This is the introductory lesson to version control using Git. It is assumed to be the very first thing done in a course.
Our philosophy is that we start from own local repository, branching and merging (locally), and a brief introduction to pushing to remotes. In the separate collaborative git lesson, we teach more use of remote repositories and good collaborative workflows. We try to stick to simple workflows, just enough for researchers who aren’t obsessed with git to be able to work well. We try to avoid commands which might get you into a bad state.
Our general flow is 30 minutes on “why version control” and exploring an online repository to see the full reason we go through this effort. Then, there’s about an hour of the basics of how to make commits. Then, there are several small steps until we get to branching, merging, and conflict resolution. Then, we just see a little bit about mirroring to an online repository and a few other random points before we conclude.
The goals of the module as a whole are that the user will feel comfortable about staging changes, committing them, merging, and branching. The guacamole example that we use is inspired by Byron Smith, for original reference, see this thread. If you are teaching this lesson, see the instructor’s guide
If you are interested in the Git-aware prompt you can find it on GitHub.
In this introduction we will mention and use GitHub but also GitLab and Bitbucket allow similar workflows and basically everything that we will discuss is transferable. With this material and these exercises we do not endorse the company GitHub. We have chosen to demonstrate a number of concepts using examples with GitHub because it is currently the most popular web platform for hosting Git repositories and the chance is high that you will interact with GitHub-based repositories even if you choose to host your Git repository on another platform.
Course participants are most welcome to use our new Nordic research software repository platform instead, for more information see https://coderefinery.org/repository/.
09:30 | Motivation |
Why version control?
Why Git? |
09:40 | In-browser session | Where are we heading? |
10:00 | Basics |
What is Git?
What is a repository? How does Git operate? How do I make commits? How do I select what to commit? |
10:45 | Break | Break |
11:05 | Undoing things | How can I undo things? |
11:25 | Using the Git staging area |
Why do we recommend to first add, then commit a change?
What should be included in a single commit? |
11:50 | Aliases and configuration |
How can I remember all these Git command options?
Is there too much configuration? |
12:00 | Lunch | Break |
13:00 | Branching and merging |
How can I or my team work on multiple features in parallel?
How to combine the changes of parallel tracks of work? How can I permanently reference a point in history, like a software version? |
13:35 | Conflict resolution |
How can we resolve conflicts?
How can we avoid conflicts? |
14:05 | Sharing repositories online |
How can I set up a public repository online?
How can I clone a public repository to my computer? How does version control scale from 1 to N users per repository? |
14:25 | Interrupted work | How can Git help us to deal with interrupted work and context switching? |
14:40 | Git under the hood |
Where are commits stored?
What are branches really? |
15:00 | Start simple, later increase the level of complexity |
What level of complexity is necessary for each project?
Is one branch enough? |
15:10 | Finish |