Pro Git.

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Bibliographic Details
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Berkeley, CA : : Apress L. P.,, 2014.
©2014.
Year of Publication:2014
Edition:2nd ed.
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (441 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Contents at a Glance
  • Contents
  • About the Authors
  • Preface by Scott Chacon
  • Preface by Ben Straub
  • Chapter 1: Getting Started
  • About Version Control
  • Local Version Control Systems
  • Centralized Version Control Systems
  • Distributed Version Control Systems
  • A Short History of Git
  • Git Basics
  • Snapshots, Not Differences
  • Nearly Every Operation Is Local
  • Git Has Integrity
  • Git Generally Only Adds Data
  • The Three States
  • The Command Line
  • Installing Git
  • Installing on Linux
  • Installing on Mac
  • Installing on Windows
  • First-Time Git Setup
  • Your Identity
  • Your Editor
  • Checking Your Settings
  • Getting Help
  • Summary
  • Chapter 2: Git Basics
  • Getting a Git Repository
  • Initializing a Repository in an Existing Directory
  • Cloning an Existing Repository
  • Recording Changes to the Repository
  • Checking the Status of Your Files
  • Tracking New Files
  • Staging Modified Files
  • Short Status
  • Ignoring Files
  • Viewing Your Staged and Unstaged Changes
  • Committing Your Changes
  • Skipping the Staging Area
  • Removing Files
  • Moving Files
  • Viewing the Commit History
  • Limiting Log Output
  • Undoing Things
  • Unstaging a Staged File
  • Unmodifying a Modified File
  • Working with Remotes
  • Showing Your Remotes
  • Adding Remote Repositories
  • Fetching and Pulling from Your Remotes
  • Pushing to Your Remotes
  • Inspecting a Remote
  • Removing and Renaming Remotes
  • Tagging
  • Listing Your Tags
  • Creating Tags
  • Annotated Tags
  • Lightweight Tags
  • Tagging Later
  • Sharing Tags
  • Git Aliases
  • Summary
  • Chapter 3: Git Branching
  • Branching in a Nutshell
  • Creating a New Branch
  • Switching Branches
  • Basic Branching and Merging
  • Basic Branching
  • Basic Merging
  • Basic Merge Conflicts
  • Branch Management
  • Branching Workflows
  • Long-Running Branches
  • Topic Branches.
  • Remote Branches
  • Pushing
  • Tracking Branches
  • Pulling
  • Deleting Remote Branches
  • Rebasing
  • The Basic Rebase
  • More Interesting Rebases
  • The Perils of Rebasing
  • Rebase When You Rebase
  • Rebase vs. Merge
  • Summary
  • Chapter 4: Git on the Server
  • The Protocols
  • Local Protocol
  • The Pros
  • The Cons
  • The HTTP Protocols
  • Smart HTTP
  • Dumb HTTP
  • The Pros
  • The Cons
  • The SSH Protocol
  • The Pros
  • The Cons
  • The Git Protocol
  • The Pros
  • The Cons
  • Getting Git on a Server
  • Putting the Bare Repository on a Server
  • Small Setups
  • SSH Access
  • Generating Your SSH Public Key
  • Setting Up the Server
  • Git Daemon
  • Smart HTTP
  • GitWeb
  • GitLab
  • Installation
  • Administration
  • Users
  • Groups
  • Projects
  • Hooks
  • Basic Usage
  • Working Together
  • Third Party Hosted Options
  • Summary
  • Chapter 5: Distributed Git
  • Distributed Workflows
  • Centralized Workflow
  • Integration-Manager Workflow
  • Dictator and Lieutenants Workflow
  • Workf lows Summary
  • Contributing to a Project
  • Commit Guidelines
  • Private Small Team
  • Private Managed Team
  • Public Project, Fork
  • Public Project, E-Mail
  • Summary
  • Maintaining a Project
  • Working in Topic Branches
  • Applying Patches from E-mail
  • Applying a Patch with apply
  • Applying a Patch with am
  • Checking Out Remote Branches
  • Determining What Is Introduced
  • Integrating Contributed Work
  • Merging Workflows
  • Large-Merging Workflows
  • Rebasing and Cherry Picking Workflows
  • Rerere
  • Tagging Your Releases
  • Generating a Build Number
  • Preparing a Release
  • The Shortlog
  • Summary
  • Chapter 6: Github
  • Account Setup and Configuration
  • SSH Access
  • Your Avatar
  • Your Email Addresses
  • Two-Factor Authentication
  • Contributing to a Project
  • Forking Projects
  • The GitHub Flow
  • Creating a Pull Request
  • Iterating on a Pull Request.
  • Advanced Pull Requests
  • Pull Requests as Patches
  • Keeping up with Upstream
  • References
  • Markdown
  • GitHub Flavored Markdown
  • Task Lists
  • Code Snippets
  • Quoting
  • Emoji
  • Images
  • Maintaining a Project
  • Creating a New Repository
  • Adding Collaborators
  • Managing Pull Requests
  • Email Notifications
  • Collaborating on the Pull Request
  • Pull Request Refs
  • Pull Requests on Pull Requests
  • Mentions and Notifications
  • The Notifications Page
  • Web Notifications
  • Email Notifications
  • Special Files
  • README
  • CONTRIBUTING
  • Project Administration
  • Changing the Default Branch
  • Transferring a Project
  • Managing an Organization
  • Organization Basics
  • Teams
  • Audit Log
  • Scripting GitHub
  • Hooks
  • Services
  • Hooks
  • The GitHub API
  • Basic Usage
  • Commenting on an Issue
  • Changing the Status of a Pull Request
  • Octokit
  • Summary
  • Chapter 7: Git Tools
  • Revision Selection
  • Single Revisions
  • Short SHA
  • Branch References
  • Ref Log Shortnames
  • Ancestry References
  • Commit Ranges
  • Double Dot
  • Multiple Points
  • Triple Dot
  • Interactive Staging
  • Staging and Unstaging Files
  • Staging Patches
  • Stashing and Cleaning
  • Stashing Your Work
  • Creative Stashing
  • Unapplying a Stash
  • Creating a Branch from a Stash
  • Cleaning Your Working Directory
  • Signing Your Work
  • GPG Introduction
  • Signing Tags
  • Verifying Tags
  • Signing Commits
  • Everyone Must Sign
  • Searching
  • Git Grep
  • Git Log Searching
  • Line Log Search
  • Rewriting History
  • Changing the Last Commit
  • Changing Multiple Commit Messages
  • Reordering Commits
  • Squashing a Commit
  • Splitting a Commit
  • The Nuclear Option: filter-branch
  • Removing a File from Every Commit
  • Making a Subdirectory the New Root
  • Changing E-Mail Addresses Globally
  • Reset Demystified
  • The Three Trees
  • The HEAD
  • The Index.
  • The Working Directory
  • The Workflow
  • The Role of Reset
  • Step 1: Move HEAD
  • Step 2: Updating the Index (--mixed)
  • Step 3: Updating the Working Directory (--hard)
  • Recap
  • Reset with a Path
  • Squashing
  • Check It Out
  • Without Paths
  • With Paths
  • Summary
  • Advanced Merging
  • Merge Conflicts
  • Aborting a Merge
  • Ignoring Whitespace
  • Manual File Re-merging
  • Checking Out Conflicts
  • Merge Log
  • Combined Diff Format
  • Undoing Merges
  • Fix the References
  • Reverse the Commit
  • Other Types of Merges
  • Our or Theirs Preference
  • Subtree Merging
  • Rerere
  • Debugging with Git
  • File Annotation
  • Binary Search
  • Submodules
  • Starting with Submodules
  • Cloning a Project with Submodules
  • Working on a Project with Submodules
  • Pulling in Upstream Changes
  • Working on a Submodule
  • Publishing Submodule Changes
  • Merging Submodule Changes
  • Submodule Tips
  • Submodule Foreach
  • Useful Aliases
  • Issues with Submodules
  • Aborting
  • Bundling
  • Replace
  • Credential Storage
  • Under the Hood
  • A Custom Credential Cache
  • Summary
  • Chapter 8: Customizing Git
  • Git Configuration
  • Basic Client Configuration
  • core.editor
  • commit.template
  • core.pager
  • user.signingkey
  • core.excludesfile
  • help.autocorrect
  • Colors in Git
  • color.ui
  • color.*
  • External Merge and Diff Tools
  • Formatting and Whitespace
  • core.autocrlf
  • core.whitespace
  • Server Configuration
  • receive.fsckObjects
  • receive.denyNonFastForwards
  • receive.denyDeletes
  • Git Attributes
  • Binary Files
  • Identifying Binary Files
  • Diffing Binary Files
  • Keyword Expansion
  • Exporting Your Repository
  • export-ignore
  • export-subst
  • Merge Strategies
  • Git Hooks
  • Installing a Hook
  • Client-Side Hooks
  • Committing-Workflow Hooks
  • E-mail Workflow Hooks
  • Other Client Hooks
  • Server-Side Hooks
  • pre-receive
  • update.
  • post-receive
  • An Example Git-Enforced Policy
  • Server-Side Hook
  • Enforcing a Specific Commit-Message Format
  • Enforcing a User-Based ACL System
  • Testing It Out
  • Client-Side Hooks
  • Summary
  • Chapter 9: Git and Other Systems
  • Git as a Client
  • Git and Subversion
  • git svn
  • Setting Up
  • Getting Started
  • Committing Back to Subversion
  • Pulling in New Changes
  • Git Branching Issues
  • Subversion Branching
  • Creating a New SVN Branch
  • Switching Active Branches
  • Subversion Commands
  • SVN Style History
  • SVN Annotation
  • SVN Server Information
  • Ignoring What Subversion Ignores
  • Git-Svn Summary
  • Git and Mercurial
  • Getting Started
  • Workflow
  • Branches and Bookmarks
  • Mercurial Summary
  • Git and Perforce
  • Git Fusion
  • Setting Up
  • Fusion Configuration
  • Workflow
  • Git-Fusion Summary
  • Git-p4
  • Setting Up
  • Getting Started
  • Workflow
  • Branching
  • Git and Perforce Summary
  • Git and TFS
  • Which Tool?
  • Getting Started: git-tf
  • Getting Started: git-tfs
  • Git-tf[s] Workflow
  • Workflow: git-tf
  • Workflow: git-tfs
  • Git and TFS Summary
  • Migrating to Git
  • Subversion
  • Mercurial
  • Perforce
  • Perforce Git Fusion
  • A Custom Importer
  • Summary
  • Chapter 10: Git Internals
  • Plumbing and Porcelain
  • Git Objects
  • Tree Objects
  • Commit Objects
  • Object Storage
  • Git References
  • The HEAD
  • Tags
  • Remotes
  • Packfiles
  • The Refspec
  • Pushing Refspecs
  • Deleting References
  • Transfer Protocols
  • The Dumb Protocol
  • The Smart Protocol
  • Uploading Data
  • SSH
  • HTTP(S)
  • Downloading Data
  • SSH
  • HTTP(S)
  • Protocols Summary
  • Maintenance and Data Recovery
  • Maintenance
  • Data Recovery
  • Removing Objects
  • Environment Variables
  • Global Behavior
  • Repository Locations
  • Pathspecs
  • Committing
  • Networking
  • Diffing and Merging
  • Debugging
  • Miscellaneous
  • Summary.
  • Appendix A: Git in Other Environments.