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For details on the branch structure see:  Branch Structure

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The initial clone (pulling down all the source code) can be done with an initial blank directory but requires the repositories csv located at the bottom of the page.

Terminology 

  • Commit: stores the current contents of the index in a new commit along with a log message from the user describing the changes
  • Branch: a pointer to a commit

  • Master: the default name for the first branch

  • HEAD: a pointer to the most recent commit on the current branch

  • Merge: joining two or more commit histories

  • Workspace: the colloquial name for your local copy of a Git repository

  • Working tree: the current branch in your workspace; you see this in git status output all the time

  • Cache: a space intended to temporarily store uncommitted changes

  • Index: the cache where changes are stored before they are committed

  • Tracked and untracked files: files either in the index cache or not yet added to it

  • Stash: another cache, that acts as a stack, where changes can be stored without committing them

  • Origin: the default name for a remote repository

  • Local repository: another term for where you keep your copy of a Git repository on your workstation

  • Remote repository: a secondary copy of a Git repository where you push changes for collaboration or backup

  • Upstream repository: the colloquial term for a remote repository that you track

  • Pull request: a GitHub-specific term to let others know about changes you've pushed to a branch in a repository

  • Merge request: a GitLab-specific term to let others know about changes you've pushed to a branch in a repository

  • 'origin/master': the default setting for a remote repository and its primary branch

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TaskCommandDescription
Get initial local copy of all codesg clone













sg branchList all of the branches in your repos.
sg checkout -b <branch>
Create and check out a new branch named <branch>. Drop the -b flag to checkout an existing branch.
git merge <branch>
Merge into the current branch.
git fetch <remote> <branch>
Fetches a specific <branch>, from the repo. Leave off <branch> to fetch all remote refs.
git push --all origin

git pull <remote>
Fetch the specified remote’s copy of current branch and immediately
merge it into the local copy.

Usage

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Usage

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Example

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