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Git: Mastering Version Control

You're reading from   Git: Mastering Version Control ...

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Product type Course
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781787123205
Length 861 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Ferdinando Santacroce Ferdinando Santacroce
Author Profile Icon Ferdinando Santacroce
Ferdinando Santacroce
Aske Olsson Aske Olsson
Author Profile Icon Aske Olsson
Aske Olsson
Jakub Narębski Jakub Narębski
Author Profile Icon Jakub Narębski
Jakub Narębski
Rasmus Voss Rasmus Voss
Author Profile Icon Rasmus Voss
Rasmus Voss
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Toc

Table of Contents (36) Chapters Close

Git: Mastering Version Control
Credits
Preface
1. Getting Started with Git FREE CHAPTER 2. Git Fundamentals – Working Locally 3. Git Fundamentals – Working Remotely 4. Git Fundamentals – Niche Concepts, Configurations, and Commands 5. Obtaining the Most – Good Commits and Workflows 6. Migrating to Git 7. Git Resources 8. Navigating Git 9. Configuration 10. Branching, Merging, and Options 11. Rebase Regularly and Interactively, and Other Use Cases 12. Storing Additional Information in Your Repository 13. Extracting Data from the Repository 14. Enhancing Your Daily Work with Git Hooks, Aliases, and Scripts 15. Recovering from Mistakes 16. Repository Maintenance 17. Patching and Offline Sharing 18. Git Plumbing and Attributes 19. Tips and Tricks 20. Git Basics in Practice 21. Exploring Project History 22. Developing with Git 23. Managing Your Worktree 24. Collaborative Development with Git 25. Advanced Branching Techniques 26. Merging Changes Together 27. Keeping History Clean 28. Managing Subprojects – Building a Living Framework 29. Customizing and Extending Git 30. Git Administration 31. Git Best Practices Bibliography
Index

Starting a project


When starting a project, you should choose and clearly define a project governance model (who manages work, who integrates changes, and who is responsible for what). You should decide about the license and the copyright of the code: whether it is work for hire, whether contributions would require a copyright assignment, a contributor agreement, or a contributor license agreement, or simply a digital certificate of origin.

Dividing work into repositories

In centralized version control systems, often everything under the sun is put under the same project tree. With distributed version control systems such as Git, it is better to split separate projects into separate repositories.

There should be one conceptual group per repository; divide it beforehand correctly. If some part of the code is needed by multiple separate projects, consider extracting it into its own project and then incorporating it as a submodule or subtree, grouping concepts into a superproject. See Chapter...

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