| A short git tutorial |
| ==================== |
| May 2005 |
| |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| |
| This is trying to be a short tutorial on setting up and using a git |
| archive, mainly because being hands-on and using explicit examples is |
| often the best way of explaining what is going on. |
| |
| In normal life, most people wouldn't use the "core" git programs |
| directly, but rather script around them to make them more palatable. |
| Understanding the core git stuff may help some people get those scripts |
| done, though, and it may also be instructive in helping people |
| understand what it is that the higher-level helper scripts are actually |
| doing. |
| |
| The core git is often called "plumbing", with the prettier user |
| interfaces on top of it called "porcelain". You may not want to use the |
| plumbing directly very often, but it can be good to know what the |
| plumbing does for when the porcelain isn't flushing... |
| |
| |
| Creating a git archive |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Creating a new git archive couldn't be easier: all git archives start |
| out empty, and the only thing you need to do is find yourself a |
| subdirectory that you want to use as a working tree - either an empty |
| one for a totally new project, or an existing working tree that you want |
| to import into git. |
| |
| For our first example, we're going to start a totally new archive from |
| scratch, with no pre-existing files, and we'll call it "git-tutorial". |
| To start up, create a subdirectory for it, change into that |
| subdirectory, and initialize the git infrastructure with "git-init-db": |
| |
| mkdir git-tutorial |
| cd git-tutorial |
| git-init-db |
| |
| to which git will reply |
| |
| defaulting to local storage area |
| |
| which is just git's way of saying that you haven't been doing anything |
| strange, and that it will have created a local .git directory setup for |
| your new project. You will now have a ".git" directory, and you can |
| inspect that with "ls". For your new empty project, ls should show you |
| three entries: |
| |
| - a symlink called HEAD, pointing to "refs/heads/master" |
| |
| Don't worry about the fact that the file that the HEAD link points to |
| doesn't even exist yet - you haven't created the commit that will |
| start your HEAD development branch yet. |
| |
| - a subdirectory called "objects", which will contain all the git SHA1 |
| objects of your project. You should never have any real reason to |
| look at the objects directly, but you might want to know that these |
| objects are what contains all the real _data_ in your repository. |
| |
| - a subdirectory called "refs", which contains references to objects. |
| |
| In particular, the "refs" subdirectory will contain two other |
| subdirectories, named "heads" and "tags" respectively. They do |
| exactly what their names imply: they contain references to any number |
| of different "heads" of development (aka "branches"), and to any |
| "tags" that you have created to name specific versions of your |
| repository. |
| |
| One note: the special "master" head is the default branch, which is |
| why the .git/HEAD file was created as a symlink to it even if it |
| doesn't yet exist. Basically, the HEAD link is supposed to always |
| point to the branch you are working on right now, and you always |
| start out expecting to work on the "master" branch. |
| |
| However, this is only a convention, and you can name your branches |
| anything you want, and don't have to ever even _have_ a "master" |
| branch. A number of the git tools will assume that .git/HEAD is |
| valid, though. |
| |
| [ Implementation note: an "object" is identified by its 160-bit SHA1 |
| hash, aka "name", and a reference to an object is always the 40-byte |
| hex representation of that SHA1 name. The files in the "refs" |
| subdirectory are expected to contain these hex references (usually |
| with a final '\n' at the end), and you should thus expect to see a |
| number of 41-byte files containing these references in this refs |
| subdirectories when you actually start populating your tree ] |
| |
| You have now created your first git archive. Of course, since it's |
| empty, that's not very useful, so let's start populating it with data. |
| |
| |
| Populating a git archive |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| We'll keep this simple and stupid, so we'll start off with populating a |
| few trivial files just to get a feel for it. |
| |
| Start off with just creating any random files that you want to maintain |
| in your git archive. We'll start off with a few bad examples, just to |
| get a feel for how this works: |
| |
| echo "Hello World" > a |
| echo "Silly example" > b |
| |
| you have now created two files in your working directory, but to |
| actually check in your hard work, you will have to go through two steps: |
| |
| - fill in the "cache" aka "index" file with the information about your |
| working directory state |
| |
| - commit that index file as an object. |
| |
| The first step is trivial: when you want to tell git about any changes |
| to your working directory, you use the "git-update-cache" program. That |
| program normally just takes a list of filenames you want to update, but |
| to avoid trivial mistakes, it refuses to add new entries to the cache |
| (or remove existing ones) unless you explicitly tell it that you're |
| adding a new entry with the "--add" flag (or removing an entry with the |
| "--remove") flag. |
| |
| So to populate the index with the two files you just created, you can do |
| |
| git-update-cache --add a b |
| |
| and you have now told git to track those two files. |
| |
| In fact, as you did that, if you now look into your object directory, |
| you'll notice that git will have added two new objects to the object |
| store. If you did exactly the steps above, you should now be able to do |
| |
| ls .git/objects/??/* |
| |
| and see two files: |
| |
| .git/objects/55/7db03de997c86a4a028e1ebd3a1ceb225be238 |
| .git/objects/f2/4c74a2e500f5ee1332c86b94199f52b1d1d962 |
| |
| which correspond with the object with SHA1 names of 557db... and f24c7.. |
| respectively. |
| |
| If you want to, you can use "git-cat-file" to look at those objects, but |
| you'll have to use the object name, not the filename of the object: |
| |
| git-cat-file -t 557db03de997c86a4a028e1ebd3a1ceb225be238 |
| |
| where the "-t" tells git-cat-file to tell you what the "type" of the |
| object is. Git will tell you that you have a "blob" object (ie just a |
| regular file), and you can see the contents with |
| |
| git-cat-file "blob" 557db03de997c86a4a028e1ebd3a1ceb225be238 |
| |
| which will print out "Hello World". The object 557db... is nothing |
| more than the contents of your file "a". |
| |
| [ Digression: don't confuse that object with the file "a" itself. The |
| object is literally just those specific _contents_ of the file, and |
| however much you later change the contents in file "a", the object we |
| just looked at will never change. Objects are immutable. ] |
| |
| Anyway, as we mentioned previously, you normally never actually take a |
| look at the objects themselves, and typing long 40-character hex SHA1 |
| names is not something you'd normally want to do. The above digression |
| was just to show that "git-update-cache" did something magical, and |
| actually saved away the contents of your files into the git content |
| store. |
| |
| Updating the cache did something else too: it created a ".git/index" |
| file. This is the index that describes your current working tree, and |
| something you should be very aware of. Again, you normally never worry |
| about the index file itself, but you should be aware of the fact that |
| you have not actually really "checked in" your files into git so far, |
| you've only _told_ git about them. |
| |
| However, since git knows about them, you can now start using some of the |
| most basic git commands to manipulate the files or look at their status. |
| |
| In particular, let's not even check in the two files into git yet, we'll |
| start off by adding another line to "a" first: |
| |
| echo "It's a new day for git" >> a |
| |
| and you can now, since you told git about the previous state of "a", ask |
| git what has changed in the tree compared to your old index, using the |
| "git-diff-files" command: |
| |
| git-diff-files |
| |
| oops. That wasn't very readable. It just spit out its own internal |
| version of a "diff", but that internal version really just tells you |
| that it has noticed that "a" has been modified, and that the old object |
| contents it had have been replaced with something else. |
| |
| To make it readable, we can tell git-diff-files to output the |
| differences as a patch, using the "-p" flag: |
| |
| git-diff-files -p |
| |
| which will spit out |
| |
| diff --git a/a b/a |
| --- a/a |
| +++ b/a |
| @@ -1 +1,2 @@ |
| Hello World |
| +It's a new day for git |
| |
| ie the diff of the change we caused by adding another line to "a". |
| |
| In other words, git-diff-files always shows us the difference between |
| what is recorded in the index, and what is currently in the working |
| tree. That's very useful. |
| |
| |
| Committing git state |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Now, we want to go to the next stage in git, which is to take the files |
| that git knows about in the index, and commit them as a real tree. We do |
| that in two phases: creating a "tree" object, and committing that "tree" |
| object as a "commit" object together with an explanation of what the |
| tree was all about, along with information of how we came to that state. |
| |
| Creating a tree object is trivial, and is done with "git-write-tree". |
| There are no options or other input: git-write-tree will take the |
| current index state, and write an object that describes that whole |
| index. In other words, we're now tying together all the different |
| filenames with their contents (and their permissions), and we're |
| creating the equivalent of a git "directory" object: |
| |
| git-write-tree |
| |
| and this will just output the name of the resulting tree, in this case |
| (if you have does exactly as I've described) it should be |
| |
| 3ede4ed7e895432c0a247f09d71a76db53bd0fa4 |
| |
| which is another incomprehensible object name. Again, if you want to, |
| you can use "git-cat-file -t 3ede4.." to see that this time the object |
| is not a "blob" object, but a "tree" object (you can also use |
| git-cat-file to actually output the raw object contents, but you'll see |
| mainly a binary mess, so that's less interesting). |
| |
| However - normally you'd never use "git-write-tree" on its own, because |
| normally you always commit a tree into a commit object using the |
| "git-commit-tree" command. In fact, it's easier to not actually use |
| git-write-tree on its own at all, but to just pass its result in as an |
| argument to "git-commit-tree". |
| |
| "git-commit-tree" normally takes several arguments - it wants to know |
| what the _parent_ of a commit was, but since this is the first commit |
| ever in this new archive, and it has no parents, we only need to pass in |
| the tree ID. However, git-commit-tree also wants to get a commit message |
| on its standard input, and it will write out the resulting ID for the |
| commit to its standard output. |
| |
| And this is where we start using the .git/HEAD file. The HEAD file is |
| supposed to contain the reference to the top-of-tree, and since that's |
| exactly what git-commit-tree spits out, we can do this all with a simple |
| shell pipeline: |
| |
| echo "Initial commit" | git-commit-tree $(git-write-tree) > .git/HEAD |
| |
| which will say: |
| |
| Committing initial tree 3ede4ed7e895432c0a247f09d71a76db53bd0fa4 |
| |
| just to warn you about the fact that it created a totally new commit |
| that is not related to anything else. Normally you do this only _once_ |
| for a project ever, and all later commits will be parented on top of an |
| earlier commit, and you'll never see this "Committing initial tree" |
| message ever again. |
| |
| |
| Making a change |
| --------------- |
| |
| Remember how we did the "git-update-cache" on file "a" and then we |
| changed "a" afterward, and could compare the new state of "a" with the |
| state we saved in the index file? |
| |
| Further, remember how I said that "git-write-tree" writes the contents |
| of the _index_ file to the tree, and thus what we just committed was in |
| fact the _original_ contents of the file "a", not the new ones. We did |
| that on purpose, to show the difference between the index state, and the |
| state in the working directory, and how they don't have to match, even |
| when we commit things. |
| |
| As before, if we do "git-diff-files -p" in our git-tutorial project, |
| we'll still see the same difference we saw last time: the index file |
| hasn't changed by the act of committing anything. However, now that we |
| have committed something, we can also learn to use a new command: |
| "git-diff-cache". |
| |
| Unlike "git-diff-files", which showed the difference between the index |
| file and the working directory, "git-diff-cache" shows the differences |
| between a committed _tree_ and the index file. In other words, |
| git-diff-cache wants a tree to be diffed against, and before we did the |
| commit, we couldn't do that, because we didn't have anything to diff |
| against. |
| |
| But now we can do |
| |
| git-diff-cache -p HEAD |
| |
| (where "-p" has the same meaning as it did in git-diff-files), and it |
| will show us the same difference, but for a totally different reason. |
| Now we're not comparing against the index file, we're comparing against |
| the tree we just wrote. It just so happens that those two are obviously |
| the same. |
| |
| "git-diff-cache" also has a specific flag "--cached", which is used to |
| tell it to show the differences purely with the index file, and ignore |
| the current working directory state entirely. Since we just wrote the |
| index file to HEAD, doing "git-diff-cache --cached -p HEAD" should thus |
| return an empty set of differences, and that's exactly what it does. |
| |
| However, our next step is to commit the _change_ we did, and again, to |
| understand what's going on, keep in mind the difference between "working |
| directory contents", "index file" and "committed tree". We have changes |
| in the working directory that we want to commit, and we always have to |
| work through the index file, so the first thing we need to do is to |
| update the index cache: |
| |
| git-update-cache a |
| |
| (note how we didn't need the "--add" flag this time, since git knew |
| about the file already). |
| |
| Note what happens to the different git-diff-xxx versions here. After |
| we've updated "a" in the index, "git-diff-files -p" now shows no |
| differences, but "git-diff-cache -p HEAD" still _does_ show that the |
| current state is different from the state we committed. In fact, now |
| "git-diff-cache" shows the same difference whether we use the "--cached" |
| flag or not, since now the index is coherent with the working directory. |
| |
| Now, since we've updated "a" in the index, we can commit the new |
| version. We could do it by writing the tree by hand, and committing the |
| tree (this time we'd have to use the "-p HEAD" flag to tell commit that |
| the HEAD was the _parent_ of the new commit, and that this wasn't an |
| initial commit any more), but the fact is, git has a simple helper |
| script for doing all of the non-initial commits that does all of this |
| for you, and starts up an editor to let you write your commit message |
| yourself, so let's just use that: |
| |
| git commit |
| |
| Write whatever message you want, and all the lines that start with '#' |
| will be pruned out, and the rest will be used as the commit message for |
| the change. If you decide you don't want to commit anything after all at |
| this point (you can continue to edit things and update the cache), you |
| can just leave an empty message. Otherwise git-commit-script will commit |
| the change for you. |
| |
| (Btw, current versions of git will consider the change in question to be |
| so big that it's considered a whole new file, since the diff is actually |
| bigger than the file. So the helpful comments that git-commit-script |
| tells you for this example will say that you deleted and re-created the |
| file "a". For a less contrived example, these things are usually more |
| obvious). |
| |
| You've now made your first real git commit. And if you're interested in |
| looking at what git-commit-script really does, feel free to investigate: |
| it's a few very simple shell scripts to generate the helpful (?) commit |
| message headers, and a few one-liners that actually do the commit itself. |
| |
| |
| Checking it out |
| --------------- |
| |
| While creating changes is useful, it's even more useful if you can tell |
| later what changed. The most useful command for this is another of the |
| "diff" family, namely "git-diff-tree". |
| |
| git-diff-tree can be given two arbitrary trees, and it will tell you the |
| differences between them. Perhaps even more commonly, though, you can |
| give it just a single commit object, and it will figure out the parent |
| of that commit itself, and show the difference directly. Thus, to get |
| the same diff that we've already seen several times, we can now do |
| |
| git-diff-tree -p HEAD |
| |
| (again, "-p" means to show the difference as a human-readable patch), |
| and it will show what the last commit (in HEAD) actually changed. |
| |
| More interestingly, you can also give git-diff-tree the "-v" flag, which |
| tells it to also show the commit message and author and date of the |
| commit, and you can tell it to show a whole series of diffs. |
| Alternatively, you can tell it to be "silent", and not show the diffs at |
| all, but just show the actual commit message. |
| |
| In fact, together with the "git-rev-list" program (which generates a |
| list of revisions), git-diff-tree ends up being a veritable fount of |
| changes. A trivial (but very useful) script called "git-whatchanged" is |
| included with git which does exactly this, and shows a log of recent |
| activity. |
| |
| To see the whole history of our pitiful little git-tutorial project, you |
| can do |
| |
| git log |
| |
| which shows just the log messages, or if we want to see the log together |
| whith the associated patches use the more complex (and much more |
| powerful) |
| |
| git-whatchanged -p --root |
| |
| and you will see exactly what has changed in the repository over its |
| short history. |
| |
| [ Side note: the "--root" flag is a flag to git-diff-tree to tell it to |
| show the initial aka "root" commit too. Normally you'd probably not |
| want to see the initial import diff, but since the tutorial project |
| was started from scratch and is so small, we use it to make the result |
| a bit more interesting ] |
| |
| With that, you should now be having some inkling of what git does, and |
| can explore on your own. |
| |
| |
| Copoying archives |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Git arhives are normally totally self-sufficient, and it's worth noting |
| that unlike CVS, for example, there is no separate notion of |
| "repository" and "working tree". A git repository normally _is_ the |
| working tree, with the local git information hidden in the ".git" |
| subdirectory. There is nothing else. What you see is what you got. |
| |
| [ Side note: you can tell git to split the git internal information from |
| the directory that it tracks, but we'll ignore that for now: it's not |
| how normal projects work, and it's really only meant for special uses. |
| So the mental model of "the git information is always tied directly to |
| the working directory that it describes" may not be technically 100% |
| accurate, but it's a good model for all normal use ] |
| |
| This has two implications: |
| |
| - if you grow bored with the tutorial archive you created (or you've |
| made a mistake and want to start all over), you can just do simple |
| |
| rm -rf git-tutorial |
| |
| and it will be gone. There's no external repository, and there's no |
| history outside of the project you created. |
| |
| - if you want to move or duplicate a git archive, you can do so. There |
| is no "git clone" command: if you want to create a copy of your |
| archive (with all the full history that went along with it), you can |
| do so with a regular "cp -a git-tutorial new-git-tutorial". |
| |
| Note that when you've moved or copied a git archive, your git index |
| file (which caches various information, notably some of the "stat" |
| information for the files involved) will likely need to be refreshed. |
| So after you do a "cp -a" to create a new copy, you'll want to do |
| |
| git-update-cache --refresh |
| |
| to make sure that the index file is up-to-date in the new one. |
| |
| Note that the second point is true even across machines. You can |
| duplicate a remote git archive with _any_ regular copy mechanism, be it |
| "scp", "rsync" or "wget". |
| |
| When copying a remote repository, you'll want to at a minimum update the |
| index cache when you do this, and especially with other peoples |
| repositories you often want to make sure that the index cache is in some |
| known state (you don't know _what_ they've done and not yet checked in), |
| so usually you'll precede the "git-update-cache" with a |
| |
| git-read-tree HEAD |
| git-update-cache --refresh |
| |
| which will force a total index re-build from the tree pointed to by |
| HEAD. |
| |
| In fact, many public remote repositories will not contain any of the |
| checked out files or even an index file, and will _only_ contain the |
| actual core git files. Such a repository usually doesn't even have the |
| ".git" subdirectory, but has all the git files directly in the |
| repository. |
| |
| To create your own local live copy of such a "raw" git repository, you'd |
| first create your own subdirectory for the project, adn then copy the |
| raw repository contents into the ".git" directory. For example, to |
| create your own copy of the git repository, you'd do the following |
| |
| mkdir my-git |
| cd my-git |
| rsync -rL rsync://rsync.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/git.git/ .git |
| |
| followed by |
| |
| git-read-tree HEAD |
| |
| to populate the index. However, now you have populated the index, and |
| you have all the git internal files, but you will notice that you don't |
| actually have any of the _working_directory_ files to work on. To get |
| those, you'd check them out with |
| |
| git-checkout-cache -u -a |
| |
| where the "-u" flag means that you want the checkout to keep the index |
| up-to-date (so that you don't have to refresh it afterwards), and the |
| "-a" file means "check out all files" (if you have a stale copy or an |
| older version of a checked out tree you may also need to add the "-f" |
| file first, to tell git-checkout-cache to _force_ overwriting of any old |
| files). |
| |
| You have now successfully copied somebody elses (mine) remote |
| repository, and checked it out. |
| |
| [ to be continued.. cvs2git, tagging versions, branches, merging.. ] |