Creating a Repository
Objectives
- Create a local Git repository.
- Describe the purpose of the
.git
directory.
Questions
- Where does Git store information?
Once Git is configured, we can start using it.
We will continue with the story of Wolfman and Dracula who are investigating if it is possible to send a planetary lander to Mars.
Werewolf vs dracula by b-maze / Deviant Art. Mars by European Space Agency / CC-BY-SA 3.0 IGO. Pluto / Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech. Mummy © Gilad Fried / The Noun Project / CC BY 3.0. Moon © Luc Viatour / https://lucnix.be / CC BY-SA 3.0.
First, let’s create a new directory in the Desktop
folder for our work and then change the current working directory to the newly created one:
$ cd ~/Desktop
$ mkdir planets
$ cd planets
Then we tell Git to make planets
a repository -- a place where Git can store versions of our files:
$ git init
It is important to note that git init
will create a repository that can include subdirectories and their files—there is no need to create separate repositories nested within the planets
repository, whether subdirectories are present from the beginning or added later. Also, note that the creation of the planets
directory and its initialization as a repository are completely separate processes.
If we use ls
to show the directory’s contents, it appears that nothing has changed:
$ ls
But if we add the -a
flag to show everything, we can see that Git has created a hidden directory within planets
called .git
:
$ ls -a
. .. .git
Git uses this special subdirectory to store all the information about the project, including the tracked files and sub-directories located within the project’s directory. If we ever delete the .git
subdirectory, we will lose the project’s history.
Next, we will change the default branch to be called main
. This might be the default branch depending on your settings and version of git.
See the setup episode for more information on this change.
$ git checkout -b main
Switched to a new branch 'main'
We can check that everything is set up correctly by asking Git to tell us the status of our project:
$ git status
On branch main
No commits yet
nothing to commit (create/copy files and use "git add" to track)
If you are using a different version of git
, the exact wording of the output might be slightly different.
Places to Create Git Repositories
Along with tracking information about planets (the project we have already created), Dracula would also like to track information about moons. Despite Wolfman’s concerns, Dracula creates a
moons
project inside hisplanets
project with the following sequence of commands:$ cd ~/Desktop # return to Desktop directory $ cd planets # go into planets directory, which is already a Git repository $ ls -a # ensure the .git subdirectory is still present in the planets directory $ mkdir moons # make a subdirectory planets/moons $ cd moons # go into moons subdirectory $ git init # make the moons subdirectory a Git repository $ ls -a # ensure the .git subdirectory is present indicating we have created a new Git repository
Is the
git init
command, run inside themoons
subdirectory, required for tracking files stored in themoons
subdirectory?
Solution
No. Dracula does not need to make the
moons
subdirectory a Git repository because theplanets
repository can track any files, sub-directories, and subdirectory files under theplanets
directory. Thus, in order to track all information about moons, Dracula only needed to add themoons
subdirectory to theplanets
directory.Additionally, Git repositories can interfere with each other if they are “nested”: the outer repository will try to version-control the inner repository. Therefore, it’s best to create each new Git repository in a separate directory. To be sure that there is no conflicting repository in the directory, check the output of
git status
. If it looks like the following, you are good to go to create a new repository as shown above:$ git status
fatal: Not a git repository (or any of the parent directories): .git
Correcting
git init
MistakesWolfman explains to Dracula how a nested repository is redundant and may cause confusion down the road. Dracula would like to remove the nested repository. How can Dracula undo his last
git init
in themoons
subdirectory?
Solution – USE WITH CAUTION!
Background
Removing files from a Git repository needs to be done with caution. But we have not learned yet how to tell Git to track a particular file; we will learn this in the next episode. Files that are not tracked by Git can easily be removed like any other “ordinary” files with
$ rm filename
Similarly a directory can be removed using
rm -r dirname
orrm -rf dirname
. If the files or folder being removed in this fashion are tracked by Git, then their removal becomes another change that we will need to track, as we will see in the next episode.Solution
Git keeps all of its files in the
.git
directory. To recover from this little mistake, Dracula can just remove the.git
folder in the moons subdirectory by running the following command from inside theplanets
directory:$ rm -rf moons/.git
But be careful! Running this command in the wrong directory will remove the entire Git history of a project you might want to keep. Therefore, always check your current directory using the command
pwd
.
Keypoints
git init
initializes a repository.- Git stores all of its repository data in the
.git
directory.