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Basic Linux Commands:

  • ls -la folderName list of files and folders including hidden files inside folderName
  • touch fileName.ext create new file
  • mkdir folderName create new folder
  • cd go to Parent directory
  • cd directoryName change directory
  • cd .. go back one directory
  • pwd print present working directory
  • rm fileName ➡ delete file
  • rm -r folderName ➡ delete folder
  • cp file1.extnsn file2.extnsn copy file1's content into file2 (OVERRIDES)
  • mv oldName.extn newName.extn ➡ rename oldName to newName
  • mv file1.ext folder/lol.md ➡ move file1 to folder as lol.md
  • cat file1 print content of file1
  • cat > file.ext enter input & (ctrl+d and ctrl+d) to save and exit (OVERRIDES)
  • cat >> file.ext enter input & (ctrl+d and ctrl+d) to save and exit (APPENDS)

Basic Vim Commands

  • i Enter insert mode
  • esc exit insert mode
  • :wq ➡ Save and quit Vim
  • :w Save file
  • :q Quit Vim editor
  • :q! Quit Vim without saving

GIT

  • git is a program that tracks changes made to a file
  • git stands for global information tracker
  • git is a distributed version control system

    (other two are: localised vc (own laptop) and centralised vc (in an institute/company))

  • .git folder inside a project, tracks all changes made over time, if you delete this folder the information of changes-made will be gone.

GIT WORKFLOW

  1. Making changes
  2. Staging changes
  3. Commiting changes

STAGING AREA

  • A concept in git, where the changes are stored before commiting

  • The index(a binary file) inside .git/ folder contains the changes added through staging

GIT COMMIT

  • Commits are stored in the objects folder in the .git/ folder

  • Each commit has a unique ID number or 'SHA'

    each commit becomes a snapshot in that point of time which finaly forms a repo history

  • If you made a typing error in the msg during commiting, then it can be corrected by the following:

     git commit --amend -m 'typo corrected'
    

    This also applies everything present inside staging area to the last commit

BRANCHING STRATEGIES

  • The main idea behind branching is to isolate your work into different types of branches

  • There are six different branch types:

    • Main / Master (outdated term)
    • Develop for development of the project
    • Feature for adding, refactoring or removing a feature
    • Hotfix for changing code with a temporary solution because of an emergency
    • Bugfix for fixing a bug
    • Test for experimenting outside of an issue/ticket
  • Examples

    • to add, refactor or remove a feature

      git branch feature/issue-42/create-new-button-component

    • to fix a bug

      git branch bugfix/issue-342/button-overlap-form-on-mobile

    • to fix a bug really fast (possibly with a temporary solution)

      git branch hotfix/no-ref/registration-form-not-working

    • to experiment outside of an issue/ticket

      git branch test/no-ref/refactor-components-with-atomic-design

COMMITING STRATEGIES

  • reference

  • A commit message should start with a category of change.

  • There are mainly 4 categories:

    • feat for adding a new feature
    • fix for fixing a bug
    • refactor for changing code for peformance or convenience purpose (e.g. readibility)
    • chore for everything else (writing documentation, formatting, adding tests, cleaning useless code etc.)
  • Examples

    - git commit -m 'feat: add new button component; add new button components to templates'
    - git commit -m 'fix: add the stop directive to button component to prevent propagation'
    - git commit -m 'refactor: rewrite button component in TypeScript'
    - git commit -m 'chore: write button documentation'
    

GIT COMMANDS

BASIC

  • git init Initializes the folder for git commands
  • git clone url copy a GitHub repo to local machine, other branches hidden except main
  • git clone -b branchName --single-branch url clone a specific branch
  • git status gives list of tracked(green) and untracked(red) files (staging area)
  • git add . adds all files to staging area
  • git restore --staged filename.extension remove from staging area
  • git commit -m 'must add message here' final save as snapshot

GIT LOG

  • git log -5 gives detailed list of last 5 commits
  • git log --oneline gives list of all commits in 1 line format
  • git log --oneline main..second_branch
    • how far second_branch is ahead of the main branch
    • displays commits that are in second_branch but not in main branch
    • how far is main branch ==> just swap second_branch..main

GIT BRANCH

  • git branch gives list of all branches
  • git branch -r gives list of all remote branches
  • git branch -a gives list of all local + remote branches
  • git branch branchName creates a new branch
  • git branch -d branchName deletes the branch
  • git push origin --delete branch_name delete a branch on GitHub that already deleted locally
  • git checkout branchName go inside branchName

    different branches for different features => because 1 branch allows only 1 pull request

STASH AREA (like temp variable):

> a way to temporarily save uncommitted changes to working directory

> useful if you need to switch branches but don't want to lose your changes	

> You're working on a feature branch, but need to fix a master branch bug. Stash your feature branch changes, switch to master, fix the bug, switch back to feature branch, and apply stashed changes

> You can stash your changes and then push the stash to the remote repository. Your teammates can then pop the stash and apply your changes to their working directories.
  • git stash save to stash area (go backstage)
  • git stash list view list of stashed files
  • git stash pop come to front from backstage
  • git stash clear clear stash area (clear backstage people)

GIT UNDOs

1. REVERT

  • git revert hashvalue

    opens editor, creates new commit: undoing changes made by hashvalue(commit)

  • git revert HEAD ➡ undo last commit after opening editor
  • git revert HEAD --no-edit undo last commit without opening editor

    used when we want to take a previous commit and add it as a new commit, keeping the log intact

2. RESET

  • git reset hashvalue/commitvalue

    used to move the repository back to a previous commit, unstaging any changes made after that commit

  • suppose it's Friday and you want to reset the branch as it was on Tuesday

GIT REDO

AMEND A COMMIT

helps to update/change/amend/modify last commit along with new commit hash
This can be useful for fixing commit message or for adding or removing files from the commit

  • git commit --amend -m 'typo corrected'
  • whatever present in staging area gets applied to last commit, if nothing present, only msg gets overridden
- Don't use `git commit --amend`, if already pushed the commit to a shared branch.

REMOTE

> a reference to another Git repository. 
It is a way to keep a copy of your repository on a different server.

> a repo can have multiple remotes: To keep backup of the repository on different servers. 
This way, if something happens to one server, you won't lose your work.

> Use multiple remotes to keep your development, staging, and production environments separate. 
Push changes to each environment independently.
  • git remote add remoteName url (default = origin) creates a new remote entry in repository's .git/config file
  • git remote remove remoteName deletes a remote
  • git remote -v list all remotes along with their URL
  • git log --remotes gives list of commits done from different REMOTES

git push remoteName branchName push commits to the remote(ie GitHub) repository

SYNCING COMMITS TO LOCAL

bring all commits made on the upstream to local repository

1. GIT FETCH

> used to fetch changes (commits, branches, tags, etc.) from upstream without automatically merging or applying those changes to current local branch
  • git fetch --all --prune

    --all => all branches and all remotes
    --prune => deleted also

  • Options after fetching:

    1. Reset: git reset --hard remoteName/branchName reset the local branch with remote branch(LOCAL K SAARE COMMITS CHU MANTAR[very dangerous])
    1. Rebase: git rebase origin/main local branch gets rebased to remote branch "origin/main" (if no conflict else JHANJHAT)
    1. Merge: git merge origin/main local branch gets merged with remote branch "origin/main" (if no conflict else JHANJHAT)
    1. git log --oneline main..second_branch how far second_branch is ahead of the main branch.

Git merge


Git merge

2. GIT PULL (RECOMMENDED)

  • git pull remoteName branchName

    used to bring changes from remote repository and automatically merge them into local current branch

    • Internally it does => "git fetch + git merge"

SQUASHING

  • used to combine multiple commits into a single commit

  • useful for feature branches where you might have made many small, incremental commits during development

  • good to squash commits before creating a PR to maintain clean history for the main branch.

  • steps:

    • use log, note down hashvalue of to-be-combined commits

    • git rebase -i HEAD~n

      i = interactive mode i.e editor will open
      n = how many commits to be combined including HEAD(most recent commit)

    • new editor opens, change "pick" => squash but leave first one as it is, save and exit

    • new editor opens, give meaningful commit msg on first line, don't touch other lines, save and exit

    • REBASE success, if no conflicts present

    • force push to remote repo: git push -f

GIT PUSH


1. Normal Push

  • git push remoteName branchName push commits to the remote(ie GitHub) repository

2. Force Push

[REMOTE K SAARE COMMITS CHU MANTAR, VERY DANGEROUS]

  • git push origin branchName -f

    • Overwrites remote branch history with local branch history.
    • This means that any commits on the remote branch that are not on the local branch will be deleted from the remote branch.
    • very useful, Removing a commit from the pull request
- merge vs rebase (two ways of Integration)
+ merge makes commit history dirty
+ rebase keeps commit history clean

- merge conflict
+ multiple people modified same line and requested for pull request 

- resolve merge conflict ➡ only using GitHub
- Pull Request ➡ only using GitHub
- fork a repository ➡ only using GitHub
- difference b/w two commits ➡ only using GitHub

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