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user5870134
00:18
Weekend's up, I hope you all have a productive week! Good bye & stay safe guys.
Good bye @Mango!
 
3 hours later…
03:09
@Mango It's a gem to allow Ruby to read a PHP file format.
 
1 hour later…
04:27
@WayneConrad Thanks... :)
 
6 hours later…
09:59
@Vijay You are welcome.
 
4 hours later…
13:40
Morning everyone!
14:12
I'm tired, too much coffee yesterday, it took some time to sleep. It did not help that I was watching shows before bed and it was hard to stop since it was so good!
 
1 hour later…
15:23
Exact same thing here. Too much coffee, late to bed. Plus woke up in the middle of the night with stomach upset.
 
1 hour later…
16:50
I don't suppose anyone here is a Git wizard?
I don't know how to answer that. Looks like a trick question :)
Someone deleted our remote Develop when merging it into master -.-
I suppose I could checkout master and create a new develop from that
Go to the server, cd to where its tree is. Use "git reflog" to find the reference to the deleted branch, and then git branch <name-of-branch> <ref-of-branch> to create the branch.
Hmmm... not sure I can... its BitBucket
I think you'll be pushing someone's local copy of the branch, then.
The developer who deleted it probably has the most recent copy. First recover the branch on his box (if it's been deleted locally), and then push that.
16:58
Yea =\. I think they might have just done a pull into develop prior to that and had that delete flag on before merging to master (a convenient feature of bucket to have it persist)
Whenever people put fancy wrappers in front of git, things get out of control. It's a somewhat complicated tool to learn. Fancy stuff doesn't make it easier--it just hides the complexity in ways that get people into trouble.
Unfortunately, this is no use against someone deleting an entire branch by "accident" and everyone else frantically searching for someone who still has a copy of that branch.
Success! Fortunately the SourceTree tool Atlassian hands out still had the history of the Develop branch on its cool graph. I was able to copy the SHA and use Wayne's suggestion :D
17:10
nice
As long as GC hasn't run on every machine, you can recover the branch. Even if it means reading through the entire reflog. Of every machine in the office. It's worth it.
17:22
Correct. The one thing that nobody said about git when I was learning about it... and by nobody, I mean Linus himself didn't explain this in his google talk about git... is that git is reference counted and garbage collected, and that dead objects can't be gc'd immediately.
As soon as you need to dig in the garbage can and pray the janitor hasn't come ... you've already done something wrong :P
I use... misuse?... this fact all the time. Did I just commit something to the wrong branch? Copy the sha1 ref, git reset --hard HEAD~, then change to the correct branch, and git cherry-pick <ref>. For a moment, the commit exists only in the garbage can.
A startlingly accurate analogy lol
 
6 hours later…

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