Hi;
I'm looking for a way to delegate control of a portion of a repo to a
select set of users. Hopefully the scenario will more accurately define
the need:
I'm setting up a puppet configuration management proof of concept who's
configuration files will be managed by git. A specific team shou
Hey;
To put this in perspective, I'm a sysadmin, not a developer. While I've
used git for a couple of years, until yesterday, I could easily count the
number of times I issued a 'git branch' command.
I'm practicing setting up a new puppet 4 server and, after some research,
I've got various en
Hey;
Apologies if this is a noob question; but, I'm not that familiar with
branching.
I'm writing a script to manipulate a bunch of files under a git repo.
While working out the script, I figured it'd be best to branch out of the
master.
$ git status
# On branch master
nothing to commit (wor
16 at 5:20:54 PM UTC-5, dkoleary wrote:
>
> Hey;
>
> Apologies if this is a noob question; but, I'm not that familiar with
> branching.
>
> I'm writing a script to manipulate a bunch of files under a git repo.
> While working out the script, I figured it
Hey;
I just had the bare vs non-bare repo concept smack me in the face. Painful
way to learn things, but I won't forget it any time soon.
Since my remote repos are no longer work trees, how can I keep two bare
repos in sync? This is primarily for DR purposes.
Here's more detail in case it'll
Apologies for replying to my own post, but I did just find the "git --bare
fetch". While that seems to have worked,
# git --bare fetch ${prod}:/opt/app/git/filemover
>From ${prod}:/opt/app/git/filemover
* branchHEAD -> FETCH_HEAD
how do I go about getting those changes into
Hey;
Absolutely amazing, sir! Your answer is spot on accurate, very complete,
and very detailed. While I sorry that I put you to that much unpaid work, I
am very grateful. I'm going to bookmark this explanation and refer to it
regularly until the concept sticks. I have a grasp on it now; but