As a freelancer, I build a lot of web sites. That's a lot of code changes to track. Thankfully, a Git-enabled workflow with proper branching makes short work of project tracking. I can easily see development features in branches as well as a snapshot of the sites' production code. A nice addition to that workflow is that ability to use Git to push updates to any of the various sites I work on while committing changes.
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
[ | |
{ | |
"name": "SofleKeyboard", | |
"author": "Josef Adamcik", | |
"switchMount": "cherry" | |
}, | |
[ | |
{ | |
"y": 0.2, | |
"x": 3, |
Sometimes it is necessary (and desireable) to work on a git repository on multiple development machines. We want to be able to push and pull between repositories without having to use an intermediary bare repository, and for this to work symetrically in both repositories.
First clone we clone an existing repository:
git clone ssh://user@hostname:/path/to/repo
By default this will name the remote as origin, but let's assume we want to reserve that name for a master repository that commits will eventually get pushed to: