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文件名称:git 官方书籍,讲解很透彻
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更新时间:2021-08-11 17:25:11
Git command
You’re about to spend several hours of your life reading about Git. Let’s take a minute to explain
what we have in store for you. Here is a quick summary of the ten chapters and three appendices of
this book.
In Chapter 1, we’re going to cover Version Control Systems (VCSs) and Git basics — no technical
stuff, just what Git is, why it came about in a land full of VCSs, what sets it apart, and why so many
people are using it. Then, we’ll explain how to download Git and set it up for the first time if you
don’t already have it on your system.
In Chapter 2, we will go over basic Git usage — how to use Git in the 80% of cases you’ll encounter
most often. After reading this chapter, you should be able to clone a repository, see what has
happened in the history of the project, modify files, and contribute changes. If the book
spontaneously combusts at this point, you should already be pretty useful wielding Git in the time it
takes you to go pick up another copy.
Chapter 3 is about the branching model in Git, often described as Git’s killer feature. Here you’ll
learn what truly sets Git apart from the pack. When you’re done, you may feel the need to spend a
quiet moment pondering how you lived before Git branching was part of your life.
Chapter 4 will cover Git on the server. This chapter is for those of you who want to set up Git inside
your organization or on your own personal server for collaboration. We will also explore various
hosted options if you prefer to let someone else handle that for you.
Chapter 5 will go over in full detail various distributed workflows and how to accomplish them
with Git. When you are done with this chapter, you should be able to work expertly with multiple
remote repositories, use Git over email and deftly juggle numerous remote branches and
contributed patches.
Chapter 6 covers the GitHub hosting service and tooling in depth. We cover signing up for and
managing an account, creating and using Git repositories, common workflows to contribute to
projects and to accept contributions to yours, GitHub’s programmatic interface and lots of little tips
to make your life easier in general.
Chapter 7 is about advanced Git commands. Here you will learn about topics like mastering the
scary reset command, using binary search to identify bugs, editing history, revision selection in
detail, and a lot more. This chapter will round out your knowledge of Git so that you are truly a
master.
Chapter 8 is about configuring your custom Git environment. This includes setting up hook scripts
to enforce or encourage customized policies and using environment configuration settings so you
can work the way you want to. We will also cover building your own set of scripts to enforce a
custom committing policy.
Chapter 9 deals with Git and other VCSs. This includes using Git in a Subversion (SVN) world and
converting projects from other VCSs to Git. A lot of organizations still use SVN and are not about to
change, but by this point you’ll have learned the incredible power of Git — and this chapter shows
you how to cope if you still have to use a SVN server. We also cover how to import projects from
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several different systems in case you do convince everyone to make the plunge.
Chapter 10 delves into the murky yet beautiful depths of Git internals. Now that you know all
about Git and can wield it with power and grace, you can move on to discuss how Git stores its
objects, what the object model is, details of packfiles, server protocols, and more. Throughout the
book, we will refer to sections of this chapter in case you feel like diving deep at that point; but if
you are like us and want to dive into the technical details, you may want to read Chapter 10 first.
We leave that up to you.
In Appendix A, we look at a number of examples of using Git in various specific environments. We
cover a number of different GUIs and IDE programming environments that you may want to use
Git in and what is available for you. If you’re interested in an overview of using Git in your shell, in
Visual Studio or Eclipse, take a look here.
In Appendix B, we explore scripting and extending Git through tools like libgit2 and JGit. If you’re
interested in writing complex and fast custom tools and need low-level Git access, this is where you
can see what that landscape looks like.
Finally, in Appendix C, we go through all the major Git commands one at a time and review where
in the book we covered them and what we did with them. If you want to know where in the book
we used any specific Git command you can look that up here.