Hmm, I am still not sure what kind of shell that gives you. My problem is that 'rm' is a standard Unix command, but it did not work for you. Maybe you can use a variation of DEL if you are in a Windows-y shell. I would have expected 'rm' to work if you were using Msys's (or Cygwin's) bash. I am not at all familiar with any of the Ruby environments on Windows.
@sscirrus I have a suggestion: always use git diff --cached before making a commit. You should have noticed something odd in the diff after you ended up with the “semi-submodule”.
@sscirrus You can use your history to tack down exactly when it happened. :) I think git diff --cached is just a good habit to get into anyway. It is like proof-reading before posting.
@sscirrus Good. Also, now that your files are “flat”, you will not be able to easily pull in updates from the upstream charts repository. Are you OK with that?
hmm... it's not a terrible thing because that repository is rarely updated. However, if I was going to do that, I assume I'd have to manually reinstall and retrack the folder each time I update it?
@VojtechR Yes, but I don't know of a way to fix it for everyone. Actually, it is not too bad in my browser (did you see the shot I posted earlier?)
@sscirrus Yes, that is probably the most straight forward way. Blow away the vendor/plugins/open_flash_chart_2 directory, re-clone, nuke its .git directory, and git add -A the result. If you also needed to carry local changes you should probably do it in a “vendor branch” to help isolate the upstream changes and preserve your local changes.
@sscirrus It is too bad that (I hear) shell scripts are really slow on Windows. git subtree (a sh script) is really quite nice. Well, nice to look at anyway. I have not used it for anything but playing and testing out my suggestions.
@sscirrus Well, shell stuff in particular since it uses many fork()s, which is just not a strong suit of Windows. Probably it was written in just about any other language it would be faster.
I’m going through my bookmarks… Some of them are old. I’m scanning through a couple to make sure they are not too old to be applicable (none of the really core stuff has changed much since I started, but lots of the “polish” has).
Recommended Reading: The Git Parable — a story about how Git might have (did) evolve from “lots of copies of the source tree” to its current object model
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I suppose you can get by without knowing the “object model”, but I think it is tremendously useful to understand how blobs, trees, commits, tags, branches, and HEAD come together to produce the functionality that is exposed in the high level commands.
I'm trying to launch a site that will be used by paying customers, so I'm looking for 'real' Rails people to take over and manage it once it's going properly. I want to learn about this, at the same time the site needs proper management.
Recommended Reading: The Thing About Git — goes into some detail on the power of Git’s index (e.g. committing only some files, git add -p, etc.) and how it can help you take messy, “real world” development and shape it into clean commits.
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Recommended Reading: Git from the bottom up — another explanation of Git’s object model (blobs, tree, commits), how branches and the index work.
Recommended Reading: Fun with merges and purposes of branches — Some advice on how to think about branches and how that guides whether, and in which direction merges should be made.
Recommended Reading: Never merging back — sometimes you need special branches that have changes that will never be incorporated into other branches
Recommended Reading: A successful Git branching model — describes a full branching model: development, feature, release, hotfixes; embodied in the gitflow tool
The Pro Git bok seems nice. It definately covers the important (IMO) parts like the object model, the basics of branching and covers lots of other details. I have never really read through the whole thing though. I had stopped looking for supplemental reading material by the time it came out. Nowadays I read the manpage and the source. :)
@sscirrus Oh, the thing about git add foo/ adding the files even if foo is a repository: I am not sure that it is a fully supported mode of operation. I saw someone mention it once and it does work for me, but it seems a bit odd to me that it works that way. I do not think I have ever seen it documented anyway. It is better (more reliable, IMO) to just delete the sub-repository’s .git to make sure it does not get in the way later.