Cd into the repository and check what files are modified
$ cd myproject $ git status
Commit the files that you staged in the local repository (example: README.md)
$ git add README.md
To unstage the file use
$ git reset HEAD README.md
Commit the files that you have staged
git commit -m 'Message'
Push the changes
$ git push
Add the files in you
$ git pull --all
Check the original link here
Clone a remote git repository and cd into it:
$ git clone git:://example.com/myproject
$ cd myproject
Next, look at the local branches in your repository:
$ git branch
* master
But there are other branches hiding in your repository! You can see these using the -a flag:
$ git branch -a
* master
origin/HEAD
origin/master
origin/v1.0-stable
origin/experimental
If you already have a existing repository but there is a new branch that is yet listed do a:
git fetch
If you just want to take a quick peek at an upstream branch, you can check it out directly:
$ git checkout origin/experimental
But if you want to work on that branch, you'll need to create a local tracking branch:
$ git checkout -b experimental origin/experimental
Now, if you look at your local branches, this is what you'll see:
$ git branch
master
* experimental
You can actually track more than one remote repository using git remote.
$ git remote add win32 git://example.com/users/joe/myproject-win32-port
$ git branch -a
* master
origin/HEAD
origin/master
origin/v1.0-stable
origin/experimental
win32/master
win32/new-widgets
At this point, things are getting pretty crazy, so run gitk to see what's going on:
$ gitk --all &