From http://www.darkcoding.net/software/cleaning-up-old-git-branches/
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Switch to the main branch, usually 'develop':
git checkout develop
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Get a list of fully merged branches:
From http://www.darkcoding.net/software/cleaning-up-old-git-branches/
Switch to the main branch, usually 'develop':
git checkout develop
Get a list of fully merged branches:
If you're aiming for a seamless Arch Linux installation in UEFI mode, follow along as this guide will walk you through the process step by step. We'll be using LUKS (Linux Unified Key Setup) and LVM (Logical Volume Manager) partitions on LUKS to achieve full disk encryption.
Note: I have updated this doc for UEFI mode. For those with BIOS/MBR systems, you can refer to the previous version, but keep in mind that it might be outdated and no longer accurate.
If you're only interested in installing Linux and not setting up dual boot with Windows, feel free to skip the Windows-related sections.
*update: TBC, but this new might affect how easy it is to use this technique past August 2024: Authy is shutting down its desktop app | The 2FA app Authy will only be available on Android and iOS starting in August
This gist, based in part on a gist by Brian Hartvigsen, allows you to export from Authy your TOTP tokens you have stored there.
Those can be "standard" 6-digits / 30 secs tokens, or Authy's own version, the 7-digits / 10 secs tokens.
Homepage: Chocolatey.org
Chocolatey is a machine-level package manager and installer for software packages, built for the Windows NT platform.
It is an execution engine using the NuGet packaging infrastructure and Windows PowerShell to provide an automation tool for installing software on Windows machines, designed to simplify the process from the user perspective.
The name is an extension on a pun of NuGet (from "nougat") "because everyone loves Chocolatey nougat".
Removing the last commit
To remove the last commit from git, you can simply run git reset --hard HEAD^
If you are removing multiple commits from the top, you can run git reset --hard HEAD~2 to remove the last two commits. You can increase the number to remove even more commits.
If you want to "uncommit" the commits, but keep the changes around for reworking, remove the "--hard": git reset HEAD^
which will evict the commits from the branch and from the index, but leave the working tree around.
If you want to save the commits on a new branch name, then run git branch newbranchname
before doing the git reset.
ORIGINAL did fork but search didn't helped me