I need to add that I don't have the git-daemon on the server, it's a
shared host.
On May 31, 10:06 pm, ben bklo...@gmail.com wrote:
I've created a clone (lets call it Dev) of local project (Core), and
want to create a remote repo of Dev on a server (Staging) with a
working tree (the actual
/stage the main repo? I
keep seeing folks doing the --bare-init for their repo, then cloning
that and adding post-update or post-commit hooks to update the files.
On May 31, 11:46 pm, Marek Wywiał onj...@gmail.com wrote:
On 1 Cze, 07:30, ben bklo...@gmail.com wrote:
I need to add that I don't
not do
so well with versioning DB dumps (the repo gets huge very quickly).
./ben
On Jun 21, 12:24 pm, KCO kochin@gmail.com wrote:
Hello folks...
I was hoping that someone could help me out here. I'm just starting
out with GIT and I'm trying to understand how to use branching as best
Hello,
I am relatively new to git; and created a new bare shared repository using
'scp' from an existing repository I had
been working on to set up a git server.
There is a reference to one of the branches in depot I copied from:
git branch -a
branch1
branch2
* master
Hi,
I am new to git; and created a bare shared repository from one I had been
working on.
The shared depot has a reference to a remote branch I had copied from;
but git remote gives no information.
git branch -a
branch1
branch2
* master
remotes/origin/branch2
git remote -v
Did something
Thanks, I thought something was wrong; I'll give it a try.
On Thursday, October 30, 2014 10:31:58 AM UTC-4, Ben A wrote:
Hi,
I am new to git; and created a bare shared repository from one I had been
working on.
The shared depot has a reference to a remote branch I had copied from;
but git
Hi, hope someone can help ... I'm very confused ...
I'm using git-gui on windows. I created a new file in my project
source directory. I'm fond of it - in fact it is the successful
culmination of months of work - so I decide I want to keep it. I fire
up Git-Gui. My new file is in the list of
On Sun, Sep 18, 2011 at 6:52 PM, Philip Oakley philipoak...@iee.org wrote:
Have a look in the reflog for the step where you commiited the file (time
for firing up the 'bash' window and some typing;-). It should give you the
sha1 value for the commit.
Assuming this is still in your own local
Sometimes if I have a solution open in Visual Studio when I pull from Git (
a common situation in this type of development environment ) it seems that
Visual Studio will have certain files locked so that Git fails to overwrite
them.
When that happens Git doesn't seem to care- it continues
file holds the project info
as well as your session state (which files/tabs are open etc).
On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 3:19 AM, Ben Moxon glen...@gmail.comjavascript:
wrote:
Sometimes if I have a solution open in Visual Studio when I pull from
Git (
a common situation in this type
repos, it seems unclear as to how I
keep those repos in sync and make sure all the developers in our company
push their changes to both repos.
Thanks,
Ben
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February 2013 23:21, Ben McCann benjamin.j.mcc...@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have any experience using subtree?
Thanks!
-Ben
On Monday, February 25, 2013 8:21:50 PM UTC-8, Ben McCann wrote:
I'm fairly new to git and am trying to determine if git subtree would be
helpful for managing our company's
://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3904932),
but they do seem easier to setup and maintain in this case as far as I can
tell as a complete beginner, so I guess I'll have to look into them.
Thanks for the help!
-Ben
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 2:53 PM, Gergely Polonkai gerg...@polonkai.euwrote:
Sorry, I wasn't totally clear
I'm new to using Git and I'm a little confused. I'm trying to patch a
module and I've gone to terminal and gone to the folder I need to patch via
FTP.
I've been following this tutorial
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i-oe7_qHreY but whenever I add the apply git
command I get 'invalid command'.
?
On Monday, 24 June 2013 23:58:17 UTC+10, Konstantin Khomoutov wrote:
On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 04:52:21 -0700 (PDT)
Ben Alcantara ben.al...@gmail.com javascript: wrote:
I'm new to using Git and I'm a little confused. I'm trying to patch a
module and I've gone to terminal and gone to the folder I need
I'm using terminal but i've gone to the directory via the ftp command. How
would I apply this patch via SSH, is it similar commands like FTP?
On Tuesday, 25 June 2013 01:32:43 UTC+10, Peter J Weisberg wrote:
On Jun 24, 2013 8:20 AM, Konstantin Khomoutov
flat...@users.sourceforge.net
Hi,
I'm very new to git. I just created a new repository in a directory with
existing code with Git Gui 1.9.4 in windows. All of the files that were in
the directory appear to be listed in Unstaged Changes in the upper left.
I'm not sure how to proceed. Should I commit them? I did set git
give
to people you're training around this? And, if rebasing does introduce
certain risks, is merging possible while avoiding polluted PRs?
Thanks...
-Ben
On Monday, December 28, 2015 at 1:43:54 AM UTC-5, GadgetSteve wrote:
>
>
> On 27/12/2015 15:09, Ben Rubinger wrote
I have a couple repos that routinely believe there are local changes, when
there are none. The only solution seems to be to delete these files
and reacquire them from git.
For example:
>git status
On branch master
Your branch is behind 'origin/master' by 2 commits, and can be
fast-forwarded.
No, you do not.
On Friday, March 11, 2016 at 1:55:27 AM UTC-6, tombert wrote:
>
> you need to do a "git checkout ." in order to overwrite local changes
> (note the dot after the checkout command).
>
> On Friday, 4 March 2016 22:05:19 UTC+1, Ben Page wrote:
>
in git for windows.
On Tuesday, February 23, 2016 at 12:34:32 PM UTC-6, Ben Page wrote:
>
> I have a couple repos that routinely believe there are local changes, when
> there are none. The only solution seems to be to delete these files
> and reacquire them from git.
>
> For exampl
?
On Wednesday, February 24, 2016 at 10:03:24 AM UTC-6, Dale R. Worley wrote:
>
> Ben Page <ben@openreign.com > writes:
> >>git status
> > On branch master
> > Your branch is behind 'origin/master' by 2 commits, and can be
> > fast-forwarded.
>
. Instead of "trying" to help people, maybe actually do it?
As for me, I'm outta here.
Blacklisted. Reason: sux.
On Tuesday, January 31, 2017 at 11:14:37 PM UTC-8, Konstantin Khomoutov
wrote:
>
> On Tue, 31 Jan 2017 15:18:44 -0800 (PST)
> Ben David <tac.be...@gmail
Wow, it blows my mind that three people answered and all of the replies
totally did not answer in a coherent intelligible way. Thanks for wasting
everyone's time. Poor John Smith.
So example.git - is that a combination of the folder name of the repository
+ the folder name of the .git
out
> files, we have just the '.git' folder.
>
> All that said, This is forensic detail, not directly required to use Git
> itself, though, given that Git was developed for the Linux kernel, there
> can be an expectation of some computer operation knowledge and eagerness
Dear all, I try installing git on windows via batch script but missing the
above mentioned flag, i do not want to load a settings file but to pass the
conhost selection as cmd line argument
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Ben Benw schrieb am Samstag, 11. November 2023 um 01:21:34 UTC+1:
> Dear all, I try installing git on windows via batch script but missing the
> above mentioned flag, i do not want to load a settings file but to pass the
> conhost selection as cmd line
Hello everyone
i just installed the last version of git (2.8.1) for windows7 from the
official site, but when i run git-bash and type somme commands in the cmd,
the screen doesn't updated correctly when i delete somme chars from the
line command. in contrary when i click the (del)'s key a
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