Hello,
I am configuring Git on windows using http access. I am able to configure
httpd.conf to the extent, where anyone in the network can push/pull changes
from the server repository. However, the authentication block within
httpd.conf seem to be not getting invoked. The authuserfile is existin
Hi,
I'm having difficulty understanding how I should use git when I have
multiple independent changes in a project. I have a local git repository
for various windows & linux machines and I work on different parts of the
project on different machines. The situation I have is that I am part way
Hello,
do I get it right, and you have only two repos, one on the linux and one on
the windows machine, and you don't use an intermittent repository, like a
git server, Gitorious or Github? If so, you MUST commit or stash your
changes in "origin", before pushing your changes there. Or, you may set
Caution: Not an expert by any means.
What I would do is this. First, I would do a "git stash".
Use git stash when you want to record the current state of the working
directory and the index, but want to go back to a clean working
directory. The command saves your local modifications away and rev
Dang it, don't do the "git stash" at all, it cleans up the working
directory. Just do the "git status" and "git reset" parts. When you've
gotten the index to contain only the files you want to commit (the
rest will be untracked), then do the git commit and git push. Then
just do a "git add -A ."
O
On Mon, 1 Jul 2013 18:33:18 -0700 (PDT)
formal3rdpa...@gmail.com wrote:
[...]
> for example git fetch command only takes 300-400 milisecond while
> windows one takes 2.03-2.5 seconds (windows one is slower).
>
> I there anyway i can improves the speed on windows?
>
> what mostlikely causing the
@John McKown, `git stash` can be "rewerted" with `git stash pop`, so it
cleans up the working directory only temporarily. So it does just what it
says it will do: put your changes in a stash.
On 2 July 2013 14:55, John McKown wrote:
> Dang it, don't do the "git stash" at all, it cleans up the w
Hi,
I'm a new one for git. I need to execute some code standards in my server
(git repository).
But i'm unable to execute the codecheck process for the new branch commits
pushed by client. Its working for the existing branch.
I'm using update hook for executing this codecheck process.
old
On Tue, 2 Jul 2013 07:51:18 -0700 (PDT)
Muthu wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm a new one for git. I need to execute some code standards in my
> server (git repository).
> But i'm unable to execute the codecheck process for the new branch
> commits pushed by client. Its working for the existing branch.
> From: HWSWMAN
>
> If I create a git repo for multiple projects, for example ALL projects that
> my team works on, when they clone and pull, do they have to download all
> the files? Can they sort of selectively download the files they may want
> to read or work on?
I believe that one co
interesting though thank you
On Tuesday, July 2, 2013, Dale R. Worley wrote:
> > From: HWSWMAN >
> >
> > If I create a git repo for multiple projects, for example ALL projects
> that
> > my team works on, when they clone and pull, do they have to download all
> > the files? Can they sort of sel
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