8d 100644
--- a/guacamole.md
+++ b/guacamole.md
@@ -4,3 +4,4 @@
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
+An ill-considered change
which is the same as what you would get if you leave out
HEAD
(try it). The real goodness in all this is when you
can refer to previous commits. We do that by adding ~1
(where “~” is “tilde”, pronounced [til-duh])
to refer to the commit one before HEAD
.
If we want to see the differences between older commits we can use
git diff
again, but with the notation HEAD~1
,
HEAD~2
, and so on, to refer to them:
OUTPUT
diff --git a/guacamole.md b/guacamole.md
index df0654a..b36abfd 100644
--- a/guacamole.md
+++ b/guacamole.md
@@ -1,3 +1,6 @@
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
+* avocado
+* lime
+* salt
## Instructions
We could also use git show
which shows us what changes
we made at an older commit as well as the commit message, rather than
the differences between a commit and our working directory that
we see by using git diff
.
OUTPUT
commit f22b25e3233b4645dabd0d81e651fe074bd8e73b
Author: Alfredo Linguini <a.linguini@ratatouille.fr>
Date: Thu Aug 22 10:07:21 2013 -0400
Create a template for recipe
diff --git a/guacamole.md b/guacamole.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..df0654a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/guacamole.md
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+# Guacamole
+## Ingredients
+## Instructions
In this way, we can build up a chain of commits. The most recent end
of the chain is referred to as HEAD
; we can refer to
previous commits using the ~
notation, so
HEAD~1
means “the previous commit”, while
HEAD~123
goes back 123 commits from where we are now.
We can also refer to commits using those long strings of digits and
letters that both git log
and git show
display. These are unique IDs for the changes, and “unique” really does
mean unique: every change to any set of files on any computer has a
unique 40-character identifier. Our first commit was given the ID
f22b25e3233b4645dabd0d81e651fe074bd8e73b
, so let’s try
this:
OUTPUT
diff --git a/guacamole.md b/guacamole.md
index df0654a..93a3e13 100644
--- a/guacamole.md
+++ b/guacamole.md
@@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
+* avocado
+* lime
+* salt
## Instructions
+An ill-considered change
That’s the right answer, but typing out random 40-character strings is annoying, so Git lets us use just the first few characters (typically seven for normal size projects):
OUTPUT
diff --git a/guacamole.md b/guacamole.md
index df0654a..93a3e13 100644
--- a/guacamole.md
+++ b/guacamole.md
@@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
+* avocado
+* lime
+* salt
## Instructions
+An ill-considered change
All right! So we can save changes to files and see what we’ve
changed. Now, how can we restore older versions of things? Let’s suppose
we change our mind about the last update to guacamole.md
(the “ill-considered change”).
git status
now tells us that the file has been changed,
but those changes haven’t been staged:
OUTPUT
On branch main
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git restore <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
modified: guacamole.md
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
We can put things back the way they were by using
git restore
:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
As you might guess from its name, git restore
restores
an old version of a file. By default, it recovers the version of the
file recorded in HEAD
, which is the last saved commit. If
we want to go back even further, we can use a commit identifier instead,
using -s
option:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
## Instructions
OUTPUT
On branch main
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git restore <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
modified: guacamole.md
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
Notice that the changes are not currently in the staging area, and
have not been committed. If we wished, we can put things back the way
they were at the last commit by using git restore
to
overwrite the working copy with the last committed version:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
It’s important to remember that we must use the commit number that
identifies the state of the repository before the change we’re
trying to undo. A common mistake is to use the number of the commit in
which we made the change we’re trying to discard. In the example below,
we want to retrieve the state from before the most recent commit
(HEAD~1
), which is commit f22b25e
. We use the
.
to mean all files:
So, to put it all together, here’s how Git works in cartoon form:
The fact that files can be reverted one by one tends to change the way people organize their work. If everything is in one large document, it’s hard (but not impossible) to undo changes to the introduction without also undoing changes made later to the conclusion. If the introduction and conclusion are stored in separate files, on the other hand, moving backward and forward in time becomes much easier.
Recovering Older Versions of a File
Jennifer has made changes to the Python script that she has been working on for weeks, and the modifications she made this morning “broke” the script and it no longer runs. She has spent ~ 1hr trying to fix it, with no luck…
Luckily, she has been keeping track of her project’s versions using
Git! Which commands below will let her recover the last committed
version of her Python script called data_cruncher.py
?
$ git restore
$ git restore data_cruncher.py
$ git restore -s HEAD~1 data_cruncher.py
$ git restore -s <unique ID of last commit> data_cruncher.py
Both 2 and 4
The answer is (5)-Both 2 and 4.
The restore
command restores files from the repository,
overwriting the files in your working directory. Answers 2 and 4 both
restore the latest version in the repository of the
file data_cruncher.py
. Answer 2 uses HEAD
to
indicate the latest, whereas answer 4 uses the unique ID of the
last commit, which is what HEAD
means.
Answer 3 gets the version of data_cruncher.py
from the
commit before HEAD
, which is NOT what we
wanted.
Answer 1 results in an error. You need to specify a file to restore.
If you want to restore all files you should use
git restore .
Reverting a Commit
Jennifer is collaborating with colleagues on her Python script. She
realizes her last commit to the project’s repository contained an error,
and wants to undo it. Jennifer wants to undo correctly so everyone in
the project’s repository gets the correct change. The command
git revert [erroneous commit ID]
will create a new commit
that reverses the erroneous commit.
The command git revert
is different from
git restore -s [commit ID] .
because
git restore
returns the files not yet committed within the
local repository to a previous state, whereas git revert
reverses changes committed to the local and project repositories.
Below are the right steps and explanations for Jennifer to use
git revert
, what is the missing command?
________ # Look at the git history of the project to find the commit ID
Copy the ID (the first few characters of the ID, e.g. 0b1d055).
git revert [commit ID]
Type in the new commit message.
Save and close.
The command git log
lists project history with commit
IDs.
The command git show HEAD
shows changes made at the
latest commit, and lists the commit ID; however, Jennifer should
double-check it is the correct commit, and no one else has committed
changes to the repository.
Understanding Workflow and History
What is the output of the last command in
BASH
$ cd recipes
$ echo "I like tomatoes, therefore I like ketchup" > ketchup.md
$ git add ketchup.md
$ echo "ketchup enhances pasta dishes" >> ketchup.md
$ git commit -m "My opinions about the red sauce"
$ git restore ketchup.md
$ cat ketchup.md # this will print the content of ketchup.md on screen
OUTPUT
ketchup enhances pasta dishes
OUTPUT
I like tomatoes, therefore I like ketchup
OUTPUT
I like tomatoes, therefore I like ketchup ketchup enhances pasta dishes
OUTPUT
Error because you have changed ketchup.md without committing the changes
The answer is 2.
The changes to the file from the second echo
command are
only applied to the working copy, The command
git add ketchup.md
places the current version of
ketchup.md
into the staging area. not the version in the
staging area.
So, when git commit -m "My opinions about the red sauce"
is executed, the version of ketchup.md
committed to the
repository is the one from the staging area and has only one line.
At this time, the working copy still has the second line (and
git status
will show that the file is modified).
However, git restore ketchup.md
replaces the working copy
with the most recently committed version of ketchup.md
. So,
cat ketchup.md
will output
OUTPUT
I like tomatoes, therefore I like ketchup
Checking Understanding of
git diff
Consider this command: git diff HEAD~9 guacamole.md
.
What do you predict this command will do if you execute it? What happens
when you do execute it? Why?
Try another command, git diff [ID] guacamole.md
, where
[ID] is replaced with the unique identifier for your most recent commit.
What do you think will happen, and what does happen?
Getting Rid of Staged Changes
git restore
can be used to restore a previous commit
when unstaged changes have been made, but will it also work for changes
that have been staged but not committed? Make a change to
guacamole.md
, add that change using git add
,
then use git restore
to see if you can remove your
change.
After adding a change, git restore
can not be used
directly. Let’s look at the output of git status
:
OUTPUT
On branch main
Changes to be committed:
(use "git restore --staged <file>..." to unstage)
modified: guacamole.md
Note that if you don’t have the same output you may either have forgotten to change the file, or you have added it and committed it.
Using the command git restore guacamole.md
now does not
give an error, but it does not restore the file either. Git helpfully
tells us that we need to use git restore --staged
first to
unstage the file:
Now, git status
gives us:
OUTPUT
On branch main
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git git restore <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
modified: guacamole.md
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
This means we can now use git restore
to restore the
file to the previous commit:
OUTPUT
On branch main
nothing to commit, working tree clean
Explore and Summarize Histories
Exploring history is an important part of Git, and often it is a challenge to find the right commit ID, especially if the commit is from several months ago.
Imagine the recipes
project has more than 50 files. You
would like to find a commit that modifies some specific text in
guacamole.md
. When you type git log
, a very
long list appeared. How can you narrow down the search?
Recall that the git diff
command allows us to explore
one specific file, e.g., git diff guacamole.md
. We can
apply a similar idea here.
Unfortunately some of these commit messages are very ambiguous, e.g.,
update files
. How can you search through these files?
Both git diff
and git log
are very useful
and they summarize a different part of the history for you. Is it
possible to combine both? Let’s try the following:
You should get a long list of output, and you should be able to see both commit messages and the difference between each commit.
Question: What does the following command do?
Key Points
-
git diff
displays differences between commits. -
git restore
recovers old versions of files.
Content from Ignoring Things
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How can I tell Git to ignore files I don’t want to track?
Objectives
- Configure Git to ignore specific files.
- Explain why ignoring files can be useful.
What if we have files that we do not want Git to track for us, like backup files created by our editor or intermediate files created during data analysis? Let’s create a few dummy files:
and see what Git says:
OUTPUT
On branch main
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
a.png
b.png
c.png
receipts/
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
Putting these files under version control would be a waste of disk space. What’s worse, having them all listed could distract us from changes that actually matter, so let’s tell Git to ignore them.
We do this by creating a file in the root directory of our project
called .gitignore
:
OUTPUT
*.png
receipts/
These patterns tell Git to ignore any file whose name ends in
.png
and everything in the receipts
directory.
(If any of these files were already being tracked, Git would continue to
track them.)
Once we have created this file, the output of git status
is much cleaner:
OUTPUT
On branch main
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
.gitignore
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
The only thing Git notices now is the newly-created
.gitignore
file. You might think we wouldn’t want to track
it, but everyone we’re sharing our repository with will probably want to
ignore the same things that we’re ignoring. Let’s add and commit
.gitignore
:
OUTPUT
On branch main
nothing to commit, working tree clean
As a bonus, using .gitignore
helps us avoid accidentally
adding files to the repository that we don’t want to track:
OUTPUT
The following paths are ignored by one of your .gitignore files:
a.png
Use -f if you really want to add them.
If we really want to override our ignore settings, we can use
git add -f
to force Git to add something. For example,
git add -f a.csv
. We can also always see the status of
ignored files if we want:
OUTPUT
On branch main
Ignored files:
(use "git add -f <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
a.png
b.png
c.png
receipts/
nothing to commit, working tree clean
If you only want to ignore the contents of
receipts/plots
, you can change your .gitignore
to ignore only the /plots/
subfolder by adding the
following line to your .gitignore:
OUTPUT
receipts/plots/
This line will ensure only the contents of
receipts/plots
is ignored, and not the contents of
receipts/data
.
As with most programming issues, there are a few alternative ways that one may ensure this ignore rule is followed. The “Ignoring Nested Files: Variation” exercise has a slightly different directory structure that presents an alternative solution. Further, the discussion page has more detail on ignore rules.
Including Specific Files
How would you ignore all .png
files in your root
directory except for final.png
? Hint: Find out what
!
(the exclamation point operator) does
You would add the following two lines to your .gitignore:
OUTPUT
*.png # ignore all png files
!final.png # except final.png
The exclamation point operator will include a previously excluded entry.
Note also that because you’ve previously committed .png
files in this lesson they will not be ignored with this new rule. Only
future additions of .png
files added to the root directory
will be ignored.
Ignoring Nested Files: Variation
Given a directory structure that looks similar to the earlier Nested Files exercise, but with a slightly different directory structure:
How would you ignore all of the contents in the receipts folder, but
not receipts/data
?
Hint: think a bit about how you created an exception with the
!
operator before.
If you want to ignore the contents of receipts/
but not
those of receipts/data/
, you can change your
.gitignore
to ignore the contents of receipts folder, but
create an exception for the contents of the receipts/data
subfolder. Your .gitignore would look like this:
OUTPUT
receipts/* # ignore everything in receipts folder
!receipts/data/ # do not ignore receipts/data/ contents
Ignoring all data Files in a Directory
Assuming you have an empty .gitignore file, and given a directory structure that looks like:
BASH
receipts/data/market_position/gps/a.dat
receipts/data/market_position/gps/b.dat
receipts/data/market_position/gps/c.dat
receipts/data/market_position/gps/info.txt
receipts/plots
What’s the shortest .gitignore
rule you could write to
ignore all .dat
files in
result/data/market_position/gps
? Do not ignore the
info.txt
.
Appending receipts/data/market_position/gps/*.dat
will
match every file in receipts/data/market_position/gps
that
ends with .dat
. The file
receipts/data/market_position/gps/info.txt
will not be
ignored.
Ignoring all data Files in the repository
Let us assume you have many .csv
files in different
subdirectories of your repository. For example, you might have:
BASH
results/a.csv
data/experiment_1/b.csv
data/experiment_2/c.csv
data/experiment_2/variation_1/d.csv
How do you ignore all the .csv
files, without explicitly
listing the names of the corresponding folders?
In the .gitignore
file, write:
OUTPUT
**/*.csv
This will ignore all the .csv
files, regardless of their
position in the directory tree. You can still include some specific
exception with the exclamation point operator.
The !
modifier will negate an entry from a previously
defined ignore pattern. Because the !*.csv
entry negates
all of the previous .csv
files in the
.gitignore
, none of them will be ignored, and all
.csv
files will be tracked.
Log Files
You wrote a script that creates many intermediate log-files of the
form log_01
, log_02
, log_03
, etc.
You want to keep them but you do not want to track them through
git
.
Write one
.gitignore
entry that excludes files of the formlog_01
,log_02
, etc.Test your “ignore pattern” by creating some dummy files of the form
log_01
, etc.You find that the file
log_01
is very important after all, add it to the tracked files without changing the.gitignore
again.Discuss with your neighbor what other types of files could reside in your directory that you do not want to track and thus would exclude via
.gitignore
.
- append either
log_*
orlog*
as a new entry in your .gitignore - track
log_01
usinggit add -f log_01
Key Points
- The
.gitignore
file tells Git what files to ignore.
Content from Remotes in GitHub
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How do I share my changes with others on the web?
Objectives
- Explain what remote repositories are and why they are useful.
- Push to or pull from a remote repository.
Version control really comes into its own when we begin to collaborate with other people. We already have most of the machinery we need to do this; the only thing missing is to copy changes from one repository to another.
Systems like Git allow us to move work between any two repositories. In practice, though, it’s easiest to use one copy as a central hub, and to keep it on the web rather than on someone’s laptop. Most programmers use hosting services like GitHub, Bitbucket or GitLab to hold those main copies; we’ll explore the pros and cons of this in a later episode.
Let’s start by sharing the changes we’ve made to our current project with the world. To this end we are going to create a remote repository that will be linked to our local repository.
1. Create a remote repository
Log in to GitHub, then click on the
icon in the top right corner to create a new repository called
recipes
:
Name your repository “recipes” and then click “Create Repository”.
Note: Since this repository will be connected to a local repository, it needs to be empty. Leave “Initialize this repository with a README” unchecked, and keep “None” as options for both “Add .gitignore” and “Add a license.” See the “GitHub License and README files” exercise below for a full explanation of why the repository needs to be empty.
As soon as the repository is created, GitHub displays a page with a URL and some information on how to configure your local repository:
This effectively does the following on GitHub’s servers:
If you remember back to the earlier episode where we added and committed our
earlier work on guacamole.md
, we had a diagram of the local
repository which looked like this:
Now that we have two repositories, we need a diagram like this:
Note that our local repository still contains our earlier work on
guacamole.md
, but the remote repository on GitHub appears
empty as it doesn’t contain any files yet.
2. Connect local to remote repository
Now we connect the two repositories. We do this by making the GitHub repository a remote for the local repository. The home page of the repository on GitHub includes the URL string we need to identify it:
Click on the ‘SSH’ link to change the protocol from HTTPS to SSH.
HTTPS vs. SSH
We use SSH here because, while it requires some additional configuration, it is a security protocol widely used by many applications. The steps below describe SSH at a minimum level for GitHub.
Copy that URL from the browser, go into the local
recipes
repository, and run this command:
Make sure to use the URL for your repository rather than Alfredo’s:
the only difference should be your username instead of
alflin
.
origin
is a local name used to refer to the remote
repository. It could be called anything, but origin
is a
convention that is often used by default in git and GitHub, so it’s
helpful to stick with this unless there’s a reason not to.
We can check that the command has worked by running
git remote -v
:
OUTPUT
origin git@github.com:alflin/recipes.git (fetch)
origin git@github.com:alflin/recipes.git (push)
We’ll discuss remotes in more detail in the next episode, while talking about how they might be used for collaboration.
3. SSH Background and Setup
Before Alfredo can connect to a remote repository, he needs to set up a way for his computer to authenticate with GitHub so it knows it’s him trying to connect to his remote repository.
We are going to set up the method that is commonly used by many different services to authenticate access on the command line. This method is called Secure Shell Protocol (SSH). SSH is a cryptographic network protocol that allows secure communication between computers using an otherwise insecure network.
SSH uses what is called a key pair. This is two keys that work together to validate access. One key is publicly known and called the public key, and the other key called the private key is kept private. Very descriptive names.
You can think of the public key as a padlock, and only you have the key (the private key) to open it. You use the public key where you want a secure method of communication, such as your GitHub account. You give this padlock, or public key, to GitHub and say “lock the communications to my account with this so that only computers that have my private key can unlock communications and send git commands as my GitHub account.”
What we will do now is the minimum required to set up the SSH keys and add the public key to a GitHub account.
Advanced SSH
A supplemental episode in this lesson discusses SSH and key pairs in more depth and detail.
The first thing we are going to do is check if this has already been done on the computer you’re on. Because generally speaking, this setup only needs to happen once and then you can forget about it.
Keeping your keys secure
You shouldn’t really forget about your SSH keys, since they keep your account secure. It’s good practice to audit your secure shell keys every so often. Especially if you are using multiple computers to access your account.
We will run the list command to check what key pairs already exist on your computer.
Your output is going to look a little different depending on whether or not SSH has ever been set up on the computer you are using.
Alfredo has not set up SSH on his computer, so his output is
OUTPUT
ls: cannot access '/c/Users/Alfredo/.ssh': No such file or directory
If SSH has been set up on the computer you’re using, the public and
private key pairs will be listed. The file names are either
id_ed25519
/id_ed25519.pub
or
id_rsa
/id_rsa.pub
depending on how the key
pairs were set up. Since they don’t exist on Alfredo’s computer, he uses
this command to create them.
3.1 Create an SSH key pair
To create an SSH key pair Alfredo uses this command, where the
-t
option specifies which type of algorithm to use and
-C
attaches a comment to the key (here, Alfredo’s
email):
If you are using a legacy system that doesn’t support the Ed25519
algorithm, use:
$ ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C "your_email@example.com"
OUTPUT
Generating public/private ed25519 key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/c/Users/Alfredo/.ssh/id_ed25519):
We want to use the default file, so just press Enter.
OUTPUT
Created directory '/c/Users/Alfredo/.ssh'.
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Now, it is prompting Alfredo for a passphrase. Since he is using his kitchen’s laptop that other people sometimes have access to, he wants to create a passphrase. Be sure to use something memorable or save your passphrase somewhere, as there is no “reset my password” option. Note that, when typing a passphrase on a terminal, there won’t be any visual feedback of your typing. This is normal: your passphrase will be recorded even if you see nothing changing on your screen.
OUTPUT
Enter same passphrase again:
After entering the same passphrase a second time, we receive the confirmation
OUTPUT
Your identification has been saved in /c/Users/Alfredo/.ssh/id_ed25519
Your public key has been saved in /c/Users/Alfredo/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub
The key fingerprint is:
SHA256:SMSPIStNyA00KPxuYu94KpZgRAYjgt9g4BA4kFy3g1o a.linguini@ratatouille.fr
The key's randomart image is:
+--[ED25519 256]--+
|^B== o. |
|%*=.*.+ |
|+=.E =.+ |
| .=.+.o.. |
|.... . S |
|.+ o |
|+ = |
|.o.o |
|oo+. |
+----[SHA256]-----+
The “identification” is actually the private key. You should never share it. The public key is appropriately named. The “key fingerprint” is a shorter version of a public key.
Now that we have generated the SSH keys, we will find the SSH files when we check.
OUTPUT
drwxr-xr-x 1 Alfredo 197121 0 Jul 16 14:48 ./
drwxr-xr-x 1 Alfredo 197121 0 Jul 16 14:48 ../
-rw-r--r-- 1 Alfredo 197121 419 Jul 16 14:48 id_ed25519
-rw-r--r-- 1 Alfredo 197121 106 Jul 16 14:48 id_ed25519.pub
3.2 Copy the public key to GitHub
Now we have a SSH key pair and we can run this command to check if GitHub can read our authentication.
OUTPUT
The authenticity of host 'github.com (192.30.255.112)' can't be established.
RSA key fingerprint is SHA256:nThbg6kXUpJWGl7E1IGOCspRomTxdCARLviKw6E5SY8.
This key is not known by any other names
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no/[fingerprint])? y
Please type 'yes', 'no' or the fingerprint: yes
Warning: Permanently added 'github.com' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.
git@github.com: Permission denied (publickey).
Right, we forgot that we need to give GitHub our public key!
First, we need to copy the public key. Be sure to include the
.pub
at the end, otherwise you’re looking at the private
key.
OUTPUT
ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIDmRA3d51X0uu9wXek559gfn6UFNF69yZjChyBIU2qKI a.linguini@ratatouille.fr
Now, going to GitHub.com, click on your profile icon in the top right corner to get the drop-down menu. Click “Settings”, then on the settings page, click “SSH and GPG keys”, on the left side “Access” menu. Click the “New SSH key” button on the right side. Now, you can add the title (Alfredo uses the title “Alfredo’s Kitchen Laptop” so he can remember where the original key pair files are located), paste your SSH key into the field, and click the “Add SSH key” to complete the setup.
Now that we’ve set that up, let’s check our authentication again from the command line.
OUTPUT
Hi Alfredo! You've successfully authenticated, but GitHub does not provide shell access.
Good! This output confirms that the SSH key works as intended. We are now ready to push our work to the remote repository.
4. Push local changes to a remote
Now that authentication is setup, we can return to the remote. This command will push the changes from our local repository to the repository on GitHub:
Since Alfredo set up a passphrase, it will prompt him for it. If you completed advanced settings for your authentication, it will not prompt for a passphrase.
OUTPUT
Enumerating objects: 16, done.
Counting objects: 100% (16/16), done.
Delta compression using up to 8 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (11/11), done.
Writing objects: 100% (16/16), 1.45 KiB | 372.00 KiB/s, done.
Total 16 (delta 2), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote: Resolving deltas: 100% (2/2), done.
To https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git
* [new branch] main -> main
Proxy
If the network you are connected to uses a proxy, there is a chance that your last command failed with “Could not resolve hostname” as the error message. To solve this issue, you need to tell Git about the proxy:
BASH
$ git config --global http.proxy http://user:password@proxy.url
$ git config --global https.proxy https://user:password@proxy.url
When you connect to another network that doesn’t use a proxy, you will need to tell Git to disable the proxy using:
Password Managers
If your operating system has a password manager configured,
git push
will try to use it when it needs your username and
password. For example, this is the default behavior for Git Bash on
Windows. If you want to type your username and password at the terminal
instead of using a password manager, type:
in the terminal, before you run git push
. Despite the
name, Git
uses SSH_ASKPASS
for all credential entry, so you may
want to unset SSH_ASKPASS
whether you are using Git via SSH
or https.
You may also want to add unset SSH_ASKPASS
at the end of
your ~/.bashrc
to make Git default to using the terminal
for usernames and passwords.
Our local and remote repositories are now in this state:
The ‘-u’ Flag
You may see a -u
option used with git push
in some documentation. This option is synonymous with the
--set-upstream-to
option for the git branch
command, and is used to associate the current branch with a remote
branch so that the git pull
command can be used without any
arguments. To do this, simply use git push -u origin main
once the remote has been set up.
We can pull changes from the remote repository to the local one as well:
OUTPUT
From https://github.com/alflin/recipes
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
Already up-to-date.
Pulling has no effect in this case because the two repositories are already synchronized. If someone else had pushed some changes to the repository on GitHub, though, this command would download them to our local repository.
GitHub GUI
Browse to your recipes
repository on GitHub. Under the
Code tab, find and click on the text that says “XX commits” (where “XX”
is some number). Hover over, and click on, the three buttons to the
right of each commit. What information can you gather/explore from these
buttons? How would you get that same information in the shell?
The left-most button (with the picture of a clipboard) copies the
full identifier of the commit to the clipboard. In the shell,
git log
will show you the full commit identifier for each
commit.
When you click on the middle button, you’ll see all of the changes
that were made in that particular commit. Green shaded lines indicate
additions and red ones removals. In the shell we can do the same thing
with git diff
. In particular,
git diff ID1..ID2
where ID1 and ID2 are commit identifiers
(e.g. git diff a3bf1e5..041e637
) will show the differences
between those two commits.
The right-most button lets you view all of the files in the
repository at the time of that commit. To do this in the shell, we’d
need to checkout the repository at that particular time. We can do this
with git checkout ID
where ID is the identifier of the
commit we want to look at. If we do this, we need to remember to put the
repository back to the right state afterwards!
Uploading files directly in GitHub browser
Github also allows you to skip the command line and upload files directly to your repository without having to leave the browser. There are two options. First you can click the “Upload files” button in the toolbar at the top of the file tree. Or, you can drag and drop files from your desktop onto the file tree. You can read more about this on this GitHub page.
GitHub Timestamp
Create a remote repository on GitHub. Push the contents of your local repository to the remote. Make changes to your local repository and push these changes. Go to the repo you just created on GitHub and check the timestamps of the files. How does GitHub record times, and why?
GitHub displays timestamps in a human readable relative format (i.e. “22 hours ago” or “three weeks ago”). However, if you hover over the timestamp, you can see the exact time at which the last change to the file occurred.
Push vs. Commit
In this episode, we introduced the “git push” command. How is “git push” different from “git commit”?
When we push changes, we’re interacting with a remote repository to update it with the changes we’ve made locally (often this corresponds to sharing the changes we’ve made with others). Commit only updates your local repository.
GitHub License and README files
In this episode we learned about creating a remote repository on GitHub, but when you initialized your GitHub repo, you didn’t add a README.md or a license file. If you had, what do you think would have happened when you tried to link your local and remote repositories?
In this case, we’d see a merge conflict due to unrelated histories. When GitHub creates a README.md file, it performs a commit in the remote repository. When you try to pull the remote repository to your local repository, Git detects that they have histories that do not share a common origin and refuses to merge.
OUTPUT
warning: no common commits
remote: Enumerating objects: 3, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (3/3), done.
remote: Total 3 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0), pack-reused 0
Unpacking objects: 100% (3/3), done.
From https://github.com/alflin/recipes
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
* [new branch] main -> origin/main
fatal: refusing to merge unrelated histories
You can force git to merge the two repositories with the option
--allow-unrelated-histories
. Be careful when you use this
option and carefully examine the contents of local and remote
repositories before merging.
OUTPUT
From https://github.com/alflin/recipes
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
Merge made by the 'recursive' strategy.
README.md | 1 +
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
create mode 100644 README.md
Key Points
- A local Git repository can be connected to one or more remote repositories.
- Use the SSH protocol to connect to remote repositories.
-
git push
copies changes from a local repository to a remote repository. -
git pull
copies changes from a remote repository to a local repository.
Content from Collaborating
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How can I use version control to collaborate with other people?
Objectives
- Clone a remote repository.
- Collaborate by pushing to a common repository.
- Describe the basic collaborative workflow.
For the next step, get into pairs. One person will be the “Owner” and the other will be the “Collaborator”. The goal is that the Collaborator add changes into the Owner’s repository. We will switch roles at the end, so both persons will play Owner and Collaborator.
Practicing By Yourself
If you’re working through this lesson on your own, you can carry on by opening a second terminal window. This window will represent your partner, working on another computer. You won’t need to give anyone access on GitHub, because both ‘partners’ are you.
The Owner needs to give the Collaborator access. In your repository page on GitHub, click the “Settings” button on the right, select “Collaborators”, click “Add people”, and then enter your partner’s username.
To accept access to the Owner’s repo, the Collaborator needs to go to https://github.com/notifications or check for email notification. Once there she can accept access to the Owner’s repo.
Next, the Collaborator needs to download a copy of the Owner’s repository to her machine. This is called “cloning a repo”.
The Collaborator doesn’t want to overwrite her own version of
recipes.git
, so needs to clone the Owner’s repository to a
different location than her own repository with the same name.
To clone the Owner’s repo into her Desktop
folder, the
Collaborator enters:
Replace ‘alflin’ with the Owner’s username.
If you choose to clone without the clone path
(~/Desktop/alflin-recipes
) specified at the end, you will
clone inside your own recipes folder! Make sure to navigate to the
Desktop
folder first.
The Collaborator can now make a change in her clone of the Owner’s repository, exactly the same way as we’ve been doing before:
OUTPUT
# Hummus
## Ingredients
* chickpeas
* lemon
* olive oil
* salt
OUTPUT
1 file changed, 6 insertion(+)
create mode 100644 hummus.md
Then push the change to the Owner’s repository on GitHub:
OUTPUT
Enumerating objects: 4, done.
Counting objects: 4, done.
Delta compression using up to 4 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done.
Writing objects: 100% (3/3), 306 bytes, done.
Total 3 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
To https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git
9272da5..29aba7c main -> main
Note that we didn’t have to create a remote called
origin
: Git uses this name by default when we clone a
repository. (This is why origin
was a sensible choice
earlier when we were setting up remotes by hand.)
Take a look at the Owner’s repository on GitHub again, and you should be able to see the new commit made by the Collaborator. You may need to refresh your browser to see the new commit.
Some more about remotes
In this episode and the previous one, our local repository has had a
single “remote”, called origin
. A remote is a copy of the
repository that is hosted somewhere else, that we can push to and pull
from, and there’s no reason that you have to work with only one. For
example, on some large projects you might have your own copy in your own
GitHub account (you’d probably call this origin
) and also
the main “upstream” project repository (let’s call this
upstream
for the sake of examples). You would pull from
upstream
from time to time to get the latest updates that
other people have committed.
Remember that the name you give to a remote only exists locally. It’s
an alias that you choose - whether origin
, or
upstream
, or alfred
- and not something
intrinstic to the remote repository.
The git remote
family of commands is used to set up and
alter the remotes associated with a repository. Here are some of the
most useful ones:
-
git remote -v
lists all the remotes that are configured (we already used this in the last episode) -
git remote add [name] [url]
is used to add a new remote -
git remote remove [name]
removes a remote. Note that it doesn’t affect the remote repository at all - it just removes the link to it from the local repo. -
git remote set-url [name] [newurl]
changes the URL that is associated with the remote. This is useful if it has moved, e.g. to a different GitHub account, or from GitHub to a different hosting service. Or, if we made a typo when adding it! -
git remote rename [oldname] [newname]
changes the local alias by which a remote is known - its name. For example, one could use this to changeupstream
toalfred
.
To download the Collaborator’s changes from GitHub, the Owner now enters:
OUTPUT
remote: Enumerating objects: 4, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (4/4), done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done.
remote: Total 3 (delta 0), reused 3 (delta 0), pack-reused 0
Unpacking objects: 100% (3/3), done.
From https://github.com/alflin/recipes
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
9272da5..29aba7c main -> origin/main
Updating 9272da5..29aba7c
Fast-forward
hummus.md | 5 +
1 file changed, 5 insertion(+)
create mode 100644 hummus.md
Now the three repositories (Owner’s local, Collaborator’s local, and Owner’s on GitHub) are back in sync.
A Basic Collaborative Workflow
In practice, it is good to be sure that you have an updated version
of the repository you are collaborating on, so you should
git pull
before making our changes. The basic collaborative
workflow would be:
- update your local repo with
git pull origin main
, - make your changes and stage them with
git add
, - commit your changes with
git commit -m
, and - upload the changes to GitHub with
git push origin main
It is better to make many commits with smaller changes rather than of one commit with massive changes: small commits are easier to read and review.
Switch Roles and Repeat
Switch roles and repeat the whole process.
Review Changes
The Owner pushed commits to the repository without giving any information to the Collaborator. How can the Collaborator find out what has changed with command line? And on GitHub?
On the command line, the Collaborator can use
git fetch origin main
to get the remote changes into the
local repository, but without merging them. Then by running
git diff main origin/main
the Collaborator will see the
changes output in the terminal.
On GitHub, the Collaborator can go to the repository and click on “commits” to view the most recent commits pushed to the repository.
Version History, Backup, and Version Control
Some backup software can keep a history of the versions of your files. They also allows you to recover specific versions. How is this functionality different from version control? What are some of the benefits of using version control, Git and GitHub?
Key Points
-
git clone
copies a remote repository to create a local repository with a remote calledorigin
automatically set up.
Content from Conflicts
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- What do I do when my changes conflict with someone else’s?
Objectives
- Explain what conflicts are and when they can occur.
- Resolve conflicts resulting from a merge.
As soon as people can work in parallel, they’ll likely step on each other’s toes. This will even happen with a single person: if we are working on a piece of software on both our laptop and a server in the lab, we could make different changes to each copy. Version control helps us manage these conflicts by giving us tools to resolve overlapping changes.
To see how we can resolve conflicts, we must first create one. The
file guacamole.md
currently looks like this in both
partners’ copies of our recipes
repository:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
Let’s add a line to the collaborator’s copy only:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
* put one avocado into a bowl.
and then push the change to GitHub:
OUTPUT
[main 5ae9631] First step on the instructions
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
OUTPUT
Enumerating objects: 5, done.
Counting objects: 100% (5/5), done.
Delta compression using up to 8 threads
Compressing objects: 100% (3/3), done.
Writing objects: 100% (3/3), 331 bytes | 331.00 KiB/s, done.
Total 3 (delta 2), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote: Resolving deltas: 100% (2/2), completed with 2 local objects.
To https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git
29aba7c..dabb4c8 main -> main
Now let’s have the owner make a different change to their copy without updating from GitHub:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
* peel the avocados
We can commit the change locally:
OUTPUT
[main 07ebc69] Add first step
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
but Git won’t let us push it to GitHub:
OUTPUT
To https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git
! [rejected] main -> main (fetch first)
error: failed to push some refs to 'https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git'
hint: Updates were rejected because the remote contains work that you do
hint: not have locally. This is usually caused by another repository pushing
hint: to the same ref. You may want to first integrate the remote changes
hint: (e.g., 'git pull ...') before pushing again.
hint: See the 'Note about fast-forwards' in 'git push --help' for details.
Git rejects the push because it detects that the remote repository has new updates that have not been incorporated into the local branch. What we have to do is pull the changes from GitHub, merge them into the copy we’re currently working in, and then push that. Let’s start by pulling:
OUTPUT
remote: Enumerating objects: 5, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (5/5), done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (1/1), done.
remote: Total 3 (delta 2), reused 3 (delta 2), pack-reused 0
Unpacking objects: 100% (3/3), done.
From https://github.com/alflin/recipes
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
29aba7c..dabb4c8 main -> origin/main
Auto-merging guacamole.md
CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in guacamole.md
Automatic merge failed; fix conflicts and then commit the result.
You may need to tell Git what to do
If you see the below in your output, Git is asking what it should do.
OUTPUT
hint: You have divergent branches and need to specify how to reconcile them.
hint: You can do so by running one of the following commands sometime before
hint: your next pull:
hint:
hint: git config pull.rebase false # merge (the default strategy)
hint: git config pull.rebase true # rebase
hint: git config pull.ff only # fast-forward only
hint:
hint: You can replace "git config" with "git config --global" to set a default
hint: preference for all repositories. You can also pass --rebase, --no-rebase,
hint: or --ff-only on the command line to override the configured default per
hint: invocation.
In newer versions of Git it gives you the option of specifying different behaviours when a pull would merge divergent branches. In our case we want ‘the default strategy’. To use this strategy run the following command to select it as the default thing git should do.
Then attempt the pull again.
The git pull
command updates the local repository to
include those changes already included in the remote repository. After
the changes from remote branch have been fetched, Git detects that
changes made to the local copy overlap with those made to the remote
repository, and therefore refuses to merge the two versions to stop us
from trampling on our previous work. The conflict is marked in in the
affected file:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
<<<<<<< HEAD
* peel the avocados
=======
* put one avocado into a bowl.
>>>>>>> dabb4c8c450e8475aee9b14b4383acc99f42af1d
Our change is preceded by
<<<<<<< HEAD
. Git has then inserted
=======
as a separator between the conflicting changes and
marked the end of the content downloaded from GitHub with
>>>>>>>
. (The string of letters and
digits after that marker identifies the commit we’ve just
downloaded.)
It is now up to us to edit this file to remove these markers and reconcile the changes. We can do anything we want: keep the change made in the local repository, keep the change made in the remote repository, write something new to replace both, or get rid of the change entirely. Let’s replace both so that the file looks like this:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
* peel the avocados and put them into a bowl.
To finish merging, we add guacamole.md
to the changes
being made by the merge and then commit:
OUTPUT
On branch main
All conflicts fixed but you are still merging.
(use "git commit" to conclude merge)
Changes to be committed:
modified: guacamole.md
OUTPUT
[main 2abf2b1] Merge changes from GitHub
Now we can push our changes to GitHub:
OUTPUT
Enumerating objects: 10, done.
Counting objects: 100% (10/10), done.
Delta compression using up to 8 threads
Compressing objects: 100% (6/6), done.
Writing objects: 100% (6/6), 645 bytes | 645.00 KiB/s, done.
Total 6 (delta 4), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote: Resolving deltas: 100% (4/4), completed with 2 local objects.
To https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git
dabb4c8..2abf2b1 main -> main
Git keeps track of what we’ve merged with what, so we don’t have to fix things by hand again when the collaborator who made the first change pulls again:
OUTPUT
remote: Enumerating objects: 10, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (10/10), done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done.
remote: Total 6 (delta 4), reused 6 (delta 4), pack-reused 0
Unpacking objects: 100% (6/6), done.
From https://github.com/alflin/recipes
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
dabb4c8..2abf2b1 main -> origin/main
Updating dabb4c8..2abf2b1
Fast-forward
guacamole.md | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
We get the merged file:
OUTPUT
# Guacamole
## Ingredients
* avocado
* lime
* salt
## Instructions
* peel the avocados and put them into a bowl.
We don’t need to merge again because Git knows someone has already done that.
Git’s ability to resolve conflicts is very useful, but conflict resolution costs time and effort, and can introduce errors if conflicts are not resolved correctly. If you find yourself resolving a lot of conflicts in a project, consider these technical approaches to reducing them:
- Pull from upstream more frequently, especially before starting new work
- Use topic branches to segregate work, merging to main when complete
- Make smaller more atomic commits
- Push your work when it is done and encourage your team to do the same to reduce work in progress and, by extension, the chance of having conflicts
- Where logically appropriate, break large files into smaller ones so that it is less likely that two authors will alter the same file simultaneously
Conflicts can also be minimized with project management strategies:
- Clarify who is responsible for what areas with your collaborators
- Discuss what order tasks should be carried out in with your collaborators so that tasks expected to change the same lines won’t be worked on simultaneously
- If the conflicts are stylistic churn (e.g. tabs vs. spaces),
establish a project convention that is governing and use code style
tools (e.g.
htmltidy
,perltidy
,rubocop
, etc.) to enforce, if necessary
Solving Conflicts that You Create
Clone the repository created by your instructor. Add a new file to it, and modify an existing file (your instructor will tell you which one). When asked by your instructor, pull her changes from the repository to create a conflict, then resolve it.
Conflicts on Non-textual files
What does Git do when there is a conflict in an image or some other non-textual file that is stored in version control?
Let’s try it. Suppose Alfredo takes a picture of its guacamole and
calls it guacamole.jpg
.
If you do not have an image file of guacamole available, you can create a dummy binary file like this:
OUTPUT
-rw-r--r-- 1 alflin 57095 1.0K Mar 8 20:24 guacamole.jpg
ls
shows us that this created a 1-kilobyte file. It is
full of random bytes read from the special file,
/dev/urandom
.
Now, suppose Alfredo adds guacamole.jpg
to his
repository:
OUTPUT
[main 8e4115c] Add picture of guacamole
1 file changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 guacamole.jpg
Suppose that Jimmy has added a similar picture in the meantime. His
is a picture of a guacamole with nachos, but it is also called
guacamole.jpg
. When Alfredo tries to push, he gets a
familiar message:
OUTPUT
To https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git
! [rejected] main -> main (fetch first)
error: failed to push some refs to 'https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git'
hint: Updates were rejected because the remote contains work that you do
hint: not have locally. This is usually caused by another repository pushing
hint: to the same ref. You may want to first integrate the remote changes
hint: (e.g., 'git pull ...') before pushing again.
hint: See the 'Note about fast-forwards' in 'git push --help' for details.
We’ve learned that we must pull first and resolve any conflicts:
When there is a conflict on an image or other binary file, git prints a message like this:
OUTPUT
$ git pull origin main
remote: Counting objects: 3, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (3/3), done.
remote: Total 3 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
Unpacking objects: 100% (3/3), done.
From https://github.com/alflin/recipes.git
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
6a67967..439dc8c main -> origin/main
warning: Cannot merge binary files: guacamole.jpg (HEAD vs. 439dc8c08869c342438f6dc4a2b615b05b93c76e)
Auto-merging guacamole.jpg
CONFLICT (add/add): Merge conflict in guacamole.jpg
Automatic merge failed; fix conflicts and then commit the result.
The conflict message here is mostly the same as it was for
guacamole.md
, but there is one key additional line:
OUTPUT
warning: Cannot merge binary files: guacamole.jpg (HEAD vs. 439dc8c08869c342438f6dc4a2b615b05b93c76e)
Git cannot automatically insert conflict markers into an image as it does for text files. So, instead of editing the image file, we must check out the version we want to keep. Then we can add and commit this version.
On the key line above, Git has conveniently given us commit
identifiers for the two versions of guacamole.jpg
. Our
version is HEAD
, and Jimmy’s version is
439dc8c0...
. If we want to use our version, we can use
git checkout
:
BASH
$ git checkout HEAD guacamole.jpg
$ git add guacamole.jpg
$ git commit -m "Use image of just guacamole instead of with nachos"
OUTPUT
[main 21032c3] Use image of just guacamole instead of with nachos
If instead we want to use Jimmy’s version, we can use
git checkout
with Jimmy’s commit identifier,
439dc8c0
:
BASH
$ git checkout 439dc8c0 guacamole.jpg
$ git add guacamole.jpg
$ git commit -m "Use image of guacamole with nachos instead of just guacamole"
OUTPUT
[main da21b34] Use image of guacamole with nachos instead of just guacamole
We can also keep both images. The catch is that we cannot keep them under the same name. But, we can check out each version in succession and rename it, then add the renamed versions. First, check out each image and rename it:
BASH
$ git checkout HEAD guacamole.jpg
$ git mv guacamole.jpg guacamole-only.jpg
$ git checkout 439dc8c0 guacamole.jpg
$ mv guacamole.jpg guacamole-nachos.jpg
Then, remove the old guacamole.jpg
and add the two new
files:
BASH
$ git rm guacamole.jpg
$ git add guacamole-only.jpg
$ git add guacamole-nachos.jpg
$ git commit -m "Use two images: just guacamole and with nachos"
OUTPUT
[main 94ae08c] Use two images: just guacamole and with nachos
2 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 guacamole-nachos.jpg
rename guacamole.jpg => guacamole-only.jpg (100%)
Now both images of guacamole are checked into the repository, and
guacamole.jpg
no longer exists.
A Typical Work Session
You sit down at your computer to work on a shared project that is tracked in a remote Git repository. During your work session, you take the following actions, but not in this order:
-
Make changes by appending the number
100
to a text filenumbers.txt
- Update remote repository to match the local repository
- Celebrate your success with some fancy beverage(s)
- Update local repository to match the remote repository
- Stage changes to be committed
- Commit changes to the local repository
In what order should you perform these actions to minimize the chances of conflicts? Put the commands above in order in the action column of the table below. When you have the order right, see if you can write the corresponding commands in the command column. A few steps are populated to get you started.
order | action . . . . . . . . . . | command . . . . . . . . . . |
---|---|---|
1 | ||
2 | echo 100 >> numbers.txt |
|
3 | ||
4 | ||
5 | ||
6 | Celebrate! |
order | action . . . . . . | command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
---|---|---|
1 | Update local | git pull origin main |
2 | Make changes | echo 100 >> numbers.txt |
3 | Stage changes | git add numbers.txt |
4 | Commit changes | git commit -m "Add 100 to numbers.txt" |
5 | Update remote | git push origin main |
6 | Celebrate! |
Key Points
- Conflicts occur when two or more people change the same lines of the same file.
- The version control system does not allow people to overwrite each other’s changes blindly, but highlights conflicts so that they can be resolved.
Content from Open Science
Last updated on 2023-05-30 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How can version control help me make my work more open?
Objectives
- Explain how a version control system can be leveraged as an electronic lab notebook for computational work.
The opposite of “open” isn’t “closed”. The opposite of “open” is “broken”.
-– John Wilbanks
Free sharing of information might be the ideal in science, but the reality is often more complicated. Normal practice today looks something like this:
- A scientist collects some data and stores it on a machine that is occasionally backed up by their department.
- They then write or modify a few small programs (which also reside on the machine) to analyze that data.
- Once they have some results, they write them up and submit a paper. The scientist might include their data – a growing number of journals require this – but they probably don’t include the code.
- Time passes.
- The journal sends the scientist reviews written anonymously by a handful of other people in their field. The scientist revises the paper to satisfy the reviewers, during which time they might also modify the scripts they wrote earlier, and resubmits.
- More time passes.
- The paper is eventually published. It might include a link to an online copy of the data, but the paper itself will be behind a paywall: only people who have personal or institutional access will be able to read it.
For a growing number of scientists, though, the process looks like this:
- The data that the scientist collects is stored in an open access repository like figshare or Zenodo, possibly as soon as it’s collected, and given its own Digital Object Identifier (DOI). Or the data was already published and is stored in Dryad.
- The scientist creates a new repository on GitHub to hold their work.
- During analysis, they push changes to their scripts (and possibly some output files) to that repository. The scientist also uses the repository for their paper; that repository is then the hub for collaboration with colleagues.
- When they are happy with the state of the paper, the scientist posts a version to arXiv or some other preprint server to invite feedback from peers.
- Based on that feedback, they may post several revisions before finally submitting the paper to a journal.
- The published paper includes links to the preprint and to the code and data repositories, which makes it much easier for other scientists to use their work as starting point for their own research.
This open model accelerates discovery: the more open work is, the more widely it is cited and re-used. However, people who want to work this way need to make some decisions about what exactly “open” means and how to do it. You can find more on the different aspects of Open Science in this book.
This is one of the (many) reasons we teach version control. When used diligently, it answers the “how” question by acting as a shareable electronic lab notebook for computational work:
- The conceptual stages of your work are documented, including who did what and when. Every step is stamped with an identifier (the commit ID) that is for most intents and purposes unique.
- You can tie documentation of rationale, ideas, and other intellectual work directly to the changes that spring from them.
- You can refer to what you used in your research to obtain your computational results in a way that is unique and recoverable.
- With a version control system such as Git, the entire history of the repository is easy to archive for perpetuity.
Making Code Citable
Anything that is hosted in a version control repository (data, code, papers, etc.) can be turned into a citable object. You’ll learn how to do this in the later episode on Citation.
How Reproducible Is My Work?
Ask one of your labmates to reproduce a result you recently obtained using only what they can find in your papers or on the web. Try to do the same for one of their results, then try to do it for a result from a lab you work with.
How to Find an Appropriate Data Repository?
Surf the internet for a couple of minutes and check out the data repositories mentioned above: Figshare, Zenodo, Dryad. Depending on your field of research, you might find community-recognized repositories that are well-known in your field. You might also find useful these data repositories recommended by Nature. Discuss with your neighbor which data repository you might want to approach for your current project and explain why.
How to Track Large Data or Image Files using Git?
Large data or image files such as .md5
or
.psd
file types can be tracked within a github repository
using the Git Large File
Storage open source extension tool. This tool automatically uploads
large file contents to a remote server and replaces the file with a text
pointer within the github repository.
Try downloading and installing the Git Large File Storage extension tool, then add tracking of a large file to your github repository. Ask a colleague to clone your repository and describe what they see when they access that large file.
Key Points
- Open scientific work is more useful and more highly cited than closed.
Content from Licensing
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- What licensing information should I include with my work?
Objectives
- Explain why adding licensing information to a repository is important.
- Choose a proper license.
- Explain differences in licensing and social expectations.
When a repository with source code, a manuscript or other creative
works becomes public, it should include a file LICENSE
or
LICENSE.txt
in the base directory of the repository that
clearly states under which license the content is being made available.
This is because creative works are automatically eligible for
intellectual property (and thus copyright) protection. Reusing creative
works without a license is dangerous, because the copyright holders
could sue you for copyright infringement.
A license solves this problem by granting rights to others (the licensees) that they would otherwise not have. What rights are being granted under which conditions differs, often only slightly, from one license to another. In practice, a few licenses are by far the most popular, and choosealicense.com will help you find a common license that suits your needs. Important considerations include:
- Whether you want to address patent rights.
- Whether you require people distributing derivative works to also distribute their source code.
- Whether the content you are licensing is source code.
- Whether you want to license the code at all.
Choosing a license that is in common use makes life easier for contributors and users, because they are more likely to already be familiar with the license and don’t have to wade through a bunch of jargon to decide if they’re ok with it. The Open Source Initiative and Free Software Foundation both maintain lists of licenses which are good choices.
This article provides an excellent overview of licensing and licensing options from the perspective of scientists who also write code.
At the end of the day what matters is that there is a clear statement as to what the license is. Also, the license is best chosen from the get-go, even if for a repository that is not public. Pushing off the decision only makes it more complicated later, because each time a new collaborator starts contributing, they, too, hold copyright and will thus need to be asked for approval once a license is chosen.
Can I Use Open License?
Find out whether you are allowed to apply an open license to your software. Can you do this unilaterally, or do you need permission from someone in your institution? If so, who?
What licenses have I already accepted?
Many of the software tools we use on a daily basis (including in this
workshop) are released as open-source software. Pick a project on GitHub
from the list below, or one of your own choosing. Find its license
(usually in a file called LICENSE
or COPYING
)
and talk about how it restricts your use of the software. Is it one of
the licenses discussed in this session? How is it different?
Key Points
- The
LICENSE
,LICENSE.md
, orLICENSE.txt
file is often used in a repository to indicate how the contents of the repo may be used by others. - People who incorporate General Public License (GPL’d) software into their own software must make the derived software also open under the GPL license if they decide to share it; most other open licenses do not require this.
- The Creative Commons family of licenses allow people to mix and match requirements and restrictions on attribution, creation of derivative works, further sharing, and commercialization.
- People who are not lawyers should not try to write licenses from scratch.
Content from Citation
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How can I make my work easier to cite?
Objectives
- Make your work easy to cite
You may want to include a file called CITATION
or
CITATION.txt
that describes how to reference your project;
the one
for Software Carpentry states:
To reference Software Carpentry in publications, please cite:
Greg Wilson: "Software Carpentry: Lessons Learned". F1000Research,
2016, 3:62 (doi: 10.12688/f1000research.3-62.v2).
@online{wilson-software-carpentry-2016,
author = {Greg Wilson},
title = {Software Carpentry: Lessons Learned},
version = {2},
date = {2016-01-28},
url = {http://f1000research.com/articles/3-62/v2},
doi = {10.12688/f1000research.3-62.v2}
}
More detailed advice, and other ways to make your code citable can be found at the Software Sustainability Institute blog and in:
Smith AM, Katz DS, Niemeyer KE, FORCE11 Software Citation Working Group. (2016) Software citation
principles. [PeerJ Computer Science 2:e86](https://peerj.com/articles/cs-86/)
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj-cs.8
There is also an @software{...
BibTeX entry type in case
no “umbrella” citation like a paper or book exists for the project you
want to make citable.
Key Points
- Add a CITATION file to a repository to explain how you want your work cited.
Content from Hosting
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- Where should I host my version control repositories?
Objectives
- Explain different options for hosting scientific work.
After choosing a license, another big question for groups that want to open up their work is where to host their code and data. One option is for the lab, the department, or the university to provide a server, manage accounts and backups, and so on. The main benefit of this is that it clarifies who owns what, which is particularly important if any of the material is sensitive (i.e., relates to experiments involving human subjects or may be used in a patent application). The main drawbacks are the cost of providing the service and its longevity: a scientist who has spent ten years collecting data would like to be sure that data will still be available ten years from now, but that’s well beyond the lifespan of most of the grants that fund academic infrastructure.
Another option is to purchase a domain and pay an Internet service provider (ISP) to host it. This gives the individual or group more control, and sidesteps problems that can arise when moving from one institution to another, but requires more time and effort to set up than either the option above or the option below.
The third option is to use a public hosting service like GitHub, GitLab, or BitBucket. Each of these services provides a web interface that enables people to create, view, and edit their code repositories. These services also provide communication and project management tools including issue tracking, wiki pages, email notifications, and code reviews. These services benefit from economies of scale and network effects: it’s easier to run one large service well than to run many smaller services to the same standard. It’s also easier for people to collaborate. Using a popular service can help connect your project with communities already using the same service.
As an example, Software Carpentry is on GitHub where you can find the source for this page. Anyone with a GitHub account can suggest changes to this text.
GitHub repositories can also be assigned DOIs, by connecting
its releases to Zenodo. For example, 10.5281/zenodo.7908089
is the DOI that has been “minted” for this introduction to Git.
Using large, well-established services can also help you quickly take advantage of powerful tools. One such tool, continuous integration (CI), can automatically run software builds and tests whenever code is committed or pull requests are submitted. Direct integration of CI with an online hosting service means this information is present in any pull request, and helps maintain code integrity and quality standards. While CI is still available in self-hosted situations, there is much less setup and maintenance involved with using an online service. Furthermore, such tools are often provided free of charge to open source projects, and are also available for private repositories for a fee.
Institutional Barriers
Sharing is the ideal for science, but many institutions place restrictions on sharing, for example to protect potentially patentable intellectual property. If you encounter such restrictions, it can be productive to inquire about the underlying motivations and either to request an exception for a specific project or domain, or to push more broadly for institutional reform to support more open science.
Can My Work Be Public?
Find out whether you are allowed to host your work openly in a public repository. Can you do this unilaterally, or do you need permission from someone in your institution? If so, who?
Key Points
- Projects can be hosted on university servers, on personal domains, or on a public hosting service.
- Rules regarding intellectual property and storage of sensitive information apply no matter where code and data are hosted.
Content from Supplemental: Using Git from RStudio
Last updated on 2024-10-25 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How can I use Git with RStudio?
Objectives
- Understand how to use Git from RStudio.
Version control can be very useful when developing data analysis scripts. For that reason, the popular development environment RStudio for the R programming language has built-in integration with Git. While some advanced Git features still require the command-line, RStudio has a nice interface for many common Git operations.
RStudio allows us to create a project associated with a given directory to keep track of various related files. To be able to track the development of the project over time, to be able to revert to previous versions, and to collaborate with others, we version control the Rstudio project with Git. To get started using Git in RStudio, we create a new project:
This opens a dialog asking us how we want to create the project. We have some options here. Let’s say that we want to use RStudio with the recipes repository that we already made. Since that repository lives in a directory on our computer, we choose the option “Existing Directory”:
Do You See a “Version Control” Option?
Although we’re not going to use it here, there should be a “version control” option on this menu. That is what you would click on if you wanted to create a project on your computer by cloning a repository from GitHub. If that option is not present, it probably means that RStudio doesn’t know where your Git executable is, and you won’t be able to progress further in this lesson until you tell RStudio where it is.
Find your Git Executable
First let’s make sure that Git is installed on your computer. Open your shell on Mac or Linux, or on Windows open the command prompt and then type:
-
which git
(macOS, Linux) -
where git
(Windows)
If there is no version of Git on your computer, please follow the Git
installation instructions in the setup of this lesson to install Git
now. Next open your shell or command prompt and type
which git
(macOS, Linux), or where git
(Windows). Copy the path to the git executable.
On one Windows computer which had GitHub Desktop installed on it, the
path was:
C:/Users/UserName/AppData/Local/GitHubDesktop/app-1.1.1/resources/app/git/cmd/git.exe
NOTE: The path on your computer will be somewhat different.
Next, RStudio will ask which existing directory we want to use. Click “Browse…” and navigate to the correct directory, then click “Create Project”:
Ta-da! We have created a new project in RStudio within the existing recipes repository. Notice the vertical “Git” menu in the menu bar. RStudio has recognized that the current directory is a Git repository, and gives us a number of tools to use Git:
To edit the existing files in the repository, we can click on them in the “Files” panel on the lower right. Now let’s add some additional information about Hummus:
Once we have saved our edited files, we can use RStudio to commit the changes by clicking on “Commit…” in the Git menu:
This will open a dialogue where we can select which files to commit
(by checking the appropriate boxes in the “Staged” column), and enter a
commit message (in the upper right panel). The icons in the “Status”
column indicate the current status of each file. Clicking on a file
shows information about changes in the lower panel (using output of
git diff
). Once everything is the way we want it, we click
“Commit”:
The changes can be pushed by selecting “Push Branch” from the Git menu. There are also options to pull from the remote repository, and to view the commit history:
Are the Push/Pull Commands Grayed Out?
Grayed out Push/Pull commands generally mean that RStudio doesn’t
know the location of your remote repository (e.g. on GitHub). To fix
this, open a terminal to the repository and enter the command:
git push -u origin main
. Then restart RStudio.
If we click on “History”, we can see a graphical version of what
git log
would tell us:
RStudio creates a number of files that it uses to keep track of a
project. We often don’t want to track these, in which case we add them
to our .gitignore
file:
Tip: versioning disposable output
Generally you do not want to version control disposable output (or
read-only data). You should modify the .gitignore
file to
tell Git to ignore these files and directories.
Challenge
- Create a new directory within your project called
graphs
. - Modify the
.gitignore
so that thegraphs
directory is not version controlled.
This can be done in Rstudio:
R
dir.create("./graphs")
Then open up the .gitignore
file from the right-hand
panel of Rstudio and add graphs/
to the list of files to
ignore.
There are many more features in the RStudio Git menu, but these should be enough to get you started!
Key Points
- Using RStudio’s Git integration allows you to version control a project over time.
Comment Changes in GitHub
The Collaborator has some questions about one line change made by the Owner and has some suggestions to propose.
With GitHub, it is possible to comment on the diff of a commit. Over the line of code to comment, a blue comment icon appears to open a comment window.
The Collaborator posts her comments and suggestions using the GitHub interface.