On Nov 27, 10:25 pm, Rick DeNatale wrote:
>>> The concept for a fixed pointer to a commit is called a tag. If I
>>> want to mark a point I might want to get back to, such as the commit
>>> corresponding to a current release, the I tag it and push the tag.
>> Good point, but there's one exception
On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 1:58 PM, Konstantin Khomoutov
wrote:
> On Nov 27, 9:51 pm, Rick DeNatale wrote:
>
Some branches in git are tracking another branches (for example,
usually master tracks origin/master). Let's assume, that in my work-
flow i don't want accidentally commit in m
On Nov 27, 9:51 pm, Rick DeNatale wrote:
>>> Some branches in git are tracking another branches (for example,
>>> usually master tracks origin/master). Let's assume, that in my work-
>>> flow i don't want accidentally commit in master, but i want master to
>>> track origin/master. I release that
On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 1:00 PM, Konstantin Khomoutov
wrote:
> On Nov 26, 11:23 am, itroot wrote:
>
>> Some branches in git are tracking another branches (for example,
>> usually master tracks origin/master). Let's assume, that in my work-
>> flow i don't want accidentally commit in master, but i
On Nov 26, 11:23 am, itroot wrote:
> Some branches in git are tracking another branches (for example,
> usually master tracks origin/master). Let's assume, that in my work-
> flow i don't want accidentally commit in master, but i want master to
> track origin/master. I release that i can do this