awesome-git-addons
git-from-the-bottom-up
awesome-git-addons | git-from-the-bottom-up | |
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1 | 32 | |
1,866 | 809 | |
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3.3 | 0.0 | |
6 months ago | 6 days ago | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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awesome-git-addons
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git-appraise – Distributed Code Review for Git
please make a pull request to add this to awesome git lists, like https://github.com/stevemao/awesome-git-addons for example! this is so cool
git-from-the-bottom-up
- Git from the Bottom Up
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How Head Works in Git
Here's a great walk through for how Git works from the bottom up: https://jwiegley.github.io/git-from-the-bottom-up/
It's short, easy to understand and you'll understand HEAD.
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git-appraise – Distributed Code Review for Git
Very tangential:
Gerrit also stores some of its configs in a git repo. I was setting up a new instance, but couldn't get Admin permissions because the way my auth front-end didn't play well with the docker image's assumptions.
Gerrit already does a lot of its work via non-standard references. For example, you don't push to a branch, `refs/branches/foo`, you push to a separate `refs/for/foo` namespace that creates the review.
Similarly, Group config is stored in the All-Users git repo [1], but in references created after a UUID, in `refs/groups/UU/UUID`.
I ended up having a to exercise the plumbiest of plumbing commands [2] to create a new commit from scratch (from a tree, from the index, from blobs), to update the group ref to add myself to the Administrators group (this, of course, requires a local shell and permissions on the Gerrit host). It was a great way to exercise what I had learned in Git from the Bottom Up [3]
[1] https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/Documentation/config-...
[2] https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Internals-Git-Objects
[3] https://jwiegley.github.io/git-from-the-bottom-up/
- Setting up Huginn on Heroku
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Books for learning Git
I found Git from the Bottom Up helpful. It is very short as well. Then refer to the official book when you want more detail.
- Good git course and/or where to practice real life scenarios?
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the first time i had to deal with a huge git rebase conflict
I recently came across "Git from the Bottom Up by John Wiegley" (thanks to Coding Blocks podcast), he has a chapter about rebasing: https://jwiegley.github.io/git-from-the-bottom-up/1-Repository/7-branching-and-the-power-of-rebase.html
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Git-SIM: Visually simulate Git operations in your own repos with a single termi
You won't have to put your entire life on break in order to understand the fundamentals of git and why it works the way it works. Going through https://jwiegley.github.io/git-from-the-bottom-up/ and really understanding the material will take you a couple of hours at max, but will save you a lot of time in the future.
Wanting to understand things before using them is hardly elitism, not sure why you would think that.
Just like you probably don't want to fix bugs without understand the cause, it's hard to use a tool correctly unless you know how the tool works.
- What is the most efficient way of learning and comprehending Git?
What are some alternatives?
the-book-of-secret-knowledge - A collection of inspiring lists, manuals, cheatsheets, blogs, hacks, one-liners, cli/web tools and more.
lisp-koans - Common Lisp Koans is a language learning exercise in the same vein as the ruby koans, python koans and others. It is a port of the prior koans with some modifications to highlight lisp-specific features. Structured as ordered groups of broken unit tests, the project guides the learner progressively through many Common Lisp language features.
awesome-wasm - 😎 Curated list of awesome things regarding WebAssembly (wasm) ecosystem.
devdocs - API Documentation Browser
awesome-design-patterns - A curated list of software and architecture related design patterns.
mark-sweep - A simple mark-sweep garbage collector in C
git-cli-tools - Collection of CLI tools for Git.
git-appraise - Distributed code review system for Git repos
SafeGuard - SafeGuard is a minecraft bedrock anticheat add-on
git-fire - :fire: Save Your Code in an Emergency
awesome-scalability - The Patterns of Scalable, Reliable, and Performant Large-Scale Systems
emlop - EMerge LOg Parser