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Setting Up Tell git your user name and email address Providing your SSH Key Addressing authentication problems with SSH How to not have to type your password for every push How to clone from github with ssh tunnels Working with git Git Screencasts Git Podcasts Git for Mac Compiling git on OS X Leopard Get git on Mac Setting up a remote repository using GitHub and OSX Issues with TextMate set as gi
Have a Subversion project you want to import into Git? Easy! Just use git-svn First, be sure to create your repository on github http://github.com/repositories/new $ git svn clone SVN_REPO_URL LOCAL_DIR $ cd LOCAL_DIR $ git remote add origin git@github.com:GITHUB_USERNAME/REPO_NAME.git $ git push origin master Author mapping When migrating a Subversion repository to Git, you can map the Subversion
We’re adding an API bit by bit. This page will serve as the documentation. The basic url template: http://github.com/api/version/format/username/repository/type/object Current version: v1 Acceptable formats: json, xml, yaml Acceptable types: commits, commit Grabbing all recent commits: $ curl -i http://github.com/api/v1/xml/caged/gitnub/commits/master | less Grabbing a single commit: $ curl -i htt
Note: On July 30th, the post-receive’s JSON will change. See before and after examples further down the page. If you supply a post-receive URL, GitHub will POST to that URL when someone uses git push on that repository. What we’ll send is JSON containing information about the push and the commits involved. Here’s the template we use in Ruby to generate the JSON: { :before => before, :after => aft
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