On Wednesday, June 1, 2016 at 9:26:44 AM UTC-6, Alain wrote:
>
> Thx Alex,
>
> regarding structure of Git repository i would like to understand something.
> I've read book and watched videos with several "trends / methods" regard
> sync several computers together.
>
> 1st method is to have
Sharan Basappa writes:
> Is there a way to retrieve the previous version of the file (that is, F.1).
It looks like "git fsck --unreachable" would output the hash of such a
file. Then you can use "git cat-file" to get the contents of each
object. You'll have to inspect
Konstantin Khomoutov writes:
> If you're pushing your project directly from Eclipse (I mean, by
> clicking some button or activating an entry of some pop-up menu) then
> you are not using Git but rather EGit -- an Eclipse's library to work
> with Git repositories
- Original Message -
From: Sharan Basappa
To: Git for human beings
Sent: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 4:13 PM
Subject: [git-users] recover added file
Folks,
As I make changes to my files, I have been adding them to git repo but
haven't been committing them.
Today, due to an
On Wed, 1 Jun 2016 08:30:55 -0700 (PDT)
Sharan Basappa wrote:
> I need some help on git status.
>
> When I do git status in my project directory, I see 3 categories as
> follows:
>
> 1) Changes to be committed:
> 2) Changed but not updated:
> 3) Untracked files:
>
>
Folks,
I need some help on git status.
When I do git status in my project directory, I see 3 categories as follows:
1) Changes to be committed:
2) Changed but not updated:
3) Untracked files:
Under "Changes to be committed" - I see files marked as modified & new file
I assume that new file
Thx Alex,
regarding structure of Git repository i would like to understand something.
I've read book and watched videos with several "trends / methods" regard
sync several computers together.
1st method is to have several git repository (1 per project)
2nd method is to have 1 main git repository
Fabian Jonsson writes:
> I had a problem recently trying to add .dll files to git. No suggestion I
> found on SO seemed to help. When trying to add each file manually in the
> Git bash, I received a message saying that one of my ignore files prevented
> the file from being
Hi,
As BitBucket is high available I suggest to keep it as a main central repo.
To have sync-ed copy of it you can have repos in any other places.
Start them with *git clone --mirror * and update them
once every minute with *git remote update --prune*.
Alex
On Wed, Jun 1, 2016 at 5:51 PM,
Hi,
i use for now BitBucket (from ATlassian) but in order to not depend on
internet connection, i would like to be sure both computer (laptop and
desktop) always have the same code.
As git is a distributed system, i would like to sync not only 1 repository
but all repositories at once.
Found the solution, there is an argument -v. So use - v2 for v2!
On Wednesday, June 1, 2016 at 12:49:05 PM UTC+1, Tony Makkiel wrote:
>
> Hi All,
> I am trying to familiarise myself with "git format-patch". I
> noticed people creating different versions of a patch, which looks better.
>
I had a problem recently trying to add .dll files to git. No suggestion I
found on SO seemed to help. When trying to add each file manually in the
Git bash, I received a message saying that one of my ignore files prevented
the file from being added. I would've liked to see which one of the
Hi All,
I am trying to familiarise myself with "git format-patch". I
noticed people creating different versions of a patch, which looks better.
For eg :- http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/2231114
In the above link it says patch version 7, v7. How is that done?
Normally when
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