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Git Version Control Cookbook

You're reading from   Git Version Control Cookbook 90 hands-on recipes that will increase your productivity when using Git as a version control system

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782168454
Length 340 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Navigating Git FREE CHAPTER 2. Configuration 3. Branching, Merging, and Options 4. Rebase Regularly and Interactively, and Other Use Cases 5. Storing Additional Information in Your Repository 6. Extracting Data from the Repository 7. Enhancing Your Daily Work with Git Hooks, Aliases, and Scripts 8. Recovering from Mistakes 9. Repository Maintenance 10. Patching and Offline Sharing 11. Git Plumbing and Attributes 12. Tips and Tricks Index

Splitting a repository


Sometimes a project tracked with Git is not one logical project but several projects. This may be fully intentional and there is nothing wrong with it, but there can also be cases where the projects tracked in the same Git repository really should belong to two different repositories. You can imagine a project where the code base grows and at some point in time, one of the subprojects could have value as an independent project. This can be achieved by splitting the subfolders and/or files that contain the project that should have its own repository with the full history of commits touching the files and/or folders.

Getting ready

In this example, we'll use the JGit repository so we'll have some history to filter through. The subfolders we split out to are not really projects, but serve well as an example for this exercise.

  1. First, clone the Jgit repository and create local branches of the remote ones using the following command:

    git clone https://git.eclipse.org/r/jgit...
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