5625df2a5a0a8656d2987ef54dcf47876595ef26
   1Git User's Manual
   2_________________
   3
   4This manual is designed to be readable by someone with basic unix
   5command-line skills, but no previous knowledge of git.
   6
   7Chapter 1 gives a brief overview of git commands, without any
   8explanation; you may prefer to skip to chapter 2 on a first reading.
   9
  10Chapters 2 and 3 explain how to fetch and study a project using
  11git--the tools you'd need to build and test a particular version of a
  12software project, to search for regressions, and so on.
  13
  14Chapter 4 explains how to do development with git, and chapter 5 how
  15to share that development with others.
  16
  17Further chapters cover more specialized topics.
  18
  19Comprehensive reference documentation is available through the man
  20pages.  For a command such as "git clone", just use
  21
  22------------------------------------------------
  23$ man git-clone
  24------------------------------------------------
  25
  26Git Quick Start
  27===============
  28
  29This is a quick summary of the major commands; the following chapters
  30will explain how these work in more detail.
  31
  32Creating a new repository
  33-------------------------
  34
  35From a tarball:
  36
  37-----------------------------------------------
  38$ tar xzf project.tar.gz
  39$ cd project
  40$ git init
  41Initialized empty Git repository in .git/
  42$ git add .
  43$ git commit
  44-----------------------------------------------
  45
  46From a remote repository:
  47
  48-----------------------------------------------
  49$ git clone git://example.com/pub/project.git
  50$ cd project
  51-----------------------------------------------
  52
  53Managing branches
  54-----------------
  55
  56-----------------------------------------------
  57$ git branch         # list all branches in this repo
  58$ git checkout test  # switch working directory to branch "test"
  59$ git branch new     # create branch "new" starting at current HEAD
  60$ git branch -d new  # delete branch "new"
  61-----------------------------------------------
  62
  63Instead of basing new branch on current HEAD (the default), use:
  64
  65-----------------------------------------------
  66$ git branch new test    # branch named "test"
  67$ git branch new v2.6.15 # tag named v2.6.15
  68$ git branch new HEAD^   # commit before the most recent
  69$ git branch new HEAD^^  # commit before that
  70$ git branch new test~10 # ten commits before tip of branch "test"
  71-----------------------------------------------
  72
  73Create and switch to a new branch at the same time:
  74
  75-----------------------------------------------
  76$ git checkout -b new v2.6.15
  77-----------------------------------------------
  78
  79Update and examine branches from the repository you cloned from:
  80
  81-----------------------------------------------
  82$ git fetch             # update
  83$ git branch -r         # list
  84  origin/master
  85  origin/next
  86  ...
  87$ git branch checkout -b masterwork origin/master
  88-----------------------------------------------
  89
  90Fetch a branch from a different repository, and give it a new
  91name in your repository:
  92
  93-----------------------------------------------
  94$ git fetch git://example.com/project.git theirbranch:mybranch
  95$ git fetch git://example.com/project.git v2.6.15:mybranch
  96-----------------------------------------------
  97
  98Keep a list of repositories you work with regularly:
  99
 100-----------------------------------------------
 101$ git remote add example git://example.com/project.git
 102$ git remote                    # list remote repositories
 103example
 104origin
 105$ git remote show example       # get details
 106* remote example
 107  URL: git://example.com/project.git
 108  Tracked remote branches
 109    master next ...
 110$ git fetch example             # update branches from example
 111$ git branch -r                 # list all remote branches
 112-----------------------------------------------
 113
 114
 115Exploring history
 116-----------------
 117
 118-----------------------------------------------
 119$ gitk                      # visualize and browse history
 120$ git log                   # list all commits
 121$ git log src/              # ...modifying src/
 122$ git log v2.6.15..v2.6.16  # ...in v2.6.16, not in v2.6.15
 123$ git log master..test      # ...in branch test, not in branch master
 124$ git log test..master      # ...in branch master, but not in test
 125$ git log test...master     # ...in one branch, not in both
 126$ git log -S'foo()'         # ...where difference contain "foo()"
 127$ git log --since="2 weeks ago"
 128$ git log -p                # show patches as well
 129$ git show                  # most recent commit
 130$ git diff v2.6.15..v2.6.16 # diff between two tagged versions
 131$ git diff v2.6.15..HEAD    # diff with current head
 132$ git grep "foo()"          # search working directory for "foo()"
 133$ git grep v2.6.15 "foo()"  # search old tree for "foo()"
 134$ git show v2.6.15:a.txt    # look at old version of a.txt
 135-----------------------------------------------
 136
 137Search for regressions:
 138
 139-----------------------------------------------
 140$ git bisect start
 141$ git bisect bad                # current version is bad
 142$ git bisect good v2.6.13-rc2   # last known good revision
 143Bisecting: 675 revisions left to test after this
 144                                # test here, then:
 145$ git bisect good               # if this revision is good, or
 146$ git bisect bad                # if this revision is bad.
 147                                # repeat until done.
 148-----------------------------------------------
 149
 150Making changes
 151--------------
 152
 153Make sure git knows who to blame:
 154
 155------------------------------------------------
 156$ cat >~/.gitconfig <<\EOF
 157[user]
 158name = Your Name Comes Here
 159email = you@yourdomain.example.com
 160EOF
 161------------------------------------------------
 162
 163Select file contents to include in the next commit, then make the
 164commit:
 165
 166-----------------------------------------------
 167$ git add a.txt    # updated file
 168$ git add b.txt    # new file
 169$ git rm c.txt     # old file
 170$ git commit
 171-----------------------------------------------
 172
 173Or, prepare and create the commit in one step:
 174
 175-----------------------------------------------
 176$ git commit d.txt # use latest content only of d.txt
 177$ git commit -a    # use latest content of all tracked files
 178-----------------------------------------------
 179
 180Merging
 181-------
 182
 183-----------------------------------------------
 184$ git merge test   # merge branch "test" into the current branch
 185$ git pull git://example.com/project.git master
 186                   # fetch and merge in remote branch
 187$ git pull . test  # equivalent to git merge test
 188-----------------------------------------------
 189
 190Sharing your changes
 191--------------------
 192
 193Importing or exporting patches:
 194
 195-----------------------------------------------
 196$ git format-patch origin..HEAD # format a patch for each commit
 197                                # in HEAD but not in origin
 198$ git-am mbox # import patches from the mailbox "mbox"
 199-----------------------------------------------
 200
 201Fetch a branch in a different git repository, then merge into the
 202current branch:
 203
 204-----------------------------------------------
 205$ git pull git://example.com/project.git theirbranch
 206-----------------------------------------------
 207
 208Store the fetched branch into a local branch before merging into the
 209current branch:
 210
 211-----------------------------------------------
 212$ git pull git://example.com/project.git theirbranch:mybranch
 213-----------------------------------------------
 214
 215After creating commits on a local branch, update the remote
 216branch with your commits:
 217
 218-----------------------------------------------
 219$ git push ssh://example.com/project.git mybranch:theirbranch
 220-----------------------------------------------
 221
 222When remote and local branch are both named "test":
 223
 224-----------------------------------------------
 225$ git push ssh://example.com/project.git test
 226-----------------------------------------------
 227
 228Shortcut version for a frequently used remote repository:
 229
 230-----------------------------------------------
 231$ git remote add example ssh://example.com/project.git
 232$ git push example test
 233-----------------------------------------------
 234
 235Repository maintenance
 236----------------------
 237
 238Check for corruption:
 239
 240-----------------------------------------------
 241$ git fsck
 242-----------------------------------------------
 243
 244Recompress, remove unused cruft:
 245
 246-----------------------------------------------
 247$ git gc
 248-----------------------------------------------
 249
 250Repositories and Branches
 251=========================
 252
 253How to get a git repository
 254---------------------------
 255
 256It will be useful to have a git repository to experiment with as you
 257read this manual.
 258
 259The best way to get one is by using the gitlink:git-clone[1] command
 260to download a copy of an existing repository for a project that you
 261are interested in.  If you don't already have a project in mind, here
 262are some interesting examples:
 263
 264------------------------------------------------
 265        # git itself (approx. 10MB download):
 266$ git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git
 267        # the linux kernel (approx. 150MB download):
 268$ git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux-2.6.git
 269------------------------------------------------
 270
 271The initial clone may be time-consuming for a large project, but you
 272will only need to clone once.
 273
 274The clone command creates a new directory named after the project
 275("git" or "linux-2.6" in the examples above).  After you cd into this
 276directory, you will see that it contains a copy of the project files,
 277together with a special top-level directory named ".git", which
 278contains all the information about the history of the project.
 279
 280In most of the following, examples will be taken from one of the two
 281repositories above.
 282
 283How to check out a different version of a project
 284-------------------------------------------------
 285
 286Git is best thought of as a tool for storing the history of a
 287collection of files.  It stores the history as a compressed
 288collection of interrelated snapshots (versions) of the project's
 289contents.
 290
 291A single git repository may contain multiple branches.  Each branch
 292is a bookmark referencing a particular point in the project history.
 293The gitlink:git-branch[1] command shows you the list of branches:
 294
 295------------------------------------------------
 296$ git branch
 297* master
 298------------------------------------------------
 299
 300A freshly cloned repository contains a single branch, named "master",
 301and the working directory contains the version of the project
 302referred to by the master branch.
 303
 304Most projects also use tags.  Tags, like branches, are references
 305into the project's history, and can be listed using the
 306gitlink:git-tag[1] command:
 307
 308------------------------------------------------
 309$ git tag -l
 310v2.6.11
 311v2.6.11-tree
 312v2.6.12
 313v2.6.12-rc2
 314v2.6.12-rc3
 315v2.6.12-rc4
 316v2.6.12-rc5
 317v2.6.12-rc6
 318v2.6.13
 319...
 320------------------------------------------------
 321
 322Tags are expected to always point at the same version of a project,
 323while branches are expected to advance as development progresses.
 324
 325Create a new branch pointing to one of these versions and check it
 326out using gitlink:git-checkout[1]:
 327
 328------------------------------------------------
 329$ git checkout -b new v2.6.13
 330------------------------------------------------
 331
 332The working directory then reflects the contents that the project had
 333when it was tagged v2.6.13, and gitlink:git-branch[1] shows two
 334branches, with an asterisk marking the currently checked-out branch:
 335
 336------------------------------------------------
 337$ git branch
 338  master
 339* new
 340------------------------------------------------
 341
 342If you decide that you'd rather see version 2.6.17, you can modify
 343the current branch to point at v2.6.17 instead, with
 344
 345------------------------------------------------
 346$ git reset --hard v2.6.17
 347------------------------------------------------
 348
 349Note that if the current branch was your only reference to a
 350particular point in history, then resetting that branch may leave you
 351with no way to find the history it used to point to; so use this
 352command carefully.
 353
 354Understanding History: Commits
 355------------------------------
 356
 357Every change in the history of a project is represented by a commit.
 358The gitlink:git-show[1] command shows the most recent commit on the
 359current branch:
 360
 361------------------------------------------------
 362$ git show
 363commit 2b5f6dcce5bf94b9b119e9ed8d537098ec61c3d2
 364Author: Jamal Hadi Salim <hadi@cyberus.ca>
 365Date:   Sat Dec 2 22:22:25 2006 -0800
 366
 367    [XFRM]: Fix aevent structuring to be more complete.
 368    
 369    aevents can not uniquely identify an SA. We break the ABI with this
 370    patch, but consensus is that since it is not yet utilized by any
 371    (known) application then it is fine (better do it now than later).
 372    
 373    Signed-off-by: Jamal Hadi Salim <hadi@cyberus.ca>
 374    Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
 375
 376diff --git a/Documentation/networking/xfrm_sync.txt b/Documentation/networking/xfrm_sync.txt
 377index 8be626f..d7aac9d 100644
 378--- a/Documentation/networking/xfrm_sync.txt
 379+++ b/Documentation/networking/xfrm_sync.txt
 380@@ -47,10 +47,13 @@ aevent_id structure looks like:
 381 
 382    struct xfrm_aevent_id {
 383              struct xfrm_usersa_id           sa_id;
 384+             xfrm_address_t                  saddr;
 385              __u32                           flags;
 386+             __u32                           reqid;
 387    };
 388...
 389------------------------------------------------
 390
 391As you can see, a commit shows who made the latest change, what they
 392did, and why.
 393
 394Every commit has a 40-hexdigit id, sometimes called the "object name" or the
 395"SHA1 id", shown on the first line of the "git show" output.  You can usually
 396refer to a commit by a shorter name, such as a tag or a branch name, but this
 397longer name can also be useful.  Most importantly, it is a globally unique
 398name for this commit: so if you tell somebody else the object name (for
 399example in email), then you are guaranteed that name will refer to the same
 400commit in their repository that it does in yours (assuming their repository
 401has that commit at all).  Since the object name is computed as a hash over the
 402contents of the commit, you are guaranteed that the commit can never change
 403without its name also changing.
 404
 405In fact, in <<git-internals>> we shall see that everything stored in git
 406history, including file data and directory contents, is stored in an object
 407with a name that is a hash of its contents.
 408
 409Understanding history: commits, parents, and reachability
 410~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 411
 412Every commit (except the very first commit in a project) also has a
 413parent commit which shows what happened before this commit.
 414Following the chain of parents will eventually take you back to the
 415beginning of the project.
 416
 417However, the commits do not form a simple list; git allows lines of
 418development to diverge and then reconverge, and the point where two
 419lines of development reconverge is called a "merge".  The commit
 420representing a merge can therefore have more than one parent, with
 421each parent representing the most recent commit on one of the lines
 422of development leading to that point.
 423
 424The best way to see how this works is using the gitlink:gitk[1]
 425command; running gitk now on a git repository and looking for merge
 426commits will help understand how the git organizes history.
 427
 428In the following, we say that commit X is "reachable" from commit Y
 429if commit X is an ancestor of commit Y.  Equivalently, you could say
 430that Y is a descendent of X, or that there is a chain of parents
 431leading from commit Y to commit X.
 432
 433Understanding history: History diagrams
 434~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 435
 436We will sometimes represent git history using diagrams like the one
 437below.  Commits are shown as "o", and the links between them with
 438lines drawn with - / and \.  Time goes left to right:
 439
 440         o--o--o <-- Branch A
 441        /
 442 o--o--o <-- master
 443        \
 444         o--o--o <-- Branch B
 445
 446If we need to talk about a particular commit, the character "o" may
 447be replaced with another letter or number.
 448
 449Understanding history: What is a branch?
 450~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 451
 452Though we've been using the word "branch" to mean a kind of reference
 453to a particular commit, the word branch is also commonly used to
 454refer to the line of commits leading up to that point.  In the
 455example above, git may think of the branch named "A" as just a
 456pointer to one particular commit, but we may refer informally to the
 457line of three commits leading up to that point as all being part of
 458"branch A".
 459
 460If we need to make it clear that we're just talking about the most
 461recent commit on the branch, we may refer to that commit as the
 462"head" of the branch.
 463
 464Manipulating branches
 465---------------------
 466
 467Creating, deleting, and modifying branches is quick and easy; here's
 468a summary of the commands:
 469
 470git branch::
 471        list all branches
 472git branch <branch>::
 473        create a new branch named <branch>, referencing the same
 474        point in history as the current branch
 475git branch <branch> <start-point>::
 476        create a new branch named <branch>, referencing
 477        <start-point>, which may be specified any way you like,
 478        including using a branch name or a tag name
 479git branch -d <branch>::
 480        delete the branch <branch>; if the branch you are deleting
 481        points to a commit which is not reachable from this branch,
 482        this command will fail with a warning.
 483git branch -D <branch>::
 484        even if the branch points to a commit not reachable
 485        from the current branch, you may know that that commit
 486        is still reachable from some other branch or tag.  In that
 487        case it is safe to use this command to force git to delete
 488        the branch.
 489git checkout <branch>::
 490        make the current branch <branch>, updating the working
 491        directory to reflect the version referenced by <branch>
 492git checkout -b <new> <start-point>::
 493        create a new branch <new> referencing <start-point>, and
 494        check it out.
 495
 496It is also useful to know that the special symbol "HEAD" can always
 497be used to refer to the current branch.
 498
 499Examining branches from a remote repository
 500-------------------------------------------
 501
 502The "master" branch that was created at the time you cloned is a copy
 503of the HEAD in the repository that you cloned from.  That repository
 504may also have had other branches, though, and your local repository
 505keeps branches which track each of those remote branches, which you
 506can view using the "-r" option to gitlink:git-branch[1]:
 507
 508------------------------------------------------
 509$ git branch -r
 510  origin/HEAD
 511  origin/html
 512  origin/maint
 513  origin/man
 514  origin/master
 515  origin/next
 516  origin/pu
 517  origin/todo
 518------------------------------------------------
 519
 520You cannot check out these remote-tracking branches, but you can
 521examine them on a branch of your own, just as you would a tag:
 522
 523------------------------------------------------
 524$ git checkout -b my-todo-copy origin/todo
 525------------------------------------------------
 526
 527Note that the name "origin" is just the name that git uses by default
 528to refer to the repository that you cloned from.
 529
 530[[how-git-stores-references]]
 531Naming branches, tags, and other references
 532-------------------------------------------
 533
 534Branches, remote-tracking branches, and tags are all references to
 535commits.  All references are named with a slash-separated path name
 536starting with "refs"; the names we've been using so far are actually
 537shorthand:
 538
 539        - The branch "test" is short for "refs/heads/test".
 540        - The tag "v2.6.18" is short for "refs/tags/v2.6.18".
 541        - "origin/master" is short for "refs/remotes/origin/master".
 542
 543The full name is occasionally useful if, for example, there ever
 544exists a tag and a branch with the same name.
 545
 546As another useful shortcut, if the repository "origin" posesses only
 547a single branch, you can refer to that branch as just "origin".
 548
 549More generally, if you have defined a remote repository named
 550"example", you can refer to the branch in that repository as
 551"example".  And for a repository with multiple branches, this will
 552refer to the branch designated as the "HEAD" branch.
 553
 554For the complete list of paths which git checks for references, and
 555the order it uses to decide which to choose when there are multiple
 556references with the same shorthand name, see the "SPECIFYING
 557REVISIONS" section of gitlink:git-rev-parse[1].
 558
 559[[Updating-a-repository-with-git-fetch]]
 560Updating a repository with git fetch
 561------------------------------------
 562
 563Eventually the developer cloned from will do additional work in her
 564repository, creating new commits and advancing the branches to point
 565at the new commits.
 566
 567The command "git fetch", with no arguments, will update all of the
 568remote-tracking branches to the latest version found in her
 569repository.  It will not touch any of your own branches--not even the
 570"master" branch that was created for you on clone.
 571
 572Fetching branches from other repositories
 573-----------------------------------------
 574
 575You can also track branches from repositories other than the one you
 576cloned from, using gitlink:git-remote[1]:
 577
 578-------------------------------------------------
 579$ git remote add linux-nfs git://linux-nfs.org/pub/nfs-2.6.git
 580$ git fetch
 581* refs/remotes/linux-nfs/master: storing branch 'master' ...
 582  commit: bf81b46
 583-------------------------------------------------
 584
 585New remote-tracking branches will be stored under the shorthand name
 586that you gave "git remote add", in this case linux-nfs:
 587
 588-------------------------------------------------
 589$ git branch -r
 590linux-nfs/master
 591origin/master
 592-------------------------------------------------
 593
 594If you run "git fetch <remote>" later, the tracking branches for the
 595named <remote> will be updated.
 596
 597If you examine the file .git/config, you will see that git has added
 598a new stanza:
 599
 600-------------------------------------------------
 601$ cat .git/config
 602...
 603[remote "linux-nfs"]
 604        url = git://linux-nfs.org/~bfields/git.git
 605        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/linux-nfs-read/*
 606...
 607-------------------------------------------------
 608
 609This is what causes git to track the remote's branches; you may modify
 610or delete these configuration options by editing .git/config with a
 611text editor.  (See the "CONFIGURATION FILE" section of
 612gitlink:git-config[1] for details.)
 613
 614Exploring git history
 615=====================
 616
 617Git is best thought of as a tool for storing the history of a
 618collection of files.  It does this by storing compressed snapshots of
 619the contents of a file heirarchy, together with "commits" which show
 620the relationships between these snapshots.
 621
 622Git provides extremely flexible and fast tools for exploring the
 623history of a project.
 624
 625We start with one specialized tool that is useful for finding the
 626commit that introduced a bug into a project.
 627
 628How to use bisect to find a regression
 629--------------------------------------
 630
 631Suppose version 2.6.18 of your project worked, but the version at
 632"master" crashes.  Sometimes the best way to find the cause of such a
 633regression is to perform a brute-force search through the project's
 634history to find the particular commit that caused the problem.  The
 635gitlink:git-bisect[1] command can help you do this:
 636
 637-------------------------------------------------
 638$ git bisect start
 639$ git bisect good v2.6.18
 640$ git bisect bad master
 641Bisecting: 3537 revisions left to test after this
 642[65934a9a028b88e83e2b0f8b36618fe503349f8e] BLOCK: Make USB storage depend on SCSI rather than selecting it [try #6]
 643-------------------------------------------------
 644
 645If you run "git branch" at this point, you'll see that git has
 646temporarily moved you to a new branch named "bisect".  This branch
 647points to a commit (with commit id 65934...) that is reachable from
 648v2.6.19 but not from v2.6.18.  Compile and test it, and see whether
 649it crashes.  Assume it does crash.  Then:
 650
 651-------------------------------------------------
 652$ git bisect bad
 653Bisecting: 1769 revisions left to test after this
 654[7eff82c8b1511017ae605f0c99ac275a7e21b867] i2c-core: Drop useless bitmaskings
 655-------------------------------------------------
 656
 657checks out an older version.  Continue like this, telling git at each
 658stage whether the version it gives you is good or bad, and notice
 659that the number of revisions left to test is cut approximately in
 660half each time.
 661
 662After about 13 tests (in this case), it will output the commit id of
 663the guilty commit.  You can then examine the commit with
 664gitlink:git-show[1], find out who wrote it, and mail them your bug
 665report with the commit id.  Finally, run
 666
 667-------------------------------------------------
 668$ git bisect reset
 669-------------------------------------------------
 670
 671to return you to the branch you were on before and delete the
 672temporary "bisect" branch.
 673
 674Note that the version which git-bisect checks out for you at each
 675point is just a suggestion, and you're free to try a different
 676version if you think it would be a good idea.  For example,
 677occasionally you may land on a commit that broke something unrelated;
 678run
 679
 680-------------------------------------------------
 681$ git bisect-visualize
 682-------------------------------------------------
 683
 684which will run gitk and label the commit it chose with a marker that
 685says "bisect".  Chose a safe-looking commit nearby, note its commit
 686id, and check it out with:
 687
 688-------------------------------------------------
 689$ git reset --hard fb47ddb2db...
 690-------------------------------------------------
 691
 692then test, run "bisect good" or "bisect bad" as appropriate, and
 693continue.
 694
 695Naming commits
 696--------------
 697
 698We have seen several ways of naming commits already:
 699
 700        - 40-hexdigit object name
 701        - branch name: refers to the commit at the head of the given
 702          branch
 703        - tag name: refers to the commit pointed to by the given tag
 704          (we've seen branches and tags are special cases of
 705          <<how-git-stores-references,references>>).
 706        - HEAD: refers to the head of the current branch
 707
 708There are many more; see the "SPECIFYING REVISIONS" section of the
 709gitlink:git-rev-parse[1] man page for the complete list of ways to
 710name revisions.  Some examples:
 711
 712-------------------------------------------------
 713$ git show fb47ddb2 # the first few characters of the object name
 714                    # are usually enough to specify it uniquely
 715$ git show HEAD^    # the parent of the HEAD commit
 716$ git show HEAD^^   # the grandparent
 717$ git show HEAD~4   # the great-great-grandparent
 718-------------------------------------------------
 719
 720Recall that merge commits may have more than one parent; by default,
 721^ and ~ follow the first parent listed in the commit, but you can
 722also choose:
 723
 724-------------------------------------------------
 725$ git show HEAD^1   # show the first parent of HEAD
 726$ git show HEAD^2   # show the second parent of HEAD
 727-------------------------------------------------
 728
 729In addition to HEAD, there are several other special names for
 730commits:
 731
 732Merges (to be discussed later), as well as operations such as
 733git-reset, which change the currently checked-out commit, generally
 734set ORIG_HEAD to the value HEAD had before the current operation.
 735
 736The git-fetch operation always stores the head of the last fetched
 737branch in FETCH_HEAD.  For example, if you run git fetch without
 738specifying a local branch as the target of the operation
 739
 740-------------------------------------------------
 741$ git fetch git://example.com/proj.git theirbranch
 742-------------------------------------------------
 743
 744the fetched commits will still be available from FETCH_HEAD.
 745
 746When we discuss merges we'll also see the special name MERGE_HEAD,
 747which refers to the other branch that we're merging in to the current
 748branch.
 749
 750The gitlink:git-rev-parse[1] command is a low-level command that is
 751occasionally useful for translating some name for a commit to the object
 752name for that commit:
 753
 754-------------------------------------------------
 755$ git rev-parse origin
 756e05db0fd4f31dde7005f075a84f96b360d05984b
 757-------------------------------------------------
 758
 759Creating tags
 760-------------
 761
 762We can also create a tag to refer to a particular commit; after
 763running
 764
 765-------------------------------------------------
 766$ git-tag stable-1 1b2e1d63ff
 767-------------------------------------------------
 768
 769You can use stable-1 to refer to the commit 1b2e1d63ff.
 770
 771This creates a "lightweight" tag.  If the tag is a tag you wish to
 772share with others, and possibly sign cryptographically, then you
 773should create a tag object instead; see the gitlink:git-tag[1] man
 774page for details.
 775
 776Browsing revisions
 777------------------
 778
 779The gitlink:git-log[1] command can show lists of commits.  On its
 780own, it shows all commits reachable from the parent commit; but you
 781can also make more specific requests:
 782
 783-------------------------------------------------
 784$ git log v2.5..        # commits since (not reachable from) v2.5
 785$ git log test..master  # commits reachable from master but not test
 786$ git log master..test  # ...reachable from test but not master
 787$ git log master...test # ...reachable from either test or master,
 788                        #    but not both
 789$ git log --since="2 weeks ago" # commits from the last 2 weeks
 790$ git log Makefile      # commits which modify Makefile
 791$ git log fs/           # ... which modify any file under fs/
 792$ git log -S'foo()'     # commits which add or remove any file data
 793                        # matching the string 'foo()'
 794-------------------------------------------------
 795
 796And of course you can combine all of these; the following finds
 797commits since v2.5 which touch the Makefile or any file under fs:
 798
 799-------------------------------------------------
 800$ git log v2.5.. Makefile fs/
 801-------------------------------------------------
 802
 803You can also ask git log to show patches:
 804
 805-------------------------------------------------
 806$ git log -p
 807-------------------------------------------------
 808
 809See the "--pretty" option in the gitlink:git-log[1] man page for more
 810display options.
 811
 812Note that git log starts with the most recent commit and works
 813backwards through the parents; however, since git history can contain
 814multiple independent lines of development, the particular order that
 815commits are listed in may be somewhat arbitrary.
 816
 817Generating diffs
 818----------------
 819
 820You can generate diffs between any two versions using
 821gitlink:git-diff[1]:
 822
 823-------------------------------------------------
 824$ git diff master..test
 825-------------------------------------------------
 826
 827Sometimes what you want instead is a set of patches:
 828
 829-------------------------------------------------
 830$ git format-patch master..test
 831-------------------------------------------------
 832
 833will generate a file with a patch for each commit reachable from test
 834but not from master.  Note that if master also has commits which are
 835not reachable from test, then the combined result of these patches
 836will not be the same as the diff produced by the git-diff example.
 837
 838Viewing old file versions
 839-------------------------
 840
 841You can always view an old version of a file by just checking out the
 842correct revision first.  But sometimes it is more convenient to be
 843able to view an old version of a single file without checking
 844anything out; this command does that:
 845
 846-------------------------------------------------
 847$ git show v2.5:fs/locks.c
 848-------------------------------------------------
 849
 850Before the colon may be anything that names a commit, and after it
 851may be any path to a file tracked by git.
 852
 853Examples
 854--------
 855
 856Check whether two branches point at the same history
 857~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 858
 859Suppose you want to check whether two branches point at the same point
 860in history.
 861
 862-------------------------------------------------
 863$ git diff origin..master
 864-------------------------------------------------
 865
 866will tell you whether the contents of the project are the same at the
 867two branches; in theory, however, it's possible that the same project
 868contents could have been arrived at by two different historical
 869routes.  You could compare the object names:
 870
 871-------------------------------------------------
 872$ git rev-list origin
 873e05db0fd4f31dde7005f075a84f96b360d05984b
 874$ git rev-list master
 875e05db0fd4f31dde7005f075a84f96b360d05984b
 876-------------------------------------------------
 877
 878Or you could recall that the ... operator selects all commits
 879contained reachable from either one reference or the other but not
 880both: so
 881
 882-------------------------------------------------
 883$ git log origin...master
 884-------------------------------------------------
 885
 886will return no commits when the two branches are equal.
 887
 888Find first tagged version including a given fix
 889~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 890
 891Suppose you know that the commit e05db0fd fixed a certain problem.
 892You'd like to find the earliest tagged release that contains that
 893fix.
 894
 895Of course, there may be more than one answer--if the history branched
 896after commit e05db0fd, then there could be multiple "earliest" tagged
 897releases.
 898
 899You could just visually inspect the commits since e05db0fd:
 900
 901-------------------------------------------------
 902$ gitk e05db0fd..
 903-------------------------------------------------
 904
 905Or you can use gitlink:git-name-rev[1], which will give the commit a
 906name based on any tag it finds pointing to one of the commit's
 907descendants:
 908
 909-------------------------------------------------
 910$ git name-rev e05db0fd
 911e05db0fd tags/v1.5.0-rc1^0~23
 912-------------------------------------------------
 913
 914The gitlink:git-describe[1] command does the opposite, naming the
 915revision using a tag on which the given commit is based:
 916
 917-------------------------------------------------
 918$ git describe e05db0fd
 919v1.5.0-rc0-ge05db0f
 920-------------------------------------------------
 921
 922but that may sometimes help you guess which tags might come after the
 923given commit.
 924
 925If you just want to verify whether a given tagged version contains a
 926given commit, you could use gitlink:git-merge-base[1]:
 927
 928-------------------------------------------------
 929$ git merge-base e05db0fd v1.5.0-rc1
 930e05db0fd4f31dde7005f075a84f96b360d05984b
 931-------------------------------------------------
 932
 933The merge-base command finds a common ancestor of the given commits,
 934and always returns one or the other in the case where one is a
 935descendant of the other; so the above output shows that e05db0fd
 936actually is an ancestor of v1.5.0-rc1.
 937
 938Alternatively, note that
 939
 940-------------------------------------------------
 941$ git log v1.5.0-rc1..e05db0fd
 942-------------------------------------------------
 943
 944will produce empty output if and only if v1.5.0-rc1 includes e05db0fd,
 945because it outputs only commits that are not reachable from v1.5.0-rc1.
 946
 947As yet another alternative, the gitlink:git-show-branch[1] command lists
 948the commits reachable from its arguments with a display on the left-hand
 949side that indicates which arguments that commit is reachable from.  So,
 950you can run something like
 951
 952-------------------------------------------------
 953$ git show-branch e05db0fd v1.5.0-rc0 v1.5.0-rc1 v1.5.0-rc2
 954! [e05db0fd] Fix warnings in sha1_file.c - use C99 printf format if
 955available
 956 ! [v1.5.0-rc0] GIT v1.5.0 preview
 957  ! [v1.5.0-rc1] GIT v1.5.0-rc1
 958   ! [v1.5.0-rc2] GIT v1.5.0-rc2
 959...
 960-------------------------------------------------
 961
 962then search for a line that looks like
 963
 964-------------------------------------------------
 965+ ++ [e05db0fd] Fix warnings in sha1_file.c - use C99 printf format if
 966available
 967-------------------------------------------------
 968
 969Which shows that e05db0fd is reachable from itself, from v1.5.0-rc1, and
 970from v1.5.0-rc2, but not from v1.5.0-rc0.
 971
 972
 973Developing with git
 974===================
 975
 976Telling git your name
 977---------------------
 978
 979Before creating any commits, you should introduce yourself to git.  The
 980easiest way to do so is:
 981
 982------------------------------------------------
 983$ cat >~/.gitconfig <<\EOF
 984[user]
 985        name = Your Name Comes Here
 986        email = you@yourdomain.example.com
 987EOF
 988------------------------------------------------
 989
 990(See the "CONFIGURATION FILE" section of gitlink:git-config[1] for
 991details on the configuration file.)
 992
 993
 994Creating a new repository
 995-------------------------
 996
 997Creating a new repository from scratch is very easy:
 998
 999-------------------------------------------------
1000$ mkdir project
1001$ cd project
1002$ git init
1003-------------------------------------------------
1004
1005If you have some initial content (say, a tarball):
1006
1007-------------------------------------------------
1008$ tar -xzvf project.tar.gz
1009$ cd project
1010$ git init
1011$ git add . # include everything below ./ in the first commit:
1012$ git commit
1013-------------------------------------------------
1014
1015[[how-to-make-a-commit]]
1016how to make a commit
1017--------------------
1018
1019Creating a new commit takes three steps:
1020
1021        1. Making some changes to the working directory using your
1022           favorite editor.
1023        2. Telling git about your changes.
1024        3. Creating the commit using the content you told git about
1025           in step 2.
1026
1027In practice, you can interleave and repeat steps 1 and 2 as many
1028times as you want: in order to keep track of what you want committed
1029at step 3, git maintains a snapshot of the tree's contents in a
1030special staging area called "the index."
1031
1032At the beginning, the content of the index will be identical to
1033that of the HEAD.  The command "git diff --cached", which shows
1034the difference between the HEAD and the index, should therefore
1035produce no output at that point.
1036
1037Modifying the index is easy:
1038
1039To update the index with the new contents of a modified file, use
1040
1041-------------------------------------------------
1042$ git add path/to/file
1043-------------------------------------------------
1044
1045To add the contents of a new file to the index, use
1046
1047-------------------------------------------------
1048$ git add path/to/file
1049-------------------------------------------------
1050
1051To remove a file from the index and from the working tree,
1052
1053-------------------------------------------------
1054$ git rm path/to/file
1055-------------------------------------------------
1056
1057After each step you can verify that
1058
1059-------------------------------------------------
1060$ git diff --cached
1061-------------------------------------------------
1062
1063always shows the difference between the HEAD and the index file--this
1064is what you'd commit if you created the commit now--and that
1065
1066-------------------------------------------------
1067$ git diff
1068-------------------------------------------------
1069
1070shows the difference between the working tree and the index file.
1071
1072Note that "git add" always adds just the current contents of a file
1073to the index; further changes to the same file will be ignored unless
1074you run git-add on the file again.
1075
1076When you're ready, just run
1077
1078-------------------------------------------------
1079$ git commit
1080-------------------------------------------------
1081
1082and git will prompt you for a commit message and then create the new
1083commit.  Check to make sure it looks like what you expected with
1084
1085-------------------------------------------------
1086$ git show
1087-------------------------------------------------
1088
1089As a special shortcut,
1090                
1091-------------------------------------------------
1092$ git commit -a
1093-------------------------------------------------
1094
1095will update the index with any files that you've modified or removed
1096and create a commit, all in one step.
1097
1098A number of commands are useful for keeping track of what you're
1099about to commit:
1100
1101-------------------------------------------------
1102$ git diff --cached # difference between HEAD and the index; what
1103                    # would be commited if you ran "commit" now.
1104$ git diff          # difference between the index file and your
1105                    # working directory; changes that would not
1106                    # be included if you ran "commit" now.
1107$ git status        # a brief per-file summary of the above.
1108-------------------------------------------------
1109
1110creating good commit messages
1111-----------------------------
1112
1113Though not required, it's a good idea to begin the commit message
1114with a single short (less than 50 character) line summarizing the
1115change, followed by a blank line and then a more thorough
1116description.  Tools that turn commits into email, for example, use
1117the first line on the Subject line and the rest of the commit in the
1118body.
1119
1120how to merge
1121------------
1122
1123You can rejoin two diverging branches of development using
1124gitlink:git-merge[1]:
1125
1126-------------------------------------------------
1127$ git merge branchname
1128-------------------------------------------------
1129
1130merges the development in the branch "branchname" into the current
1131branch.  If there are conflicts--for example, if the same file is
1132modified in two different ways in the remote branch and the local
1133branch--then you are warned; the output may look something like this:
1134
1135-------------------------------------------------
1136$ git pull . next
1137Trying really trivial in-index merge...
1138fatal: Merge requires file-level merging
1139Nope.
1140Merging HEAD with 77976da35a11db4580b80ae27e8d65caf5208086
1141Merging:
114215e2162 world
114377976da goodbye
1144found 1 common ancestor(s):
1145d122ed4 initial
1146Auto-merging file.txt
1147CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in file.txt
1148Automatic merge failed; fix conflicts and then commit the result.
1149-------------------------------------------------
1150
1151Conflict markers are left in the problematic files, and after
1152you resolve the conflicts manually, you can update the index
1153with the contents and run git commit, as you normally would when
1154creating a new file.
1155
1156If you examine the resulting commit using gitk, you will see that it
1157has two parents, one pointing to the top of the current branch, and
1158one to the top of the other branch.
1159
1160In more detail:
1161
1162[[resolving-a-merge]]
1163Resolving a merge
1164-----------------
1165
1166When a merge isn't resolved automatically, git leaves the index and
1167the working tree in a special state that gives you all the
1168information you need to help resolve the merge.
1169
1170Files with conflicts are marked specially in the index, so until you
1171resolve the problem and update the index, git commit will fail:
1172
1173-------------------------------------------------
1174$ git commit
1175file.txt: needs merge
1176-------------------------------------------------
1177
1178Also, git status will list those files as "unmerged".
1179
1180All of the changes that git was able to merge automatically are
1181already added to the index file, so gitlink:git-diff[1] shows only
1182the conflicts.  Also, it uses a somewhat unusual syntax:
1183
1184-------------------------------------------------
1185$ git diff
1186diff --cc file.txt
1187index 802992c,2b60207..0000000
1188--- a/file.txt
1189+++ b/file.txt
1190@@@ -1,1 -1,1 +1,5 @@@
1191++<<<<<<< HEAD:file.txt
1192 +Hello world
1193++=======
1194+ Goodbye
1195++>>>>>>> 77976da35a11db4580b80ae27e8d65caf5208086:file.txt
1196-------------------------------------------------
1197
1198Recall that the commit which will be commited after we resolve this
1199conflict will have two parents instead of the usual one: one parent
1200will be HEAD, the tip of the current branch; the other will be the
1201tip of the other branch, which is stored temporarily in MERGE_HEAD.
1202
1203The diff above shows the differences between the working-tree version
1204of file.txt and two previous versions: one version from HEAD, and one
1205from MERGE_HEAD.  So instead of preceding each line by a single "+"
1206or "-", it now uses two columns: the first column is used for
1207differences between the first parent and the working directory copy,
1208and the second for differences between the second parent and the
1209working directory copy.  Thus after resolving the conflict in the
1210obvious way, the diff will look like:
1211
1212-------------------------------------------------
1213$ git diff
1214diff --cc file.txt
1215index 802992c,2b60207..0000000
1216--- a/file.txt
1217+++ b/file.txt
1218@@@ -1,1 -1,1 +1,1 @@@
1219- Hello world
1220 -Goodbye
1221++Goodbye world
1222-------------------------------------------------
1223
1224This shows that our resolved version deleted "Hello world" from the
1225first parent, deleted "Goodbye" from the second parent, and added
1226"Goodbye world", which was previously absent from both.
1227
1228The gitlink:git-log[1] command also provides special help for merges:
1229
1230-------------------------------------------------
1231$ git log --merge
1232-------------------------------------------------
1233
1234This will list all commits which exist only on HEAD or on MERGE_HEAD,
1235and which touch an unmerged file.
1236
1237We can now add the resolved version to the index and commit:
1238
1239-------------------------------------------------
1240$ git add file.txt
1241$ git commit
1242-------------------------------------------------
1243
1244Note that the commit message will already be filled in for you with
1245some information about the merge.  Normally you can just use this
1246default message unchanged, but you may add additional commentary of
1247your own if desired.
1248
1249[[undoing-a-merge]]
1250undoing a merge
1251---------------
1252
1253If you get stuck and decide to just give up and throw the whole mess
1254away, you can always return to the pre-merge state with
1255
1256-------------------------------------------------
1257$ git reset --hard HEAD
1258-------------------------------------------------
1259
1260Or, if you've already commited the merge that you want to throw away,
1261
1262-------------------------------------------------
1263$ git reset --hard ORIG_HEAD
1264-------------------------------------------------
1265
1266However, this last command can be dangerous in some cases--never
1267throw away a commit you have already committed if that commit may
1268itself have been merged into another branch, as doing so may confuse
1269further merges.
1270
1271Fast-forward merges
1272-------------------
1273
1274There is one special case not mentioned above, which is treated
1275differently.  Normally, a merge results in a merge commit, with two
1276parents, one pointing at each of the two lines of development that
1277were merged.
1278
1279However, if one of the two lines of development is completely
1280contained within the other--so every commit present in the one is
1281already contained in the other--then git just performs a
1282<<fast-forwards,fast forward>>; the head of the current branch is
1283moved forward to point at the head of the merged-in branch, without
1284any new commits being created.
1285
1286Fixing mistakes
1287---------------
1288
1289If you've messed up the working tree, but haven't yet committed your
1290mistake, you can return the entire working tree to the last committed
1291state with
1292
1293-------------------------------------------------
1294$ git reset --hard HEAD
1295-------------------------------------------------
1296
1297If you make a commit that you later wish you hadn't, there are two
1298fundamentally different ways to fix the problem:
1299
1300        1. You can create a new commit that undoes whatever was done
1301        by the previous commit.  This is the correct thing if your
1302        mistake has already been made public.
1303
1304        2. You can go back and modify the old commit.  You should
1305        never do this if you have already made the history public;
1306        git does not normally expect the "history" of a project to
1307        change, and cannot correctly perform repeated merges from
1308        a branch that has had its history changed.
1309
1310Fixing a mistake with a new commit
1311~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1312
1313Creating a new commit that reverts an earlier change is very easy;
1314just pass the gitlink:git-revert[1] command a reference to the bad
1315commit; for example, to revert the most recent commit:
1316
1317-------------------------------------------------
1318$ git revert HEAD
1319-------------------------------------------------
1320
1321This will create a new commit which undoes the change in HEAD.  You
1322will be given a chance to edit the commit message for the new commit.
1323
1324You can also revert an earlier change, for example, the next-to-last:
1325
1326-------------------------------------------------
1327$ git revert HEAD^
1328-------------------------------------------------
1329
1330In this case git will attempt to undo the old change while leaving
1331intact any changes made since then.  If more recent changes overlap
1332with the changes to be reverted, then you will be asked to fix
1333conflicts manually, just as in the case of <<resolving-a-merge,
1334resolving a merge>>.
1335
1336Fixing a mistake by editing history
1337~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1338
1339If the problematic commit is the most recent commit, and you have not
1340yet made that commit public, then you may just
1341<<undoing-a-merge,destroy it using git-reset>>.
1342
1343Alternatively, you
1344can edit the working directory and update the index to fix your
1345mistake, just as if you were going to <<how-to-make-a-commit,create a
1346new commit>>, then run
1347
1348-------------------------------------------------
1349$ git commit --amend
1350-------------------------------------------------
1351
1352which will replace the old commit by a new commit incorporating your
1353changes, giving you a chance to edit the old commit message first.
1354
1355Again, you should never do this to a commit that may already have
1356been merged into another branch; use gitlink:git-revert[1] instead in
1357that case.
1358
1359It is also possible to edit commits further back in the history, but
1360this is an advanced topic to be left for
1361<<cleaning-up-history,another chapter>>.
1362
1363Checking out an old version of a file
1364~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1365
1366In the process of undoing a previous bad change, you may find it
1367useful to check out an older version of a particular file using
1368gitlink:git-checkout[1].  We've used git checkout before to switch
1369branches, but it has quite different behavior if it is given a path
1370name: the command
1371
1372-------------------------------------------------
1373$ git checkout HEAD^ path/to/file
1374-------------------------------------------------
1375
1376replaces path/to/file by the contents it had in the commit HEAD^, and
1377also updates the index to match.  It does not change branches.
1378
1379If you just want to look at an old version of the file, without
1380modifying the working directory, you can do that with
1381gitlink:git-show[1]:
1382
1383-------------------------------------------------
1384$ git show HEAD^ path/to/file
1385-------------------------------------------------
1386
1387which will display the given version of the file.
1388
1389Ensuring good performance
1390-------------------------
1391
1392On large repositories, git depends on compression to keep the history
1393information from taking up to much space on disk or in memory.
1394
1395This compression is not performed automatically.  Therefore you
1396should occasionally run gitlink:git-gc[1]:
1397
1398-------------------------------------------------
1399$ git gc
1400-------------------------------------------------
1401
1402to recompress the archive.  This can be very time-consuming, so
1403you may prefer to run git-gc when you are not doing other work.
1404
1405Ensuring reliability
1406--------------------
1407
1408Checking the repository for corruption
1409~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1410
1411The gitlink:git-fsck[1] command runs a number of self-consistency checks
1412on the repository, and reports on any problems.  This may take some
1413time.  The most common warning by far is about "dangling" objects:
1414
1415-------------------------------------------------
1416$ git fsck
1417dangling commit 7281251ddd2a61e38657c827739c57015671a6b3
1418dangling commit 2706a059f258c6b245f298dc4ff2ccd30ec21a63
1419dangling commit 13472b7c4b80851a1bc551779171dcb03655e9b5
1420dangling blob 218761f9d90712d37a9c5e36f406f92202db07eb
1421dangling commit bf093535a34a4d35731aa2bd90fe6b176302f14f
1422dangling commit 8e4bec7f2ddaa268bef999853c25755452100f8e
1423dangling tree d50bb86186bf27b681d25af89d3b5b68382e4085
1424dangling tree b24c2473f1fd3d91352a624795be026d64c8841f
1425...
1426-------------------------------------------------
1427
1428Dangling objects are objects that are harmless, but also unnecessary;
1429you can remove them at any time with gitlink:git-prune[1] or the --prune
1430option to gitlink:git-gc[1]:
1431
1432-------------------------------------------------
1433$ git gc --prune
1434-------------------------------------------------
1435
1436This may be time-consuming.  Unlike most other git operations (including
1437git-gc when run without any options), it is not safe to prune while
1438other git operations are in progress in the same repository.
1439
1440For more about dangling objects, see <<dangling-objects>>.
1441
1442
1443Recovering lost changes
1444~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1445
1446Reflogs
1447^^^^^^^
1448
1449Say you modify a branch with gitlink:git-reset[1] --hard, and then
1450realize that the branch was the only reference you had to that point in
1451history.
1452
1453Fortunately, git also keeps a log, called a "reflog", of all the
1454previous values of each branch.  So in this case you can still find the
1455old history using, for example, 
1456
1457-------------------------------------------------
1458$ git log master@{1}
1459-------------------------------------------------
1460
1461This lists the commits reachable from the previous version of the head.
1462This syntax can be used to with any git command that accepts a commit,
1463not just with git log.  Some other examples:
1464
1465-------------------------------------------------
1466$ git show master@{2}           # See where the branch pointed 2,
1467$ git show master@{3}           # 3, ... changes ago.
1468$ gitk master@{yesterday}       # See where it pointed yesterday,
1469$ gitk master@{"1 week ago"}    # ... or last week
1470-------------------------------------------------
1471
1472The reflogs are kept by default for 30 days, after which they may be
1473pruned.  See gitlink:git-reflog[1] and gitlink:git-gc[1] to learn
1474how to control this pruning, and see the "SPECIFYING REVISIONS"
1475section of gitlink:git-rev-parse[1] for details.
1476
1477Note that the reflog history is very different from normal git history.
1478While normal history is shared by every repository that works on the
1479same project, the reflog history is not shared: it tells you only about
1480how the branches in your local repository have changed over time.
1481
1482Examining dangling objects
1483^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1484
1485In some situations the reflog may not be able to save you.  For
1486example, suppose you delete a branch, then realize you need the history
1487it contained.  The reflog is also deleted; however, if you have not
1488yet pruned the repository, then you may still be able to find
1489the lost commits; run git-fsck and watch for output that mentions
1490"dangling commits":
1491
1492-------------------------------------------------
1493$ git fsck
1494dangling commit 7281251ddd2a61e38657c827739c57015671a6b3
1495dangling commit 2706a059f258c6b245f298dc4ff2ccd30ec21a63
1496dangling commit 13472b7c4b80851a1bc551779171dcb03655e9b5
1497...
1498-------------------------------------------------
1499
1500You can examine
1501one of those dangling commits with, for example,
1502
1503------------------------------------------------
1504$ gitk 7281251ddd --not --all
1505------------------------------------------------
1506
1507which does what it sounds like: it says that you want to see the commit
1508history that is described by the dangling commit(s), but not the
1509history that is described by all your existing branches and tags.  Thus
1510you get exactly the history reachable from that commit that is lost.
1511(And notice that it might not be just one commit: we only report the
1512"tip of the line" as being dangling, but there might be a whole deep
1513and complex commit history that was dropped.)
1514
1515If you decide you want the history back, you can always create a new
1516reference pointing to it, for example, a new branch:
1517
1518------------------------------------------------
1519$ git branch recovered-branch 7281251ddd 
1520------------------------------------------------
1521
1522
1523Sharing development with others
1524===============================
1525
1526[[getting-updates-with-git-pull]]
1527Getting updates with git pull
1528-----------------------------
1529
1530After you clone a repository and make a few changes of your own, you
1531may wish to check the original repository for updates and merge them
1532into your own work.
1533
1534We have already seen <<Updating-a-repository-with-git-fetch,how to
1535keep remote tracking branches up to date>> with gitlink:git-fetch[1],
1536and how to merge two branches.  So you can merge in changes from the
1537original repository's master branch with:
1538
1539-------------------------------------------------
1540$ git fetch
1541$ git merge origin/master
1542-------------------------------------------------
1543
1544However, the gitlink:git-pull[1] command provides a way to do this in
1545one step:
1546
1547-------------------------------------------------
1548$ git pull origin master
1549-------------------------------------------------
1550
1551In fact, "origin" is normally the default repository to pull from,
1552and the default branch is normally the HEAD of the remote repository,
1553so often you can accomplish the above with just
1554
1555-------------------------------------------------
1556$ git pull
1557-------------------------------------------------
1558
1559See the descriptions of the branch.<name>.remote and
1560branch.<name>.merge options in gitlink:git-config[1] to learn
1561how to control these defaults depending on the current branch.
1562
1563In addition to saving you keystrokes, "git pull" also helps you by
1564producing a default commit message documenting the branch and
1565repository that you pulled from.
1566
1567(But note that no such commit will be created in the case of a
1568<<fast-forwards,fast forward>>; instead, your branch will just be
1569updated to point to the latest commit from the upstream branch.)
1570
1571The git-pull command can also be given "." as the "remote" repository,
1572in which case it just merges in a branch from the current repository; so
1573the commands
1574
1575-------------------------------------------------
1576$ git pull . branch
1577$ git merge branch
1578-------------------------------------------------
1579
1580are roughly equivalent.  The former is actually very commonly used.
1581
1582Submitting patches to a project
1583-------------------------------
1584
1585If you just have a few changes, the simplest way to submit them may
1586just be to send them as patches in email:
1587
1588First, use gitlink:git-format-patch[1]; for example:
1589
1590-------------------------------------------------
1591$ git format-patch origin
1592-------------------------------------------------
1593
1594will produce a numbered series of files in the current directory, one
1595for each patch in the current branch but not in origin/HEAD.
1596
1597You can then import these into your mail client and send them by
1598hand.  However, if you have a lot to send at once, you may prefer to
1599use the gitlink:git-send-email[1] script to automate the process.
1600Consult the mailing list for your project first to determine how they
1601prefer such patches be handled.
1602
1603Importing patches to a project
1604------------------------------
1605
1606Git also provides a tool called gitlink:git-am[1] (am stands for
1607"apply mailbox"), for importing such an emailed series of patches.
1608Just save all of the patch-containing messages, in order, into a
1609single mailbox file, say "patches.mbox", then run
1610
1611-------------------------------------------------
1612$ git am -3 patches.mbox
1613-------------------------------------------------
1614
1615Git will apply each patch in order; if any conflicts are found, it
1616will stop, and you can fix the conflicts as described in
1617"<<resolving-a-merge,Resolving a merge>>".  (The "-3" option tells
1618git to perform a merge; if you would prefer it just to abort and
1619leave your tree and index untouched, you may omit that option.)
1620
1621Once the index is updated with the results of the conflict
1622resolution, instead of creating a new commit, just run
1623
1624-------------------------------------------------
1625$ git am --resolved
1626-------------------------------------------------
1627
1628and git will create the commit for you and continue applying the
1629remaining patches from the mailbox.
1630
1631The final result will be a series of commits, one for each patch in
1632the original mailbox, with authorship and commit log message each
1633taken from the message containing each patch.
1634
1635[[setting-up-a-public-repository]]
1636Setting up a public repository
1637------------------------------
1638
1639Another way to submit changes to a project is to simply tell the
1640maintainer of that project to pull from your repository, exactly as
1641you did in the section "<<getting-updates-with-git-pull, Getting
1642updates with git pull>>".
1643
1644If you and maintainer both have accounts on the same machine, then
1645then you can just pull changes from each other's repositories
1646directly; note that all of the commands (gitlink:git-clone[1],
1647git-fetch[1], git-pull[1], etc.) that accept a URL as an argument
1648will also accept a local file patch; so, for example, you can
1649use
1650
1651-------------------------------------------------
1652$ git clone /path/to/repository
1653$ git pull /path/to/other/repository
1654-------------------------------------------------
1655
1656If this sort of setup is inconvenient or impossible, another (more
1657common) option is to set up a public repository on a public server.
1658This also allows you to cleanly separate private work in progress
1659from publicly visible work.
1660
1661You will continue to do your day-to-day work in your personal
1662repository, but periodically "push" changes from your personal
1663repository into your public repository, allowing other developers to
1664pull from that repository.  So the flow of changes, in a situation
1665where there is one other developer with a public repository, looks
1666like this:
1667
1668                        you push
1669  your personal repo ------------------> your public repo
1670        ^                                     |
1671        |                                     |
1672        | you pull                            | they pull
1673        |                                     |
1674        |                                     |
1675        |               they push             V
1676  their public repo <------------------- their repo
1677
1678Now, assume your personal repository is in the directory ~/proj.  We
1679first create a new clone of the repository:
1680
1681-------------------------------------------------
1682$ git clone --bare proj-clone.git
1683-------------------------------------------------
1684
1685The resulting directory proj-clone.git will contains a "bare" git
1686repository--it is just the contents of the ".git" directory, without
1687a checked-out copy of a working directory.
1688
1689Next, copy proj-clone.git to the server where you plan to host the
1690public repository.  You can use scp, rsync, or whatever is most
1691convenient.
1692
1693If somebody else maintains the public server, they may already have
1694set up a git service for you, and you may skip to the section
1695"<<pushing-changes-to-a-public-repository,Pushing changes to a public
1696repository>>", below.
1697
1698Otherwise, the following sections explain how to export your newly
1699created public repository:
1700
1701[[exporting-via-http]]
1702Exporting a git repository via http
1703-----------------------------------
1704
1705The git protocol gives better performance and reliability, but on a
1706host with a web server set up, http exports may be simpler to set up.
1707
1708All you need to do is place the newly created bare git repository in
1709a directory that is exported by the web server, and make some
1710adjustments to give web clients some extra information they need:
1711
1712-------------------------------------------------
1713$ mv proj.git /home/you/public_html/proj.git
1714$ cd proj.git
1715$ git update-server-info
1716$ chmod a+x hooks/post-update
1717-------------------------------------------------
1718
1719(For an explanation of the last two lines, see
1720gitlink:git-update-server-info[1], and the documentation
1721link:hooks.txt[Hooks used by git].)
1722
1723Advertise the url of proj.git.  Anybody else should then be able to
1724clone or pull from that url, for example with a commandline like:
1725
1726-------------------------------------------------
1727$ git clone http://yourserver.com/~you/proj.git
1728-------------------------------------------------
1729
1730(See also
1731link:howto/setup-git-server-over-http.txt[setup-git-server-over-http]
1732for a slightly more sophisticated setup using WebDAV which also
1733allows pushing over http.)
1734
1735[[exporting-via-git]]
1736Exporting a git repository via the git protocol
1737-----------------------------------------------
1738
1739This is the preferred method.
1740
1741For now, we refer you to the gitlink:git-daemon[1] man page for
1742instructions.  (See especially the examples section.)
1743
1744[[pushing-changes-to-a-public-repository]]
1745Pushing changes to a public repository
1746--------------------------------------
1747
1748Note that the two techniques outline above (exporting via
1749<<exporting-via-http,http>> or <<exporting-via-git,git>>) allow other
1750maintainers to fetch your latest changes, but they do not allow write
1751access, which you will need to update the public repository with the
1752latest changes created in your private repository.
1753
1754The simplest way to do this is using gitlink:git-push[1] and ssh; to
1755update the remote branch named "master" with the latest state of your
1756branch named "master", run
1757
1758-------------------------------------------------
1759$ git push ssh://yourserver.com/~you/proj.git master:master
1760-------------------------------------------------
1761
1762or just
1763
1764-------------------------------------------------
1765$ git push ssh://yourserver.com/~you/proj.git master
1766-------------------------------------------------
1767
1768As with git-fetch, git-push will complain if this does not result in
1769a <<fast-forwards,fast forward>>.  Normally this is a sign of
1770something wrong.  However, if you are sure you know what you're
1771doing, you may force git-push to perform the update anyway by
1772proceeding the branch name by a plus sign:
1773
1774-------------------------------------------------
1775$ git push ssh://yourserver.com/~you/proj.git +master
1776-------------------------------------------------
1777
1778As with git-fetch, you may also set up configuration options to
1779save typing; so, for example, after
1780
1781-------------------------------------------------
1782$ cat >.git/config <<EOF
1783[remote "public-repo"]
1784        url = ssh://yourserver.com/~you/proj.git
1785EOF
1786-------------------------------------------------
1787
1788you should be able to perform the above push with just
1789
1790-------------------------------------------------
1791$ git push public-repo master
1792-------------------------------------------------
1793
1794See the explanations of the remote.<name>.url, branch.<name>.remote,
1795and remote.<name>.push options in gitlink:git-config[1] for
1796details.
1797
1798Setting up a shared repository
1799------------------------------
1800
1801Another way to collaborate is by using a model similar to that
1802commonly used in CVS, where several developers with special rights
1803all push to and pull from a single shared repository.  See
1804link:cvs-migration.txt[git for CVS users] for instructions on how to
1805set this up.
1806
1807Allow web browsing of a repository
1808----------------------------------
1809
1810The gitweb cgi script provides users an easy way to browse your
1811project's files and history without having to install git; see the file
1812gitweb/README in the git source tree for instructions on setting it up.
1813
1814Examples
1815--------
1816
1817TODO: topic branches, typical roles as in everyday.txt, ?
1818
1819
1820[[cleaning-up-history]]
1821Rewriting history and maintaining patch series
1822==============================================
1823
1824Normally commits are only added to a project, never taken away or
1825replaced.  Git is designed with this assumption, and violating it will
1826cause git's merge machinery (for example) to do the wrong thing.
1827
1828However, there is a situation in which it can be useful to violate this
1829assumption.
1830
1831Creating the perfect patch series
1832---------------------------------
1833
1834Suppose you are a contributor to a large project, and you want to add a
1835complicated feature, and to present it to the other developers in a way
1836that makes it easy for them to read your changes, verify that they are
1837correct, and understand why you made each change.
1838
1839If you present all of your changes as a single patch (or commit), they
1840may find that it is too much to digest all at once.
1841
1842If you present them with the entire history of your work, complete with
1843mistakes, corrections, and dead ends, they may be overwhelmed.
1844
1845So the ideal is usually to produce a series of patches such that:
1846
1847        1. Each patch can be applied in order.
1848
1849        2. Each patch includes a single logical change, together with a
1850           message explaining the change.
1851
1852        3. No patch introduces a regression: after applying any initial
1853           part of the series, the resulting project still compiles and
1854           works, and has no bugs that it didn't have before.
1855
1856        4. The complete series produces the same end result as your own
1857           (probably much messier!) development process did.
1858
1859We will introduce some tools that can help you do this, explain how to
1860use them, and then explain some of the problems that can arise because
1861you are rewriting history.
1862
1863Keeping a patch series up to date using git-rebase
1864--------------------------------------------------
1865
1866Suppose that you create a branch "mywork" on a remote-tracking branch
1867"origin", and create some commits on top of it:
1868
1869-------------------------------------------------
1870$ git checkout -b mywork origin
1871$ vi file.txt
1872$ git commit
1873$ vi otherfile.txt
1874$ git commit
1875...
1876-------------------------------------------------
1877
1878You have performed no merges into mywork, so it is just a simple linear
1879sequence of patches on top of "origin":
1880
1881
1882 o--o--o <-- origin
1883        \
1884         o--o--o <-- mywork
1885
1886Some more interesting work has been done in the upstream project, and
1887"origin" has advanced:
1888
1889 o--o--O--o--o--o <-- origin
1890        \
1891         a--b--c <-- mywork
1892
1893At this point, you could use "pull" to merge your changes back in;
1894the result would create a new merge commit, like this:
1895
1896
1897 o--o--O--o--o--o <-- origin
1898        \        \
1899         a--b--c--m <-- mywork
1900 
1901However, if you prefer to keep the history in mywork a simple series of
1902commits without any merges, you may instead choose to use
1903gitlink:git-rebase[1]:
1904
1905-------------------------------------------------
1906$ git checkout mywork
1907$ git rebase origin
1908-------------------------------------------------
1909
1910This will remove each of your commits from mywork, temporarily saving
1911them as patches (in a directory named ".dotest"), update mywork to
1912point at the latest version of origin, then apply each of the saved
1913patches to the new mywork.  The result will look like:
1914
1915
1916 o--o--O--o--o--o <-- origin
1917                 \
1918                  a'--b'--c' <-- mywork
1919
1920In the process, it may discover conflicts.  In that case it will stop
1921and allow you to fix the conflicts; after fixing conflicts, use "git
1922add" to update the index with those contents, and then, instead of
1923running git-commit, just run
1924
1925-------------------------------------------------
1926$ git rebase --continue
1927-------------------------------------------------
1928
1929and git will continue applying the rest of the patches.
1930
1931At any point you may use the --abort option to abort this process and
1932return mywork to the state it had before you started the rebase:
1933
1934-------------------------------------------------
1935$ git rebase --abort
1936-------------------------------------------------
1937
1938Reordering or selecting from a patch series
1939-------------------------------------------
1940
1941Given one existing commit, the gitlink:git-cherry-pick[1] command
1942allows you to apply the change introduced by that commit and create a
1943new commit that records it.  So, for example, if "mywork" points to a
1944series of patches on top of "origin", you might do something like:
1945
1946-------------------------------------------------
1947$ git checkout -b mywork-new origin
1948$ gitk origin..mywork &
1949-------------------------------------------------
1950
1951And browse through the list of patches in the mywork branch using gitk,
1952applying them (possibly in a different order) to mywork-new using
1953cherry-pick, and possibly modifying them as you go using commit
1954--amend.
1955
1956Another technique is to use git-format-patch to create a series of
1957patches, then reset the state to before the patches:
1958
1959-------------------------------------------------
1960$ git format-patch origin
1961$ git reset --hard origin
1962-------------------------------------------------
1963
1964Then modify, reorder, or eliminate patches as preferred before applying
1965them again with gitlink:git-am[1].
1966
1967Other tools
1968-----------
1969
1970There are numerous other tools, such as stgit, which exist for the
1971purpose of maintaining a patch series.  These are outside of the scope of
1972this manual.
1973
1974Problems with rewriting history
1975-------------------------------
1976
1977The primary problem with rewriting the history of a branch has to do
1978with merging.  Suppose somebody fetches your branch and merges it into
1979their branch, with a result something like this:
1980
1981 o--o--O--o--o--o <-- origin
1982        \        \
1983         t--t--t--m <-- their branch:
1984
1985Then suppose you modify the last three commits:
1986
1987         o--o--o <-- new head of origin
1988        /
1989 o--o--O--o--o--o <-- old head of origin
1990
1991If we examined all this history together in one repository, it will
1992look like:
1993
1994         o--o--o <-- new head of origin
1995        /
1996 o--o--O--o--o--o <-- old head of origin
1997        \        \
1998         t--t--t--m <-- their branch:
1999
2000Git has no way of knowing that the new head is an updated version of
2001the old head; it treats this situation exactly the same as it would if
2002two developers had independently done the work on the old and new heads
2003in parallel.  At this point, if someone attempts to merge the new head
2004in to their branch, git will attempt to merge together the two (old and
2005new) lines of development, instead of trying to replace the old by the
2006new.  The results are likely to be unexpected.
2007
2008You may still choose to publish branches whose history is rewritten,
2009and it may be useful for others to be able to fetch those branches in
2010order to examine or test them, but they should not attempt to pull such
2011branches into their own work.
2012
2013For true distributed development that supports proper merging,
2014published branches should never be rewritten.
2015
2016Advanced branch management
2017==========================
2018
2019Fetching individual branches
2020----------------------------
2021
2022Instead of using gitlink:git-remote[1], you can also choose just
2023to update one branch at a time, and to store it locally under an
2024arbitrary name:
2025
2026-------------------------------------------------
2027$ git fetch origin todo:my-todo-work
2028-------------------------------------------------
2029
2030The first argument, "origin", just tells git to fetch from the
2031repository you originally cloned from.  The second argument tells git
2032to fetch the branch named "todo" from the remote repository, and to
2033store it locally under the name refs/heads/my-todo-work.
2034
2035You can also fetch branches from other repositories; so
2036
2037-------------------------------------------------
2038$ git fetch git://example.com/proj.git master:example-master
2039-------------------------------------------------
2040
2041will create a new branch named "example-master" and store in it the
2042branch named "master" from the repository at the given URL.  If you
2043already have a branch named example-master, it will attempt to
2044"fast-forward" to the commit given by example.com's master branch.  So
2045next we explain what a fast-forward is:
2046
2047[[fast-forwards]]
2048Understanding git history: fast-forwards
2049----------------------------------------
2050
2051In the previous example, when updating an existing branch, "git
2052fetch" checks to make sure that the most recent commit on the remote
2053branch is a descendant of the most recent commit on your copy of the
2054branch before updating your copy of the branch to point at the new
2055commit.  Git calls this process a "fast forward".
2056
2057A fast forward looks something like this:
2058
2059 o--o--o--o <-- old head of the branch
2060           \
2061            o--o--o <-- new head of the branch
2062
2063
2064In some cases it is possible that the new head will *not* actually be
2065a descendant of the old head.  For example, the developer may have
2066realized she made a serious mistake, and decided to backtrack,
2067resulting in a situation like:
2068
2069 o--o--o--o--a--b <-- old head of the branch
2070           \
2071            o--o--o <-- new head of the branch
2072
2073
2074
2075In this case, "git fetch" will fail, and print out a warning.
2076
2077In that case, you can still force git to update to the new head, as
2078described in the following section.  However, note that in the
2079situation above this may mean losing the commits labeled "a" and "b",
2080unless you've already created a reference of your own pointing to
2081them.
2082
2083Forcing git fetch to do non-fast-forward updates
2084------------------------------------------------
2085
2086If git fetch fails because the new head of a branch is not a
2087descendant of the old head, you may force the update with:
2088
2089-------------------------------------------------
2090$ git fetch git://example.com/proj.git +master:refs/remotes/example/master
2091-------------------------------------------------
2092
2093Note the addition of the "+" sign.  Be aware that commits that the
2094old version of example/master pointed at may be lost, as we saw in
2095the previous section.
2096
2097Configuring remote branches
2098---------------------------
2099
2100We saw above that "origin" is just a shortcut to refer to the
2101repository that you originally cloned from.  This information is
2102stored in git configuration variables, which you can see using
2103gitlink:git-config[1]:
2104
2105-------------------------------------------------
2106$ git config -l
2107core.repositoryformatversion=0
2108core.filemode=true
2109core.logallrefupdates=true
2110remote.origin.url=git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git
2111remote.origin.fetch=+refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
2112branch.master.remote=origin
2113branch.master.merge=refs/heads/master
2114-------------------------------------------------
2115
2116If there are other repositories that you also use frequently, you can
2117create similar configuration options to save typing; for example,
2118after
2119
2120-------------------------------------------------
2121$ git config remote.example.url git://example.com/proj.git
2122-------------------------------------------------
2123
2124then the following two commands will do the same thing:
2125
2126-------------------------------------------------
2127$ git fetch git://example.com/proj.git master:refs/remotes/example/master
2128$ git fetch example master:refs/remotes/example/master
2129-------------------------------------------------
2130
2131Even better, if you add one more option:
2132
2133-------------------------------------------------
2134$ git config remote.example.fetch master:refs/remotes/example/master
2135-------------------------------------------------
2136
2137then the following commands will all do the same thing:
2138
2139-------------------------------------------------
2140$ git fetch git://example.com/proj.git master:ref/remotes/example/master
2141$ git fetch example master:ref/remotes/example/master
2142$ git fetch example example/master
2143$ git fetch example
2144-------------------------------------------------
2145
2146You can also add a "+" to force the update each time:
2147
2148-------------------------------------------------
2149$ git config remote.example.fetch +master:ref/remotes/example/master
2150-------------------------------------------------
2151
2152Don't do this unless you're sure you won't mind "git fetch" possibly
2153throwing away commits on mybranch.
2154
2155Also note that all of the above configuration can be performed by
2156directly editing the file .git/config instead of using
2157gitlink:git-config[1].
2158
2159See gitlink:git-config[1] for more details on the configuration
2160options mentioned above.
2161
2162
2163[[git-internals]]
2164Git internals
2165=============
2166
2167There are two object abstractions: the "object database", and the
2168"current directory cache" aka "index".
2169
2170The Object Database
2171-------------------
2172
2173The object database is literally just a content-addressable collection
2174of objects.  All objects are named by their content, which is
2175approximated by the SHA1 hash of the object itself.  Objects may refer
2176to other objects (by referencing their SHA1 hash), and so you can
2177build up a hierarchy of objects.
2178
2179All objects have a statically determined "type" aka "tag", which is
2180determined at object creation time, and which identifies the format of
2181the object (i.e. how it is used, and how it can refer to other
2182objects).  There are currently four different object types: "blob",
2183"tree", "commit" and "tag".
2184
2185A "blob" object cannot refer to any other object, and is, like the type
2186implies, a pure storage object containing some user data.  It is used to
2187actually store the file data, i.e. a blob object is associated with some
2188particular version of some file. 
2189
2190A "tree" object is an object that ties one or more "blob" objects into a
2191directory structure. In addition, a tree object can refer to other tree
2192objects, thus creating a directory hierarchy. 
2193
2194A "commit" object ties such directory hierarchies together into
2195a DAG of revisions - each "commit" is associated with exactly one tree
2196(the directory hierarchy at the time of the commit). In addition, a
2197"commit" refers to one or more "parent" commit objects that describe the
2198history of how we arrived at that directory hierarchy.
2199
2200As a special case, a commit object with no parents is called the "root"
2201object, and is the point of an initial project commit.  Each project
2202must have at least one root, and while you can tie several different
2203root objects together into one project by creating a commit object which
2204has two or more separate roots as its ultimate parents, that's probably
2205just going to confuse people.  So aim for the notion of "one root object
2206per project", even if git itself does not enforce that. 
2207
2208A "tag" object symbolically identifies and can be used to sign other
2209objects. It contains the identifier and type of another object, a
2210symbolic name (of course!) and, optionally, a signature.
2211
2212Regardless of object type, all objects share the following
2213characteristics: they are all deflated with zlib, and have a header
2214that not only specifies their type, but also provides size information
2215about the data in the object.  It's worth noting that the SHA1 hash
2216that is used to name the object is the hash of the original data
2217plus this header, so `sha1sum` 'file' does not match the object name
2218for 'file'.
2219(Historical note: in the dawn of the age of git the hash
2220was the sha1 of the 'compressed' object.)
2221
2222As a result, the general consistency of an object can always be tested
2223independently of the contents or the type of the object: all objects can
2224be validated by verifying that (a) their hashes match the content of the
2225file and (b) the object successfully inflates to a stream of bytes that
2226forms a sequence of <ascii type without space> + <space> + <ascii decimal
2227size> + <byte\0> + <binary object data>. 
2228
2229The structured objects can further have their structure and
2230connectivity to other objects verified. This is generally done with
2231the `git-fsck` program, which generates a full dependency graph
2232of all objects, and verifies their internal consistency (in addition
2233to just verifying their superficial consistency through the hash).
2234
2235The object types in some more detail:
2236
2237Blob Object
2238-----------
2239
2240A "blob" object is nothing but a binary blob of data, and doesn't
2241refer to anything else.  There is no signature or any other
2242verification of the data, so while the object is consistent (it 'is'
2243indexed by its sha1 hash, so the data itself is certainly correct), it
2244has absolutely no other attributes.  No name associations, no
2245permissions.  It is purely a blob of data (i.e. normally "file
2246contents").
2247
2248In particular, since the blob is entirely defined by its data, if two
2249files in a directory tree (or in multiple different versions of the
2250repository) have the same contents, they will share the same blob
2251object. The object is totally independent of its location in the
2252directory tree, and renaming a file does not change the object that
2253file is associated with in any way.
2254
2255A blob is typically created when gitlink:git-update-index[1]
2256is run, and its data can be accessed by gitlink:git-cat-file[1].
2257
2258Tree Object
2259-----------
2260
2261The next hierarchical object type is the "tree" object.  A tree object
2262is a list of mode/name/blob data, sorted by name.  Alternatively, the
2263mode data may specify a directory mode, in which case instead of
2264naming a blob, that name is associated with another TREE object.
2265
2266Like the "blob" object, a tree object is uniquely determined by the
2267set contents, and so two separate but identical trees will always
2268share the exact same object. This is true at all levels, i.e. it's
2269true for a "leaf" tree (which does not refer to any other trees, only
2270blobs) as well as for a whole subdirectory.
2271
2272For that reason a "tree" object is just a pure data abstraction: it
2273has no history, no signatures, no verification of validity, except
2274that since the contents are again protected by the hash itself, we can
2275trust that the tree is immutable and its contents never change.
2276
2277So you can trust the contents of a tree to be valid, the same way you
2278can trust the contents of a blob, but you don't know where those
2279contents 'came' from.
2280
2281Side note on trees: since a "tree" object is a sorted list of
2282"filename+content", you can create a diff between two trees without
2283actually having to unpack two trees.  Just ignore all common parts,
2284and your diff will look right.  In other words, you can effectively
2285(and efficiently) tell the difference between any two random trees by
2286O(n) where "n" is the size of the difference, rather than the size of
2287the tree.
2288
2289Side note 2 on trees: since the name of a "blob" depends entirely and
2290exclusively on its contents (i.e. there are no names or permissions
2291involved), you can see trivial renames or permission changes by
2292noticing that the blob stayed the same.  However, renames with data
2293changes need a smarter "diff" implementation.
2294
2295A tree is created with gitlink:git-write-tree[1] and
2296its data can be accessed by gitlink:git-ls-tree[1].
2297Two trees can be compared with gitlink:git-diff-tree[1].
2298
2299Commit Object
2300-------------
2301
2302The "commit" object is an object that introduces the notion of
2303history into the picture.  In contrast to the other objects, it
2304doesn't just describe the physical state of a tree, it describes how
2305we got there, and why.
2306
2307A "commit" is defined by the tree-object that it results in, the
2308parent commits (zero, one or more) that led up to that point, and a
2309comment on what happened.  Again, a commit is not trusted per se:
2310the contents are well-defined and "safe" due to the cryptographically
2311strong signatures at all levels, but there is no reason to believe
2312that the tree is "good" or that the merge information makes sense.
2313The parents do not have to actually have any relationship with the
2314result, for example.
2315
2316Note on commits: unlike real SCM's, commits do not contain
2317rename information or file mode change information.  All of that is
2318implicit in the trees involved (the result tree, and the result trees
2319of the parents), and describing that makes no sense in this idiotic
2320file manager.
2321
2322A commit is created with gitlink:git-commit-tree[1] and
2323its data can be accessed by gitlink:git-cat-file[1].
2324
2325Trust
2326-----
2327
2328An aside on the notion of "trust". Trust is really outside the scope
2329of "git", but it's worth noting a few things.  First off, since
2330everything is hashed with SHA1, you 'can' trust that an object is
2331intact and has not been messed with by external sources.  So the name
2332of an object uniquely identifies a known state - just not a state that
2333you may want to trust.
2334
2335Furthermore, since the SHA1 signature of a commit refers to the
2336SHA1 signatures of the tree it is associated with and the signatures
2337of the parent, a single named commit specifies uniquely a whole set
2338of history, with full contents.  You can't later fake any step of the
2339way once you have the name of a commit.
2340
2341So to introduce some real trust in the system, the only thing you need
2342to do is to digitally sign just 'one' special note, which includes the
2343name of a top-level commit.  Your digital signature shows others
2344that you trust that commit, and the immutability of the history of
2345commits tells others that they can trust the whole history.
2346
2347In other words, you can easily validate a whole archive by just
2348sending out a single email that tells the people the name (SHA1 hash)
2349of the top commit, and digitally sign that email using something
2350like GPG/PGP.
2351
2352To assist in this, git also provides the tag object...
2353
2354Tag Object
2355----------
2356
2357Git provides the "tag" object to simplify creating, managing and
2358exchanging symbolic and signed tokens.  The "tag" object at its
2359simplest simply symbolically identifies another object by containing
2360the sha1, type and symbolic name.
2361
2362However it can optionally contain additional signature information
2363(which git doesn't care about as long as there's less than 8k of
2364it). This can then be verified externally to git.
2365
2366Note that despite the tag features, "git" itself only handles content
2367integrity; the trust framework (and signature provision and
2368verification) has to come from outside.
2369
2370A tag is created with gitlink:git-mktag[1],
2371its data can be accessed by gitlink:git-cat-file[1],
2372and the signature can be verified by
2373gitlink:git-verify-tag[1].
2374
2375
2376The "index" aka "Current Directory Cache"
2377-----------------------------------------
2378
2379The index is a simple binary file, which contains an efficient
2380representation of a virtual directory content at some random time.  It
2381does so by a simple array that associates a set of names, dates,
2382permissions and content (aka "blob") objects together.  The cache is
2383always kept ordered by name, and names are unique (with a few very
2384specific rules) at any point in time, but the cache has no long-term
2385meaning, and can be partially updated at any time.
2386
2387In particular, the index certainly does not need to be consistent with
2388the current directory contents (in fact, most operations will depend on
2389different ways to make the index 'not' be consistent with the directory
2390hierarchy), but it has three very important attributes:
2391
2392'(a) it can re-generate the full state it caches (not just the
2393directory structure: it contains pointers to the "blob" objects so
2394that it can regenerate the data too)'
2395
2396As a special case, there is a clear and unambiguous one-way mapping
2397from a current directory cache to a "tree object", which can be
2398efficiently created from just the current directory cache without
2399actually looking at any other data.  So a directory cache at any one
2400time uniquely specifies one and only one "tree" object (but has
2401additional data to make it easy to match up that tree object with what
2402has happened in the directory)
2403
2404'(b) it has efficient methods for finding inconsistencies between that
2405cached state ("tree object waiting to be instantiated") and the
2406current state.'
2407
2408'(c) it can additionally efficiently represent information about merge
2409conflicts between different tree objects, allowing each pathname to be
2410associated with sufficient information about the trees involved that
2411you can create a three-way merge between them.'
2412
2413Those are the ONLY three things that the directory cache does.  It's a
2414cache, and the normal operation is to re-generate it completely from a
2415known tree object, or update/compare it with a live tree that is being
2416developed.  If you blow the directory cache away entirely, you generally
2417haven't lost any information as long as you have the name of the tree
2418that it described. 
2419
2420At the same time, the index is at the same time also the
2421staging area for creating new trees, and creating a new tree always
2422involves a controlled modification of the index file.  In particular,
2423the index file can have the representation of an intermediate tree that
2424has not yet been instantiated.  So the index can be thought of as a
2425write-back cache, which can contain dirty information that has not yet
2426been written back to the backing store.
2427
2428
2429
2430The Workflow
2431------------
2432
2433Generally, all "git" operations work on the index file. Some operations
2434work *purely* on the index file (showing the current state of the
2435index), but most operations move data to and from the index file. Either
2436from the database or from the working directory. Thus there are four
2437main combinations: 
2438
2439working directory -> index
2440~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2441
2442You update the index with information from the working directory with
2443the gitlink:git-update-index[1] command.  You
2444generally update the index information by just specifying the filename
2445you want to update, like so:
2446
2447-------------------------------------------------
2448$ git-update-index filename
2449-------------------------------------------------
2450
2451but to avoid common mistakes with filename globbing etc, the command
2452will not normally add totally new entries or remove old entries,
2453i.e. it will normally just update existing cache entries.
2454
2455To tell git that yes, you really do realize that certain files no
2456longer exist, or that new files should be added, you
2457should use the `--remove` and `--add` flags respectively.
2458
2459NOTE! A `--remove` flag does 'not' mean that subsequent filenames will
2460necessarily be removed: if the files still exist in your directory
2461structure, the index will be updated with their new status, not
2462removed. The only thing `--remove` means is that update-cache will be
2463considering a removed file to be a valid thing, and if the file really
2464does not exist any more, it will update the index accordingly.
2465
2466As a special case, you can also do `git-update-index --refresh`, which
2467will refresh the "stat" information of each index to match the current
2468stat information. It will 'not' update the object status itself, and
2469it will only update the fields that are used to quickly test whether
2470an object still matches its old backing store object.
2471
2472index -> object database
2473~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2474
2475You write your current index file to a "tree" object with the program
2476
2477-------------------------------------------------
2478$ git-write-tree
2479-------------------------------------------------
2480
2481that doesn't come with any options - it will just write out the
2482current index into the set of tree objects that describe that state,
2483and it will return the name of the resulting top-level tree. You can
2484use that tree to re-generate the index at any time by going in the
2485other direction:
2486
2487object database -> index
2488~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2489
2490You read a "tree" file from the object database, and use that to
2491populate (and overwrite - don't do this if your index contains any
2492unsaved state that you might want to restore later!) your current
2493index.  Normal operation is just
2494
2495-------------------------------------------------
2496$ git-read-tree <sha1 of tree>
2497-------------------------------------------------
2498
2499and your index file will now be equivalent to the tree that you saved
2500earlier. However, that is only your 'index' file: your working
2501directory contents have not been modified.
2502
2503index -> working directory
2504~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2505
2506You update your working directory from the index by "checking out"
2507files. This is not a very common operation, since normally you'd just
2508keep your files updated, and rather than write to your working
2509directory, you'd tell the index files about the changes in your
2510working directory (i.e. `git-update-index`).
2511
2512However, if you decide to jump to a new version, or check out somebody
2513else's version, or just restore a previous tree, you'd populate your
2514index file with read-tree, and then you need to check out the result
2515with
2516
2517-------------------------------------------------
2518$ git-checkout-index filename
2519-------------------------------------------------
2520
2521or, if you want to check out all of the index, use `-a`.
2522
2523NOTE! git-checkout-index normally refuses to overwrite old files, so
2524if you have an old version of the tree already checked out, you will
2525need to use the "-f" flag ('before' the "-a" flag or the filename) to
2526'force' the checkout.
2527
2528
2529Finally, there are a few odds and ends which are not purely moving
2530from one representation to the other:
2531
2532Tying it all together
2533~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2534
2535To commit a tree you have instantiated with "git-write-tree", you'd
2536create a "commit" object that refers to that tree and the history
2537behind it - most notably the "parent" commits that preceded it in
2538history.
2539
2540Normally a "commit" has one parent: the previous state of the tree
2541before a certain change was made. However, sometimes it can have two
2542or more parent commits, in which case we call it a "merge", due to the
2543fact that such a commit brings together ("merges") two or more
2544previous states represented by other commits.
2545
2546In other words, while a "tree" represents a particular directory state
2547of a working directory, a "commit" represents that state in "time",
2548and explains how we got there.
2549
2550You create a commit object by giving it the tree that describes the
2551state at the time of the commit, and a list of parents:
2552
2553-------------------------------------------------
2554$ git-commit-tree <tree> -p <parent> [-p <parent2> ..]
2555-------------------------------------------------
2556
2557and then giving the reason for the commit on stdin (either through
2558redirection from a pipe or file, or by just typing it at the tty).
2559
2560git-commit-tree will return the name of the object that represents
2561that commit, and you should save it away for later use. Normally,
2562you'd commit a new `HEAD` state, and while git doesn't care where you
2563save the note about that state, in practice we tend to just write the
2564result to the file pointed at by `.git/HEAD`, so that we can always see
2565what the last committed state was.
2566
2567Here is an ASCII art by Jon Loeliger that illustrates how
2568various pieces fit together.
2569
2570------------
2571
2572                     commit-tree
2573                      commit obj
2574                       +----+
2575                       |    |
2576                       |    |
2577                       V    V
2578                    +-----------+
2579                    | Object DB |
2580                    |  Backing  |
2581                    |   Store   |
2582                    +-----------+
2583                       ^
2584           write-tree  |     |
2585             tree obj  |     |
2586                       |     |  read-tree
2587                       |     |  tree obj
2588                             V
2589                    +-----------+
2590                    |   Index   |
2591                    |  "cache"  |
2592                    +-----------+
2593         update-index  ^
2594             blob obj  |     |
2595                       |     |
2596    checkout-index -u  |     |  checkout-index
2597             stat      |     |  blob obj
2598                             V
2599                    +-----------+
2600                    |  Working  |
2601                    | Directory |
2602                    +-----------+
2603
2604------------
2605
2606
2607Examining the data
2608------------------
2609
2610You can examine the data represented in the object database and the
2611index with various helper tools. For every object, you can use
2612gitlink:git-cat-file[1] to examine details about the
2613object:
2614
2615-------------------------------------------------
2616$ git-cat-file -t <objectname>
2617-------------------------------------------------
2618
2619shows the type of the object, and once you have the type (which is
2620usually implicit in where you find the object), you can use
2621
2622-------------------------------------------------
2623$ git-cat-file blob|tree|commit|tag <objectname>
2624-------------------------------------------------
2625
2626to show its contents. NOTE! Trees have binary content, and as a result
2627there is a special helper for showing that content, called
2628`git-ls-tree`, which turns the binary content into a more easily
2629readable form.
2630
2631It's especially instructive to look at "commit" objects, since those
2632tend to be small and fairly self-explanatory. In particular, if you
2633follow the convention of having the top commit name in `.git/HEAD`,
2634you can do
2635
2636-------------------------------------------------
2637$ git-cat-file commit HEAD
2638-------------------------------------------------
2639
2640to see what the top commit was.
2641
2642Merging multiple trees
2643----------------------
2644
2645Git helps you do a three-way merge, which you can expand to n-way by
2646repeating the merge procedure arbitrary times until you finally
2647"commit" the state.  The normal situation is that you'd only do one
2648three-way merge (two parents), and commit it, but if you like to, you
2649can do multiple parents in one go.
2650
2651To do a three-way merge, you need the two sets of "commit" objects
2652that you want to merge, use those to find the closest common parent (a
2653third "commit" object), and then use those commit objects to find the
2654state of the directory ("tree" object) at these points.
2655
2656To get the "base" for the merge, you first look up the common parent
2657of two commits with
2658
2659-------------------------------------------------
2660$ git-merge-base <commit1> <commit2>
2661-------------------------------------------------
2662
2663which will return you the commit they are both based on.  You should
2664now look up the "tree" objects of those commits, which you can easily
2665do with (for example)
2666
2667-------------------------------------------------
2668$ git-cat-file commit <commitname> | head -1
2669-------------------------------------------------
2670
2671since the tree object information is always the first line in a commit
2672object.
2673
2674Once you know the three trees you are going to merge (the one "original"
2675tree, aka the common case, and the two "result" trees, aka the branches
2676you want to merge), you do a "merge" read into the index. This will
2677complain if it has to throw away your old index contents, so you should
2678make sure that you've committed those - in fact you would normally
2679always do a merge against your last commit (which should thus match what
2680you have in your current index anyway).
2681
2682To do the merge, do
2683
2684-------------------------------------------------
2685$ git-read-tree -m -u <origtree> <yourtree> <targettree>
2686-------------------------------------------------
2687
2688which will do all trivial merge operations for you directly in the
2689index file, and you can just write the result out with
2690`git-write-tree`.
2691
2692
2693Merging multiple trees, continued
2694---------------------------------
2695
2696Sadly, many merges aren't trivial. If there are files that have
2697been added.moved or removed, or if both branches have modified the
2698same file, you will be left with an index tree that contains "merge
2699entries" in it. Such an index tree can 'NOT' be written out to a tree
2700object, and you will have to resolve any such merge clashes using
2701other tools before you can write out the result.
2702
2703You can examine such index state with `git-ls-files --unmerged`
2704command.  An example:
2705
2706------------------------------------------------
2707$ git-read-tree -m $orig HEAD $target
2708$ git-ls-files --unmerged
2709100644 263414f423d0e4d70dae8fe53fa34614ff3e2860 1       hello.c
2710100644 06fa6a24256dc7e560efa5687fa84b51f0263c3a 2       hello.c
2711100644 cc44c73eb783565da5831b4d820c962954019b69 3       hello.c
2712------------------------------------------------
2713
2714Each line of the `git-ls-files --unmerged` output begins with
2715the blob mode bits, blob SHA1, 'stage number', and the
2716filename.  The 'stage number' is git's way to say which tree it
2717came from: stage 1 corresponds to `$orig` tree, stage 2 `HEAD`
2718tree, and stage3 `$target` tree.
2719
2720Earlier we said that trivial merges are done inside
2721`git-read-tree -m`.  For example, if the file did not change
2722from `$orig` to `HEAD` nor `$target`, or if the file changed
2723from `$orig` to `HEAD` and `$orig` to `$target` the same way,
2724obviously the final outcome is what is in `HEAD`.  What the
2725above example shows is that file `hello.c` was changed from
2726`$orig` to `HEAD` and `$orig` to `$target` in a different way.
2727You could resolve this by running your favorite 3-way merge
2728program, e.g.  `diff3` or `merge`, on the blob objects from
2729these three stages yourself, like this:
2730
2731------------------------------------------------
2732$ git-cat-file blob 263414f... >hello.c~1
2733$ git-cat-file blob 06fa6a2... >hello.c~2
2734$ git-cat-file blob cc44c73... >hello.c~3
2735$ merge hello.c~2 hello.c~1 hello.c~3
2736------------------------------------------------
2737
2738This would leave the merge result in `hello.c~2` file, along
2739with conflict markers if there are conflicts.  After verifying
2740the merge result makes sense, you can tell git what the final
2741merge result for this file is by:
2742
2743-------------------------------------------------
2744$ mv -f hello.c~2 hello.c
2745$ git-update-index hello.c
2746-------------------------------------------------
2747
2748When a path is in unmerged state, running `git-update-index` for
2749that path tells git to mark the path resolved.
2750
2751The above is the description of a git merge at the lowest level,
2752to help you understand what conceptually happens under the hood.
2753In practice, nobody, not even git itself, uses three `git-cat-file`
2754for this.  There is `git-merge-index` program that extracts the
2755stages to temporary files and calls a "merge" script on it:
2756
2757-------------------------------------------------
2758$ git-merge-index git-merge-one-file hello.c
2759-------------------------------------------------
2760
2761and that is what higher level `git resolve` is implemented with.
2762
2763How git stores objects efficiently: pack files
2764----------------------------------------------
2765
2766We've seen how git stores each object in a file named after the
2767object's SHA1 hash.
2768
2769Unfortunately this system becomes inefficient once a project has a
2770lot of objects.  Try this on an old project:
2771
2772------------------------------------------------
2773$ git count-objects
27746930 objects, 47620 kilobytes
2775------------------------------------------------
2776
2777The first number is the number of objects which are kept in
2778individual files.  The second is the amount of space taken up by
2779those "loose" objects.
2780
2781You can save space and make git faster by moving these loose objects in
2782to a "pack file", which stores a group of objects in an efficient
2783compressed format; the details of how pack files are formatted can be
2784found in link:technical/pack-format.txt[technical/pack-format.txt].
2785
2786To put the loose objects into a pack, just run git repack:
2787
2788------------------------------------------------
2789$ git repack
2790Generating pack...
2791Done counting 6020 objects.
2792Deltifying 6020 objects.
2793 100% (6020/6020) done
2794Writing 6020 objects.
2795 100% (6020/6020) done
2796Total 6020, written 6020 (delta 4070), reused 0 (delta 0)
2797Pack pack-3e54ad29d5b2e05838c75df582c65257b8d08e1c created.
2798------------------------------------------------
2799
2800You can then run
2801
2802------------------------------------------------
2803$ git prune
2804------------------------------------------------
2805
2806to remove any of the "loose" objects that are now contained in the
2807pack.  This will also remove any unreferenced objects (which may be
2808created when, for example, you use "git reset" to remove a commit).
2809You can verify that the loose objects are gone by looking at the
2810.git/objects directory or by running
2811
2812------------------------------------------------
2813$ git count-objects
28140 objects, 0 kilobytes
2815------------------------------------------------
2816
2817Although the object files are gone, any commands that refer to those
2818objects will work exactly as they did before.
2819
2820The gitlink:git-gc[1] command performs packing, pruning, and more for
2821you, so is normally the only high-level command you need.
2822
2823[[dangling-objects]]
2824Dangling objects
2825----------------
2826
2827The gitlink:git-fsck[1] command will sometimes complain about dangling
2828objects.  They are not a problem.
2829
2830The most common cause of dangling objects is that you've rebased a
2831branch, or you have pulled from somebody else who rebased a branch--see
2832<<cleaning-up-history>>.  In that case, the old head of the original
2833branch still exists, as does obviously everything it pointed to. The
2834branch pointer itself just doesn't, since you replaced it with another
2835one.
2836
2837There are also other situations too that cause dangling objects. For
2838example, a "dangling blob" may arise because you did a "git add" of a
2839file, but then, before you actually committed it and made it part of the
2840bigger picture, you changed something else in that file and committed
2841that *updated* thing - the old state that you added originally ends up
2842not being pointed to by any commit or tree, so it's now a dangling blob
2843object.
2844
2845Similarly, when the "recursive" merge strategy runs, and finds that
2846there are criss-cross merges and thus more than one merge base (which is
2847fairly unusual, but it does happen), it will generate one temporary
2848midway tree (or possibly even more, if you had lots of criss-crossing
2849merges and more than two merge bases) as a temporary internal merge
2850base, and again, those are real objects, but the end result will not end
2851up pointing to them, so they end up "dangling" in your repository.
2852
2853Generally, dangling objects aren't anything to worry about. They can
2854even be very useful: if you screw something up, the dangling objects can
2855be how you recover your old tree (say, you did a rebase, and realized
2856that you really didn't want to - you can look at what dangling objects
2857you have, and decide to reset your head to some old dangling state).
2858
2859For commits, the most useful thing to do with dangling objects tends to
2860be to do a simple
2861
2862------------------------------------------------
2863$ gitk <dangling-commit-sha-goes-here> --not --all
2864------------------------------------------------
2865
2866For blobs and trees, you can't do the same, but you can examine them.
2867You can just do
2868
2869------------------------------------------------
2870$ git show <dangling-blob/tree-sha-goes-here>
2871------------------------------------------------
2872
2873to show what the contents of the blob were (or, for a tree, basically
2874what the "ls" for that directory was), and that may give you some idea
2875of what the operation was that left that dangling object.
2876
2877Usually, dangling blobs and trees aren't very interesting. They're
2878almost always the result of either being a half-way mergebase (the blob
2879will often even have the conflict markers from a merge in it, if you
2880have had conflicting merges that you fixed up by hand), or simply
2881because you interrupted a "git fetch" with ^C or something like that,
2882leaving _some_ of the new objects in the object database, but just
2883dangling and useless.
2884
2885Anyway, once you are sure that you're not interested in any dangling 
2886state, you can just prune all unreachable objects:
2887
2888------------------------------------------------
2889$ git prune
2890------------------------------------------------
2891
2892and they'll be gone. But you should only run "git prune" on a quiescent
2893repository - it's kind of like doing a filesystem fsck recovery: you
2894don't want to do that while the filesystem is mounted.
2895
2896(The same is true of "git-fsck" itself, btw - but since 
2897git-fsck never actually *changes* the repository, it just reports 
2898on what it found, git-fsck itself is never "dangerous" to run. 
2899Running it while somebody is actually changing the repository can cause 
2900confusing and scary messages, but it won't actually do anything bad. In 
2901contrast, running "git prune" while somebody is actively changing the 
2902repository is a *BAD* idea).
2903
2904Glossary of git terms
2905=====================
2906
2907include::glossary.txt[]
2908
2909Notes and todo list for this manual
2910===================================
2911
2912This is a work in progress.
2913
2914The basic requirements:
2915        - It must be readable in order, from beginning to end, by
2916          someone intelligent with a basic grasp of the unix
2917          commandline, but without any special knowledge of git.  If
2918          necessary, any other prerequisites should be specifically
2919          mentioned as they arise.
2920        - Whenever possible, section headings should clearly describe
2921          the task they explain how to do, in language that requires
2922          no more knowledge than necessary: for example, "importing
2923          patches into a project" rather than "the git-am command"
2924
2925Think about how to create a clear chapter dependency graph that will
2926allow people to get to important topics without necessarily reading
2927everything in between.
2928
2929Say something about .gitignore.
2930
2931Scan Documentation/ for other stuff left out; in particular:
2932        howto's
2933        some of technical/?
2934        hooks
2935        list of commands in gitlink:git[1]
2936
2937Scan email archives for other stuff left out
2938
2939Scan man pages to see if any assume more background than this manual
2940provides.
2941
2942Simplify beginning by suggesting disconnected head instead of
2943temporary branch creation?
2944
2945Explain how to refer to file stages in the "how to resolve a merge"
2946section: diff -1, -2, -3, --ours, --theirs :1:/path notation.  The
2947"git ls-files --unmerged --stage" thing is sorta useful too,
2948actually.  And note gitk --merge.
2949
2950Add more good examples.  Entire sections of just cookbook examples
2951might be a good idea; maybe make an "advanced examples" section a
2952standard end-of-chapter section?
2953
2954Include cross-references to the glossary, where appropriate.
2955
2956Document shallow clones?  See draft 1.5.0 release notes for some
2957documentation.
2958
2959Add a section on working with other version control systems, including
2960CVS, Subversion, and just imports of series of release tarballs.
2961
2962More details on gitweb?
2963
2964Write a chapter on using plumbing and writing scripts.