Setting Up Git
Overview
Teaching: 5 min
Exercises: 0 minQuestions
How do I get set up to use Git?
Objectives
Configure
git
the first time it is used on a computer.Understand the meaning of the
--global
configuration flag.
When we use Git on a new computer for the first time, we need to configure a few things. Below are a few examples of configurations we will set as we get started with Git:
- our name and email address,
- what our preferred text editor is,
- and that we want to use these settings globally (i.e. for every project).
On a command line, Git commands are written as git verb options
,
where verb
is what we actually want to do and options
is additional optional information which may be needed for the verb
. So here is how
Dracula sets up his new laptop:
$ git config --global user.name "Vlad Dracula"
$ git config --global user.email "vlad@tran.sylvan.ia"
Please use your own name and email address instead of Dracula’s. This user name and email will be associated with your subsequent Git activity, which means that any changes pushed to GitHub, BitBucket, GitLab or another Git host server in a later lesson will include this information.
For these lessons, we will be interacting with GitHub and so the email address used should be the same as the one used when setting up your GitHub account. If you are concerned about privacy, please review GitHub’s instructions for keeping your email address private.
Keeping your email private
If you elect to use a private email address with GitHub, then use that same email address for the
user.email
value, e.g.username@users.noreply.github.com
replacingusername
with your GitHub one.
Line Endings
As with other keys, when you hit Return on your keyboard, your computer encodes this input as a character. Different operating systems use different character(s) to represent the end of a line. (You may also hear these referred to as newlines or line breaks.) Because Git uses these characters to compare files, it may cause unexpected issues when editing a file on different machines. Though it is beyond the scope of this lesson, you can read more about this issue on this GitHub page.
You can change the way Git recognizes and encodes line endings using the
core.autocrlf
command togit config
. The following settings are recommended:On macOS and Linux:
$ git config --global core.autocrlf input
And on Windows:
$ git config --global core.autocrlf true
Dracula also has to set his favorite text editor, following this table:
Editor | Configuration command |
---|---|
Atom | $ git config --global core.editor "atom --wait" |
nano | $ git config --global core.editor "nano -w" |
BBEdit (Mac, with command line tools) | $ git config --global core.editor "bbedit -w" |
Sublime Text (Mac) | $ git config --global core.editor "/Applications/Sublime\ Text.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl -n -w" |
Sublime Text (Win, 32-bit install) | $ git config --global core.editor "'c:/program files (x86)/sublime text 3/sublime_text.exe' -w" |
Sublime Text (Win, 64-bit install) | $ git config --global core.editor "'c:/program files/sublime text 3/sublime_text.exe' -w" |
Notepad++ (Win, 32-bit install) | $ git config --global core.editor "'c:/program files (x86)/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin" |
Notepad++ (Win, 64-bit install) | $ git config --global core.editor "'c:/program files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin" |
Kate (Linux) | $ git config --global core.editor "kate" |
Gedit (Linux) | $ git config --global core.editor "gedit --wait --new-window" |
Scratch (Linux) | $ git config --global core.editor "scratch-text-editor" |
Emacs | $ git config --global core.editor "emacs" |
Vim | $ git config --global core.editor "vim" |
VS Code | $ git config --global core.editor "code --wait" |
It is possible to reconfigure the text editor for Git whenever you want to change it.
Exiting Vim
Note that Vim is the default editor for many programs. If you haven’t used Vim before and wish to exit a session without saving your changes, press Esc then type
:q!
and hit Return. If you want to save your changes and quit, press Esc then type:wq
and hit Return.
The four commands we just ran above only need to be run once: the flag --global
tells Git
to use the settings for every project, in your user account, on this computer.
You can check your settings at any time:
$ git config --list
You can change your configuration as many times as you want: use the same commands to choose another editor or update your email address.
Saving crendentials
We will use http(s) login when we will interact with Github, you can ask git to save your crendentials so you don’t have to enter your loging all the time :
$ git config --global credential.helper store
Proxy
In some networks you need to use a proxy. If this is the case, you may also need to tell Git about the proxy:
$ git config --global http.proxy proxy-url $ git config --global https.proxy proxy-url
To disable the proxy, use
$ git config --global --unset http.proxy $ git config --global --unset https.proxy
Git Help and Manual
Always remember that if you forget a
git
command, you can access the list of commands by using-h
and access the Git manual by using--help
:$ git config -h $ git config --help
While viewing the manual, remember the
:
is a prompt waiting for commands and you can press Q to exit the manual.
Key Points
Use
git config
with the--global
option to configure a user name, email address, editor, and other preferences once per machine.