--- /dev/null
+## Chapter 2
+A tour of git: the basics
+
+### 2.0 Copyright
+
+This document is a modified version of a document originally titled
+"Distributed revision control with Mercurial" and originally authored
+by Bryan O’Sullivan. The original document was obtained from
+<http://hgbook.red-bean.com/>.
+
+Copyright © 2006, 2007 Bryan O’Sullivan.
+
+This material may be distributed only subject to the terms and
+conditions set forth in version 1.0 of the Open Publication
+License. Please refer to Appendix D for the license text.
+
+As this is a modified version, the name of Bryan O'Sullivan is used
+only to properly credit him with the original text. The appearance of
+his name here explicitly does not assert or imply his endorsement of
+this modified document.
+
+Portions Copyright © 2007 Carl Worth.
+
+Changes made by Carl include the following:
+
+ * 2007-09-27:
+ * Convert from HTML to markdown source syntax
+ * Eliminate all content except Chapter 2 and Appendix D
+ * Eliminate line numbers from examples
+ * Modified to describe git instead of mercurial
+
+The source of this modified version can be obtained via git:
+
+ git clone git://cworth.org/git/hgbook-git
+or git clone http://cworth.org/git/hgbook-git
+
+and can be browsed online:
+
+ http://git.cworth.org/git/hgbook-git
+
+### 2.1 Installing git on your system
+
+Prebuilt binary packages of git are available for many popular
+operating systems. These make it easy to start using git on your
+computer immediately.
+
+#### 2.1.1 Linux
+
+Because each Linux distribution has its own packaging tools, policies,
+and rate of development, it’s difficult to give a comprehensive set of
+instructions on how to install git binaries. The version of
+git that you will end up with can vary depending on how active
+the person is who maintains the package for your distribution.
+
+To keep things simple, I will focus on installing git from the
+command line under the most popular Linux distributions. Most of these
+distributions provide graphical package managers that will let you
+install git with a single click. The package name to look for is
+often git, but is sometimes git-core, (due to an unfortunate name
+with git, meaning GNU Interactive Tools).
+
+ * Debian
+
+ apt-get install git-core
+
+ * Fedora Core
+
+ yum install git
+
+ * Gentoo
+
+ emerge git
+
+ * OpenSUSE
+
+ yum install git
+
+ * Ubuntu
+
+ apt-get install git
+
+#### 2.1.2 Mac OS X
+
+A git-core package is available through
+[macports](http://macports.org). Once macports is enabled, the command
+to install git is:
+
+ port install git-core
+
+#### 2.1.3 Windows
+
+Git has long been available as part of cygwin, and works reasonably
+well in that environment. Some people find cygwin a particularly
+inelegant approach to running git and would prefer a "native"
+solution. To this end, the [msysgit
+project](http://code.google.com/p/msysgit/) is rapidly putting
+together a solution including various packages with full
+installers. These include GitMe, a package to install the entire
+development environment necessary to work on improving the msysgit
+port of git, and WinGit, a package for installing just git itself
+without the development environment, (still in Alpha as of September
+2008).
+
+### 2.2 Getting started
+
+To begin, we’ll use the “git version” command to find out whether git
+is actually installed properly. Versions 1.5 and newer of git are much
+more friendly to new users than versions 1.4 and older. If you aren't
+yet running version 1.5 or newer, it's highly recommended that you
+upgrade.
+
+ $ git version
+ git version 1.5.3.2
+
+#### 2.2.1 Built-in help
+
+Git provides a built-in help system. This is invaluable for those
+times when you find yourself stuck trying to remember how to run a
+command. If you are completely stuck, simply run “git help”; it will
+print a brief list of commonly-used commands, along with a description
+of what each does. If you ask for help on a specific command (such as
+"git help init"), it prints more detailed information. [XXX: Does "git
+help <foo>" work universally as a built-in or does it expect man to be
+present and just call out to "man git-<foo>"?]
+
+ [XXX: The original hgbook includes the complete output of "hg
+ help init" at this point. I'm not including the corresponding
+ "git help init" output as it would be excessively long. The
+ description alone is quite reasonable, (other than a
+ not-too-helpful aside about the obsolete git-init-db command),
+ but it only comes after a full screen's worth of options
+ details. Might it make sense to have a more summarized help
+ output for "git help <foo>" than all of the documentation
+ available for git-<foo>? And perhaps alos provide a "git -v
+ help" similar to "hg -v help" for more?]
+
+### 2.3 Working with a repository
+
+In git, everything happens inside a repository. The repository
+for a project contains all of the files that “belong to” that project,
+along with a historical record of the project’s files.
+
+There’s nothing particularly magical about a repository; it is simply
+a directory tree in your filesystem that git treats as
+special. You can rename or delete a repository any time you like,
+using either the command line or your file browser.
+
+#### 2.3.1 Making a local copy of a repository
+
+Copying a repository is just a little bit special. While you could use
+a normal file copying command to make a copy of a repository, it’s
+best to use a built-in command that git provides. This command
+is called “git clone”, because it creates an identical copy of an
+existing repository.
+
+ $ git clone git://cworth.org/git/hello
+ Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/hello/.git/
+ remote: Generating pack...
+ remote: Done counting 15 objects.
+ remote: Deltifying 15 objects...
+ remote: 100% (15/15) done
+ remote: Total 15 (delta 2), reused 15 (delta remote: 2)
+ Indexing 15 objects...
+ 100% (15/15) done
+ Resolving 2 deltas...
+ 100% (2/2) done
+
+If for some reason you are prevented from talking on the git: port,
+then there is also the capability to clone a repository (less
+efficiently) over http:
+
+ $ git clone http://cworth.org/git/hello
+ Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/hello/.git/
+ Getting alternates list for http://cworth.org/git/hello
+ Getting pack list for http://cworth.org/git/hello
+ Getting index for pack 04ecb061314ecbd60fa0610ecf55a1cbf85ea294
+ Getting pack 04ecb061314ecbd60fa0610ecf55a1cbf85ea294
+ which contains a1a0e8b392b17caf50325498df54802fe3c03710
+ walk a1a0e8b392b17caf50325498df54802fe3c03710
+ walk 72d4f10e4a27dbb09ace1503c20dbac1912ee451
+ walk 13ed136b983a9c439eddeea8a1c2076cffbb685f
+ walk 0a633bf58b45fcf1a8299d3c82cd1fd26d3f48f2
+ walk db7117a9dd9a6e57e8632ea5848e1101eee0fbde
+
+If our clone succeeded, we should now have a local directory called
+hello. This directory will contain some files.
+
+ $ ls -l
+ total 4
+ drwxr-xr-x 3 cworth cworth 4096 2007-09-27 16:40 hello
+ $ ls hello
+ hello.c Makefile
+
+These files have the same contents and history in our repository as
+they do in the repository we cloned.
+
+Every git repository is complete, self-contained, and
+independent. It contains its own private copy of a project’s files and
+history. A cloned repository remembers the location of the repository
+it was cloned from, but it does not communicate with that repository,
+or any other, unless you tell it to.
+
+What this means for now is that we’re free to experiment with our
+repository, safe in the knowledge that it’s a private “sandbox” that
+won’t affect anyone else.
+
+#### 2.3.2 What’s in a repository?
+
+When we take a more detailed look inside a repository, we can see that
+it contains a directory named .git. This is where git keeps all
+of its metadata for the repository.
+
+ $ cd hello
+ $ ls -a
+ . .. .git hello.c Makefile
+
+The contents of the .git directory and its subdirectories are private
+to git. Every other file and directory in the repository is
+yours to do with as you please.
+
+To introduce a little terminology, the .git directory is the “real”
+repository, and all of the files and directories that coexist with it
+are said to live in the working directory. An easy way to remember the
+distinction is that the repository contains the history of your
+project, while the working directory contains a snapshot of your
+project at a particular point in history.
+
+### 2.4 A tour through history
+
+One of the first things we might want to do with a new, unfamiliar
+repository is understand its history. The “git log” command gives us a
+view of history.
+
+ $ git log
+ commit a1a0e8b392b17caf50325498df54802fe3c03710
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 15:43:07 2005 -0700
+
+ Trim comments.
+
+ commit 72d4f10e4a27dbb09ace1503c20dbac1912ee451
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:58 2005 -0700
+
+ Get make to generate the final binary from a .o file.
+
+ commit 13ed136b983a9c439eddeea8a1c2076cffbb685f
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:43 2005 -0700
+
+ Introduce a typo into hello.c.
+
+ commit 0a633bf58b45fcf1a8299d3c82cd1fd26d3f48f2
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <mpm@selenic.com>
+ Date: Fri Aug 26 01:21:28 2005 -0700
+
+ Create a makefile
+
+ commit db7117a9dd9a6e57e8632ea5848e1101eee0fbde
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <mpm@selenic.com>
+ Date: Fri Aug 26 01:20:50 2005 -0700
+
+ Create a standard "hello, world" program
+
+By default, this command prints a brief paragraph of output for each
+change to the project that was recorded. In git terminology, we
+call each of these recorded events a commit.
+
+The fields in a record of output from “git log” are as follows.
+
+ * commit This field consists of a string of 40 hexadecimal characters.
+ This is a unique identifier for referring to particular commits.
+ * Author The identity of the person who authored the commit. This
+ field consist of two sub-fields for the user's name and email
+ address, (or at least an email-like idenitifer). Note that git
+ stores a separate "Committer" field for the person who commited
+ the change, (since often an author will email a change to a
+ maintainer that commits it). The "git log" command doesn't display
+ the Committer, but other git tools do.
+ * Date The date and time on which the commit was authored, (again
+ stored separately from the date the change was committed).
+ timezone in which it was created. (The date and time are displayed
+ in the timezone of the person who created the commit.)
+ * commit message The text message that the creator of the commit
+ entered to describe the commit, (generally a one-line summary
+ followed by more supporting text).
+
+The default output printed by “git log” is purely a summary; it is
+missing a lot of detail.
+
+#### 2.4.1 Commits, revisions, and talking to other people
+
+As English is a notoriously sloppy language, and computer science has
+a hallowed history of terminological confusion (why use one term when
+four will do?), revision control has a variety of words and phrases
+that mean the same thing. If you are talking about git history
+with other people, you will find that what we have called a “commit”
+is often called a "revision". In other systems, a similar notion
+is referred to as a "changeset". You might even see abbreviations of
+these terms such as "rev", "change", or even "cset".
+
+While it may not matter much what word you use to refer to the concept
+of “a commit”, it's important to know how to name “a specific
+commit”. We have already seen one means of referring to a particular
+commit, the 40-character hexadecimal string shown by "git log". These
+commit identifiers are powerful because they are permanent, unique
+identifiers that always identify the same commit in any copy of a
+repository. If two users are examining a working directory associated
+with the same commit identifier, then those two users have precisely
+the same contents in all files, and exactly the same history leading
+to that commit.
+
+So there are places where it is often important to archive the
+complete commit identifier, (perhaps in bug-tracking systems to
+indicate a specific commit that fixes a bug, for example). But often,
+in more casual settings, it's more convenient to use abbreviated
+commit identifiers. Git accept any unique prefix of a commit
+identifier, (and for reasonably-sized project the first 8 or 10
+characters are almost always unique).
+
+And unlike the permanent commit identifiers, git also provides
+transient means of identifying commits. In fact, in day-to-day use of
+git, you will probably use these names more than commit
+identifiers. One example is branch names, (such as the default
+"master" branch in any git repository), or any project-specific branch
+names such as "stable", "experimental", or "crazy-insane-changes". Git
+also provides a special name "HEAD" which always refers to the current
+branch.
+
+#### 2.4.2 Naming related commits
+
+Git offers simple ways to name revisions that are related to
+particular revisions in the history. One syntax is the ~ suffix which
+refers to the parent of a commit, or if followed by a number, to the
+Nth parent. For example, since "HEAD" refers to the most recent commit
+in the current branch, "HEAD~", refers to the previous commit, and
+"HEAD~2" refers to two commits back in the history.
+
+Another useful syntax is .. which can be used to specify a range of
+commits. So "origin..master" specifies everything that has been
+committed to master since it derived from origin.
+
+#### 2.4.3 Viewing specific revisions
+
+You can use "git log" to explore the range syntax just introduced. For
+example, to see a list of the most recent 3 revisions you can use
+"HEAD~3..", (the destination of the range is implicitly HEAD in this
+case):
+
+ $ git log HEAD~3..
+ commit a1a0e8b392b17caf50325498df54802fe3c03710
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 15:43:07 2005 -0700
+
+ Trim comments.
+
+ commit 72d4f10e4a27dbb09ace1503c20dbac1912ee451
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:58 2005 -0700
+
+ Get make to generate the final binary from a .o file.
+
+ commit 13ed136b983a9c439eddeea8a1c2076cffbb685f
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:43 2005 -0700
+
+ Introduce a typo into hello.c.
+
+#### 2.4.4 Other log filters
+
+Besides filtering by commit identifiers, git allows you to easily
+filter the log output according to which files (or directories) are
+modified by listing them after "--" wihch is necessary to distinguish
+commit names from file names:
+
+ $ git log -- Makefile
+ commit 72d4f10e4a27dbb09ace1503c20dbac1912ee451
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:58 2005 -0700
+
+ Get make to generate the final binary from a .o file.
+
+ commit 0a633bf58b45fcf1a8299d3c82cd1fd26d3f48f2
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <mpm@selenic.com>
+ Date: Fri Aug 26 01:21:28 2005 -0700
+
+ Create a makefile
+
+And "git log" can also filter based on the dates at which commits were
+created:
+
+ $ git log --since="2 weeks ago" --until="yesterday"
+
+Another useful option is -n or --max-count which, unsurprisingly,
+limits the maximum number of commits to be displayed.
+
+#### 2.4.3 More detailed information
+
+While the default information printed by “git log” is useful if you
+already know what you’re looking for, you may need to see more details
+of the change, such as the "diffstat" information with --stat:
+
+ $ git log --stat --max-count=3
+ commit a1a0e8b392b17caf50325498df54802fe3c03710
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 15:43:07 2005 -0700
+
+ Trim comments.
+
+ hello.c | 8 ++------
+ 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
+
+ commit 72d4f10e4a27dbb09ace1503c20dbac1912ee451
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:58 2005 -0700
+
+ Get make to generate the final binary from a .o file.
+
+ Makefile | 2 ++
+ 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
+
+ commit 13ed136b983a9c439eddeea8a1c2076cffbb685f
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:43 2005 -0700
+
+ Introduce a typo into hello.c.
+
+ hello.c | 2 +-
+ 1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
+
+Or perhaps you'd like to see the actual patch content of each change,
+which you can get with -p. That commit with the word typo in its name
+looks suspicous, so let's tak a closer look. Remember that we can name
+it as master~3, HEAD~3, or any prefix of its commit identifier, (such
+as 13ed136b):
+
+ $ git log -p -n 1 13ed136b
+ commit 13ed136b983a9c439eddeea8a1c2076cffbb685f
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:43 2005 -0700
+
+ Introduce a typo into hello.c.
+
+ diff --git a/hello.c b/hello.c
+ index ed55ec0..80b260c 100644
+ --- a/hello.c
+ +++ b/hello.c
+ @@ -11,6 +11,6 @@
+
+ int main(int argc, char **argv)
+ {
+ - printf("hello, world!\n");
+ + printf("hello, world!\");
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+Of course, wanting to see all this information for a single commit is
+such a common operation that it's given its own name in git, "git
+show". So "git show 13ed136b" is a much easier way to get exactly the
+same output:
+
+ $ git show 13ed136b
+ commit 13ed136b983a9c439eddeea8a1c2076cffbb685f
+ Author: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
+ Date: Tue Sep 6 13:15:43 2005 -0700
+
+ Introduce a typo into hello.c.
+
+ diff --git a/hello.c b/hello.c
+ index ed55ec0..80b260c 100644
+ --- a/hello.c
+ +++ b/hello.c
+ @@ -11,6 +11,6 @@
+
+ int main(int argc, char **argv)
+ {
+ - printf("hello, world!\n");
+ + printf("hello, world!\");
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+### 2.5 All about command options
+
+Let’s take a brief break from exploring git commands to discuss
+a pattern in the way that they work; you may find this useful to keep
+in mind as we continue our tour.
+
+Git has a consistent and straightforward approach to dealing
+with the options that you can pass to commands. It follows the
+conventions for options that are common to modern Linux and Unix
+systems.
+
+ * Most options have long names. For example, as we’ve already seen,
+ the “git log" command accepts a --max-count=<number> option.
+ * Some options have short, single-character names. Often these are
+ aliases for long commands, (such as "-n <number>" instead of
+ --max-count=<number>), but sometimes the option exists in
+ short-form with no long-form equivalent, (such as -p). [XXX: It
+ wouldn't hurt to fix this by adding --patch, etc. right?]
+ * Long options start with two dashes (e.g. --max-count), while short
+ options start with one (e.g. -n).
+
+ * Option naming and usage is consistent across commands. For
+ example, every command that lets you specify a commit identifier
+ or range will accept the same expressions, (HEAD~3,
+ origin..master, 72d4f10e, etc), while any command that can be
+ limited by paths will accept the same expressions ("-- doc/
+ some-file.c"), etc.
+
+Many commands that print output of some kind can be made more quiet by
+passing the -q or --quiet options.
+
+### 2.6 Making and reviewing changes
+
+Now that we have a grasp of viewing history in git, let’s take a
+look at making some changes and examining them.
+
+The first thing we’ll do is isolate our experiment in a repository of
+its own. We use the “git clone” command, but we don’t need to clone a
+copy of the remote repository. Since we already have a copy of it
+locally, we can just clone that instead. This is much faster than
+cloning over the network, and cloning a local repository uses less
+disk space in most cases, too.
+
+ $ cd ..
+ $ git clone hello my-hello
+ Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/my-hello/.git/
+ 0 blocks
+
+ [XXX We say "empty" here, (presumably from the git-init part),
+ but shouldn't the command also report the succesful clone
+ which makes it non-empty? And what the heck does "0 blocks"
+ mean?]
+
+As an aside, it’s often good practice to keep a “pristine” copy of a
+remote repository around, which you can then make temporary clones of
+to create sandboxes for each task you want to work on. This lets you
+work on multiple tasks in parallel, each isolated from the others
+until it’s complete and you’re ready to integrate it back. Because
+local clones are so cheap, there’s almost no overhead to cloning and
+destroying repositories whenever you want.
+
+Alternatively, you can achieve much the same effect by creating
+multiple branches in a single repository, (but we won't go into detail
+on how to do that in this chapter). Some people greatly appreciate
+having multiple branches in a single repository rather than having
+many repositories cluttering up their filesystem. Other people prefer
+the ability to have working-tree changes, and intermediate build
+files, etc. each isolated in a separate repository per branch. Both
+modes are very well-supported by git, so it's really a matter of which
+you find most appropriate at any time given your tastes and project
+workflows.
+
+In our my-hello repository, we have a file hello.c that contains the
+classic “hello, world” program. Let’s use the ancient and venerable
+sed command to edit this file so that it prints a second line of
+output. (I’m only using sed to do this because it’s easy to write a
+scripted example this way. Since you’re not under the same constraint,
+you probably won’t want to use sed; simply use your preferred text
+editor to do the same thing.)
+
+ $ sed -i '/printf/a\\tprintf("hello again!\\n");' hello.c
+
+The “git status” command will tell us what git knows about the files
+in the repository.
+
+ $ ls
+ hello.c Makefile
+ $ git status
+ # On branch master
+ # Changed but not updated:
+ # (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
+ #
+ # modified: hello.c
+ #
+ no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
+
+We see that “git status” command prints a line with "modified" for
+hello.c. The “git status” command will not print any output for files
+that have not been modified.
+
+Notice that we didn’t need to inform git that we were going to modify
+the file before we started, or that we had modified the file after we
+were done; it was able to figure this out itself.
+
+It’s a little bit helpful to know that we’ve modified hello.c, but we
+might prefer to know exactly what changes we’ve made to it. To do
+this, we use the “git diff” command.
+
+ $ git diff
+ diff --git a/hello.c b/hello.c
+ index 9a3ff79..6d28887 100644
+ --- a/hello.c
+ +++ b/hello.c
+ @@ -8,5 +8,6 @@
+ int main(int argc, char **argv)
+ {
+ printf("hello, world!\");
+ + printf("hello again!\n");
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+### 2.7 Recording changes in a new commit
+
+We can modify files, build and test our changes, and use “git status”
+and “git diff” to review our changes, until we’re satisfied with what
+we’ve done and arrive at a natural stopping point where we want to
+record our work in a new commit.
+
+The “git commit” command lets us create a new changeset; we’ll usually
+refer to this as “making a commit” or “committing”.
+
+#### 2.7.1 Setting up a username
+
+When you try to run “git commit” for the first time, it might not do
+exactly what you want. Git records your name and address with each
+change that you commit, (as both author and committer unless you tell
+it otherwise), so that you and others will later be able to tell who
+made each change. Git tries to automatically figure out a sensible
+name and address to attribute to both author and committer. It will
+attempt each of the following methods, in order, (stopping for each field as soon as a value is found):
+
+ 1. If you specify a --author option to the “git commit” command on
+ the command line, followed by a "Real Name <email@example.com>"
+ string, then this name and addresss will be used for the author
+ fields. The committer fields will still be determined as
+ below. This option is very helpful for when applying a commit
+ originally authored by someone other than yourself.
+ 2. If any of the GIT_AUTHOR_NAME, GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL,
+ GIT_COMMITTER_NAME, or GIT_COMMITER_EMAIL environment variables
+ are set, then those values will be used for the corresponding
+ fields.
+ 3. If you have a file in your home directory called .gitconfig, with
+ name or email settings in the [user] section, then these values
+ will be used to set any remaining author and committer
+ fields. For more details on the contents of this file, refer to
+ section 2.7.1 below.
+ 4. If you have a file in the local repository called .git/config,
+ again with name or email settings in the [user] section, then
+ these values will be used to set any remaining author and
+ committer fields.
+ 5. If you have set the EMAIL environment variable, this will be used
+ to set author and committer email addresses if still unset.
+ 6. git will query your system to find out your real name from
+ available GECOS field and your username, hostname, and domain to
+ construct an email address, (or at least an identifier resembling
+ an email address).
+
+If all of these mechanisms fail, "git commit" will fail, printing an
+error message instructing you how to use "git config" to tell git your
+name and email address.
+
+You should think of the GIT_AUTHOR/COMMITER_NAME/EMAIL environment
+variables and the --author option to the “git commit” command as ways
+to override git’s default selection. For normal use, the simplest and
+most robust way to set your information is by creating a .gitconfig
+file, (either manually or with the "git config" command); see below
+for details.
+
+##### Creating a git configuration file
+
+To set your name and email address, just use the following commands:
+
+ git config --global user.name "Your Name"
+ git config --global user.email "you@example.com"
+
+The --global option means that this command will set global
+information, (affecting all repositories on this machine), in the
+.gitconfig file in your home directory. Alternately, you could omit
+the --global which would make the change take effect only in the local
+repository. This is convenient if you want to have different email
+addresses associated with different projects, for example.
+
+Of course, git's configuration file is a simple-to-edit plain-text
+file, so instead of using the above commands, you can also just edit
+the files directly. Use your favorite editor to create a file called
+.gitconfig in your home directory, (or if you ran the above commands
+then it will be there already). The initial contents of your
+.gitconfig should look like this.
+
+ # This is a git configuration file.
+ [user]
+ name = Your Name
+ email = you@example.com
+
+Similarly, you can make a repository-specific configuration by editing
+.git/config in the local repository. It will already have some
+sections present, (created by the "git clone"), just add a [user]
+section as above.
+
+The “[user]” line begins a section of the config file, so you can read
+the “name = ...” line as meaning “set the value of the name item in
+the user section”. This is the same notion expressed with the
+"user.name" syntax on the git-config command line. A section
+continues until a new section begins, or the end of the file. Git
+ignores empty lines and treats any text from “#” to the end of a line
+as a comment.
+
+##### Choosing a user name
+
+You can use any text you like as the value of the name and email
+configuration items, since this information is for reading by other
+people, not for interpreting by git. It is conventional to use a valid
+email address, but some, (notably Linus Torvalds, the original author
+of git), actually like the default user@hostname convention that git
+falls back on without any additional information. There's no
+requirement that the email address actually be valid, and perhaps it's
+useful to be reminded which machine was used to create particular
+commits.
+
+#### 2.7.2 Writing a commit message
+
+When we commit a change, git drops us into a text editor to
+enter a message that will describe the modifications we’ve made in
+this commit. This is called the commit message. It will be a record
+for readers of what we did and why, and it will be printed by “git log”
+after we’ve finished committing.
+
+ $ git commit -a
+
+Note: The -a on the command-line instructs git to commit all changes
+to tracked files. Without this, "git commit" will only commit changes
+that have been previously staged for committing with "git add
+file". The most common usage is to commit with "git commit -a" and
+only use "git add file; git commit" when there is a need to commit
+only some subset of changes that have been made.
+
+The editor that the “git commit” command drops us into will contain an
+empty line, followed by a number of lines starting with “#”.
+
+ empty line
+ # Please enter the commit message for your changes.
+ # (Comment lines starting with '#' will not be included)
+ # On branch master
+ # Changes to be committed:
+ # (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
+ #
+ # modified: hello.c
+ #
+
+git ignores the lines that start with “#”; it uses them only
+to tell us which files it’s recording changes to. Modifying or
+deleting these lines has no effect.
+
+#### 2.7.3 Writing a good commit message
+
+A good commit message will generally have a single line that
+summarizes the commit, a blank line, and then one or more pargraphs
+with supporting detail. Since many tools only print the first line of
+a commit message by default, it’s important that the first line stands
+alone.
+
+One example of a first-line-only viewer is "git log
+--pretty=short". Other examples include graphical history viewers such
+as gitk and gitview, and web-based viewers such as gitweb and cgit.
+
+Here’s a real example of a commit message that doesn’t follow
+this guideline, and hence has a summary that is not readable.
+
+ $ git log --pretty=short
+ commit 3ef5535144da88a854f7930503845cd44506c2e2
+ Author: Censored Person <censored.person@example.org>
+
+ include buildmeister/commondefs. Add an exports and install
+
+As far as the remainder of the contents of the commit message are
+concerned, there are no hard-and-fast rules. git itself doesn’t
+interpret or care about the contents of the commit message, though
+your project may have policies that dictate a certain kind of
+formatting.
+
+My personal preference is for short, but informative, commit messages
+that tell me something that I can’t figure out with a quick glance at
+the output of “git log -p".
+
+#### 2.7.4 Aborting a commit
+
+If you decide that you don’t want to commit while in the middle of
+editing a commit message, simply exit from your editor without saving
+the file that it’s editing. This will cause nothing to happen to
+either the repository or the working directory.
+
+#### 2.7.5 Admiring our new handiwork
+
+Once we’ve finished the commit, we can use the “git show” command to
+display the commit we just created. As discussed previously, this
+command produces output that is identical to “git log -p”, but for
+only a single revision, (and the most recent revision by default):
+
+ $ git show
+ commit 018cfb742be6176443ffddac454e593e802ddf3e
+ Author: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
+ Date: Thu Sep 27 23:55:00 2007 -0700
+
+ Added an extra line of output.
+
+ If I would have been clever I would have fixed that old typo
+ while I was at it...
+
+ diff --git a/hello.c b/hello.c
+ index 9a3ff79..6d28887 100644
+ --- a/hello.c
+ +++ b/hello.c
+ @@ -8,5 +8,6 @@
+ int main(int argc, char **argv)
+ {
+ printf("hello, world!\");
+ + printf("hello again!\n");
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+Note that you will not see the same commit identifier for your commit,
+even if the change you made is identical to mine. The commit
+identifier incorporates not only the contents of the files, but commit
+message, the author and committer names and emails, and the author and
+commit dates. (OK, so now you probably know enough to be able to guess
+the right command to produce a commit with exactly the commit
+identifier shown above. Can you do it?)
+
+#### 2.7.6 Fixing up a broken commit (before anyone else sees it)
+
+So now that we've cloned a local repository, made a change to the
+code, setup our name and email address, and made a commit with a
+careful message, we're just about ready to share our change with the
+world. But wait, we forgot to try to compile it didn't we?
+
+ $ make
+ cc -c -o hello.o hello.c
+ hello.c:10:9: warning: missing terminating " character
+ hello.c:10:9: warning: missing terminating " character
+ hello.c: In function ‘main’:
+ hello.c:10: error: missing terminating " character
+ hello.c:11: error: expected ‘)’ before ‘;’ token
+ hello.c:13: warning: passing argument 1 of ‘printf’ makes pointer from integer without a cast
+ hello.c:13: error: expected ‘;’ before ‘}’ token
+ make: *** [hello.o] Error 1
+
+Oh look. The code's broken and doesn't compile. We don't want to share
+code in this state. For situations where you notice one tiny detail
+that got left out of the last commit, (a silly syntax error, a
+misspelling in a comment or commit messsage), git provides a very
+handy tool for just changing the last commit.
+
+So fix that typo, (a missing 'n' between the '\' and the '"'), with
+your editor or with something like this:
+
+ sed -i 's/\\"/\\n"/' hello.c
+
+And then you can just amend the previous commit rather than creating a
+new one with the --amend option to "git commit":
+
+ $ git commit -a --amend
+
+Note that we use -a to include the code change here. And that helps
+point out a situation where "git commit" is useful without the -a
+option, "git commit --amend" is a useful command for amend just the
+last commit message, without committing any new code changes, even if
+some files have been modified in the working tree.
+
+And here's the final result:
+
+ $ git show
+ commit 839b58d021c618bd0e1d336d4d5878a0082672e6
+ Author: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
+ Date: Thu Sep 27 23:55:00 2007 -0700
+
+ Added an extra line of output and fixed the typo bug.
+
+ diff --git a/hello.c b/hello.c
+ index 9a3ff79..ca750e0 100644
+ --- a/hello.c
+ +++ b/hello.c
+ @@ -7,6 +7,7 @@
+
+ int main(int argc, char **argv)
+ {
+ - printf("hello, world!\");
+ + printf("hello, world!\n");
+ + printf("hello again!\n");
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+I can't help but point out that this really was a poor example for
+--amend. The end result is a single commit that does two independent
+things, (fixes one bug and adds one new feature). It's much better to
+create a code history where each commit makes an independent change,
+(and as small as possible). This is important for several reasons:
+
+ * Small changes are easier to review
+
+ * Independent changes are easier to split up if only part of the
+ series gets accepted "upstream" for one reason or another.
+
+ * The smaller the changes are the more useful the history will be
+ when actually using the history, not just viewing it. This is
+ particularly important when doing "git bisect"---that's a powerful
+ tool for isolating the single commit that introduces a bug. And
+ it's much more powerful if the commit it isolates is as small as
+ possible.
+
+So it's a good thing this document is available under a license that
+allows for distribution of modified versions. Someone should clean up
+the --amend example to not teach bad habits like I did above. [Note:
+All this bad-habit stuff was introduced by me, and was not present in
+Bryan's original chapter. -Carl]
+
+### 2.8 Sharing changes
+
+We mentioned earlier that repositories in git are
+self-contained. This means that the commit we just created exists
+only in our my-hello repository. Let’s look at a few ways that we can
+propagate this change into other repositories.
+
+#### 2.8.1 Pulling changes from another repository
+
+To get started, let’s clone our original hello repository, which does
+not contain the change we just committed. We’ll call our temporary
+repository hello-pull.
+
+ $ cd ..
+ $ git clone hello hello-pull
+ Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/hello-pull/.git/
+ 0 blocks
+
+We could use the “git pull” command to apply changes from my-hello to
+our master branch in hello-pull. However, blindly pulling unknown
+changes into a repository is a somewhat scary prospect. The "git pull"
+command is coneptually the combination of two commands, "git fetch"
+and "git merge"; we can run those separately to examine the changes
+before applying them locally. First we do the fetch:
+
+ $ cd hello-pull
+ $ git fetch ../my-hello
+ remote: Generating pack...
+ Unpacking 3 objects...
+ 100% (3/3) done
+ remote: Done counting 5 objects.
+ Result has 3 objects.
+ Deltifying 3 objects...
+ 100% remote: (3/3) done
+ Total 3 (delta 1), reused 0 (delta 0)
+
+The fetched commits (or commit in this case) are available as the name
+FETCH_HEAD. [XXX: Shouldn't git-fetch print that name out to the user
+if the user didn't provide a specific branch name to fetch into.] And
+the difference between what we had before and what exists on
+FETCH_HEAD can easily be examined with the ..FETCH_HEAD range
+notation:
+
+ $ git log ..FETCH_HEAD
+ commit 839b58d021c618bd0e1d336d4d5878a0082672e6
+ Author: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
+ Date: Thu Sep 27 23:55:00 2007 -0700
+
+ Added an extra line of output and fixed the typo bug.
+
+Since these commits actually exist in the local repository now, we
+don't need to fetch or pull them from the remote repository again---we
+can now use "git merge" to apply the previously fetched commits. (A
+mercurial user might notice here that git does not have the race
+condition between "hg incoming" and "hg pull" that mercurial has since
+the commits are fetched only once.)
+
+ $ git merge FETCH_HEAD
+ Updating a1a0e8b..839b58d
+ Fast forward
+ hello.c | 3 ++-
+ 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
+
+Notice that "git merge" reports that our branch pointer has been
+updated from a1a0e8b to 839b58d. Also, this is a "fast forward"
+meaning that the new commits are a linear sequence on top of the
+commit we already hand. In other words, there wasn't any divergence
+between these two repositories so no actual "merge" commit was
+created.
+
+This separation of fetch and merge is useful when you need to
+carefully review some changes before applying them. But often you're
+in a situation where you know you trust the remote repository and you
+simply want to pull those changes as conveniently as possible, (no
+extra commands, no typing a magic name like FETCH_HEAD). This is the
+case when the tracking upstream development of a project with git. And
+in that case, the above steps are as simple as just executing "git
+pull". So let's repeat all that the simpler way:
+
+ $ cd ..
+ $ git clone hello hello-tracking
+ Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/hello-tracking/.git/
+ 0 blocks
+ $ cd hello-tracking
+ $ git pull ../my-hello
+ remote: Generating pack...
+ remote: Done counting 5 objects.
+ Result has 3 objects.
+ Deltifying 3 objects...
+ Unpacking 3 objects...
+ remote: 100% (3/3) done
+ Total 3 (delta 1), reused 0 (delta 0)
+ 100% (3/3) done
+ Updating a1a0e8b..839b58d
+ Fast forward
+ hello.c | 3 ++-
+ 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
+
+It should be plain to see that the "git pull" command really did the
+combined sequence of "git fetch" and "git merge". Also, if you want to
+pull from the same repository you cloned from originally, (which is
+the common case for the upstream-tracking scenario), then "git pull"
+with no explicit repository is suffcient, and it will default to
+pulling from the same repository as the original clone.
+
+[XXX: The structure of the preceding section follows that of the
+original hgbook. But an alternate structure that arranged to pull from
+the originally cloned repository (as would be common) would allow for
+more straightforward use of git's features. For example, instead of
+the silly FETCH_HEAD stuff it would allow for "git fetch" and "git log
+master..origin" to be a very nice replacement for "hg
+incoming". Similarly, below, "git log origin..master" would make a
+nice replacement for "hg outgoing" which is something I didn't offer
+at all. One could also use git's remotes with the myriad repositories
+as used here, but it would require doing things like "git remote add
+<some-name> ../hello-pull" and that seems like a bit much to introduce
+for a turorial of this level. If nothing else, if the above section
+seems a little intimidating, understand that it's because things are
+not presented in the most natural "git way", (and I'm a little too
+tired to fix it tonight).]
+
+#### 2.8.2 Checking out previous revisions
+
+If any users of mercurial are reading this, they might wonder if
+there's a need for the equivalent of "hg update" after doing a "git
+pull". And the answer is no. Unlike mercurial, "git pull" and "git
+merge" will automatically update the workind-directory files as
+necessary.
+
+But there's another function provided by "hg update" which is to
+update the working-directory files to a particular revision. In git,
+this functionality is provided by the "git checkout" command. To
+checkout a particular branch, tag, or an arbitrary revions, simply
+give the appropriate name to the "git checkout" command. For example,
+to examine the files as they existed before the original typo
+introduction, we could do:
+
+ $ git checkout 0a633bf5
+ Note: moving to "0a633bf5" which isn't a local branch
+ If you want to create a new branch from this checkout, you may do so
+ (now or later) by using -b with the checkout command again. Example:
+ git checkout -b <new_branch_name>
+ HEAD is now at 0a633bf... Create a makefile
+
+The note that git gives us is to indicate that we are checking out a
+non-branch revision. This is perfectly fine if we are just exploring
+history, but if we actually wanted to use this revision as the basis
+for new commits, we would first have to create a new branch name as it
+describes.
+
+For now, let's return back to the tip of the master branch by just
+checking it out again:
+
+ $ git checkout master
+ Previous HEAD position was 0a633bf... Create a makefile
+ Switched to branch "master"
+
+#### 2.8.3 Pushing changes to another repository
+
+Git lets us push changes to another repository, from the repository
+we’re currently visiting. As with previous examples, above, we’ll
+first create a temporary repository to push our changes into. But
+instead of using "git clone", this time we'll use "git init" to make a
+repository from an empty directory. We do this to create a "bare"
+repository which is simply a repository that has no working-directory
+files associated with it. In general, you should only push to bare
+repositories.
+
+ $ cd ..
+ $ mkdir hello-push
+ $ cd hello-push
+ $ git --bare init
+ Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/hello-push/
+
+And then we'll go back to our my-hello repository to perform the
+push. Since this is our very first push into this repository we need
+to tell git which branches to push. The easiest way to do this is to
+use --all to indicate all branches:
+
+ $ cd ../my-hello
+ $ git push ../hello-push --all
+ updating 'refs/heads/master'
+ from 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
+ to 839b58d021c618bd0e1d336d4d5878a0082672e6
+ Generating pack...
+ Done counting 18 objects.
+ Deltifying 18 objects...
+ 100% (18/18) done
+ Writing 18 objects...
+ 100% (18/18) done
+ Total 18 (delta 3), reused 0 (delta 0)
+ Unpacking 18 objects...
+ 100% (18/18) done
+ refs/heads/master: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 -> 839b58d021c618bd0e1d336d4d5878a0082672e6
+
+For subsequent pushes we don't need to specify --all as "git push"
+will push all branches that exist in both the local and remote
+repositories.
+
+What happens if we try to pull or push changes and the receiving
+repository already has those changes? Nothing too exciting.
+
+ $ git push ../hello-push
+ Everything up-to-date
+
+#### 2.8.4 Sharing changes over a network
+
+The commands we have covered in the previous few sections are not
+limited to working with local repositories. Each works in exactly the
+same fashion over a network connection; simply pass in a URL or an ssh
+host:/path/name specification instead of a local path.
+
+## Appendix D
+Open Publication License
+
+Version 1.0, 8 June 1999
+
+### D.1 Requirements on both unmodified and modified versions
+
+The Open Publication works may be reproduced and distributed in whole
+or in part, in any medium physical or electronic, provided that the
+terms of this license are adhered to, and that this license or an
+incorporation of it by reference (with any options elected by the
+author(s) and/or publisher) is displayed in the reproduction.
+
+Proper form for an incorporation by reference is as follows:
+
+Copyright (c) year by author’s name or designee. This material may be
+distributed only subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the
+Open Publication License, vx.y or later (the latest version is
+presently available at
+[http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/][http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/]).
+
+The reference must be immediately followed with any options elected by
+the author(s) and/or publisher of the document (see section D.6).
+
+Commercial redistribution of Open Publication-licensed material is
+permitted.
+
+Any publication in standard (paper) book form shall require the
+citation of the original publisher and author. The publisher and
+author’s names shall appear on all outer surfaces of the book. On all
+outer surfaces of the book the original publisher’s name shall be as
+large as the title of the work and cited as possessive with respect to
+the title.
+
+### D.2 Copyright
+
+The copyright to each Open Publication is owned by its author(s) or
+designee.
+
+### D.3 Scope of license
+
+The following license terms apply to all Open Publication works,
+unless otherwise explicitly stated in the document.
+
+Mere aggregation of Open Publication works or a portion of an Open
+Publication work with other works or programs on the same media shall
+not cause this license to apply to those other works. The aggregate
+work shall contain a notice specifying the inclusion of the Open
+Publication material and appropriate copyright notice.
+
+Severability. If any part of this license is found to be unenforceable
+in any jurisdiction, the remaining portions of the license remain in
+force.
+
+No warranty. Open Publication works are licensed and provided “as is”
+without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including, but not
+limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for
+a particular purpose or a warranty of non-infringement.
+
+### D.4 Requirements on modified works
+
+All modified versions of documents covered by this license, including
+translations, anthologies, compilations and partial documents, must
+meet the following requirements:
+
+ 1. The modified version must be labeled as such.
+ 2. The person making the modifications must be identified and the
+ modifications dated.
+ 3. Acknowledgement of the original author and publisher if
+ applicable must be retained according to normal academic citation
+ practices.
+ 4. The location of the original unmodified document must be identified.
+ 5. The original author’s (or authors’) name(s) may not be used to
+ assert or imply endorsement of the resulting document without the
+ original author’s (or authors’) permission.
+
+### D.5 Good-practice recommendations
+
+In addition to the requirements of this license, it is requested from
+and strongly recommended of redistributors that:
+
+ 1. If you are distributing Open Publication works on hardcopy or
+ CD-ROM, you provide email notification to the authors of your
+ intent to redistribute at least thirty days before your
+ manuscript or media freeze, to give the authors time to provide
+ updated documents. This notification should describe
+ modifications, if any, made to the document.
+ 2. All substantive modifications (including deletions) be either
+ clearly marked up in the document or else described in an
+ attachment to the document.
+ 3. Finally, while it is not mandatory under this license, it is
+ considered good form to offer a free copy of any hardcopy and
+ CD-ROM expression of an Open Publication-licensed work to its
+ author(s).
+
+### D.6 License options
+
+The author(s) and/or publisher of an Open Publication-licensed
+document may elect certain options by appending language to the
+reference to or copy of the license. These options are considered part
+of the license instance and must be included with the license (or its
+incorporation by reference) in derived works.
+
+ 1. To prohibit distribution of substantively modified versions
+ without the explicit permission of the author(s). “Substantive
+ modification” is defined as a change to the semantic content of
+ the document, and excludes mere changes in format or
+ typographical corrections.
+
+ To accomplish this, add the phrase “Distribution of substantively
+ modified versions of this document is prohibited without the
+ explicit permission of the copyright holder.” to the license
+ reference or copy.
+
+ 2. To prohibit any publication of this work or derivative works in
+ whole or in part in standard (paper) book form for commercial
+ purposes is prohibited unless prior permission is obtained from
+ the copyright holder.
+
+ To accomplish this, add the phrase “Distribution of the work or
+ derivative of the work in any standard (paper) book form is
+ prohibited unless prior permission is obtained from the copyright
+ holder.” to the license reference or copy.