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title | pubDate | permalink | tags | |
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Useful Git configuration | 2022-09-19 | daily/2022/09/19/useful-git-configuration |
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Here are some snippets from my Git configuration file.
These days, I use a much simpler workflow and configuration since doing more trunk-based development, but in general, I rebase instead of merging by default, and prefer to use fast-forward merges that doesn't create a merge commit.
branch.autosetuprebase = always
and pull.rebase = true
configure Git to always rebase instead of pull. It does this for all branches, though I might override this for main
branches.
pull.ff = only
and merge.ff = only
prevents creating a merge commit and will prevent the merge if it would create one. If I needed to override this, I could by using the --no-ff
option on the command line.
I use checkout.defaultRemote = origin
to ensure that the origin
remote is used if I have multiple remotes configured, and push.default = upstream
to set the default remote to push to.
merge.autoStash
allows for running merges on a dirty worktree by automatically creating and re-applying a stash of the changes, and fetch.prune
will automatically prune branches on fetch - keeping things tidy.
I also have and use a number of aliases.
Some like pl = pull
and ps = push
are shorter versions of existing commands, and some like aa = add --all
, fixup = commit --fixup
and some additional arguments to commands.
I also have some like current-branch = rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
and worktrees = worktree list
which add simple additional commands, and some like repush = !git pull --rebase && git push
which use execute shell commands to execute more complex commands or combine multiple commands.
This is a snapshot of my Git configuration. The full version is on GitHub.