You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
66 lines
2.7 KiB
66 lines
2.7 KiB
|
|
Git installation |
|
|
|
Normally you can just do "make" followed by "make install", and that |
|
will install the git programs in your own ~/bin/ directory. If you want |
|
to do a global install, you can do |
|
|
|
make prefix=/usr install |
|
|
|
(or prefix=/usr/local, of course). Some day somebody may send me a RPM |
|
spec file or something, and you can do "make rpm" or whatever. |
|
|
|
Issues of note: |
|
|
|
- git normally installs a helper script wrapper called "git", which |
|
conflicts with a similarly named "GNU interactive tools" program. |
|
|
|
Tough. Either don't use the wrapper script, or delete the old GNU |
|
interactive tools. None of the core git stuff needs the wrapper, |
|
it's just a convenient shorthand and while it is documented in some |
|
places, you can always replace "git commit" with "git-commit-script" |
|
instead. |
|
|
|
But let's face it, most of us don't have GNU interactive tools, and |
|
even if we had it, we wouldn't know what it does. I don't think it |
|
has been actively developed since 1997, and people have moved over to |
|
graphical file managers. |
|
|
|
- Git is reasonably self-sufficient, but does depend on a few external |
|
programs and libraries: |
|
|
|
- "zlib", the compression library. Git won't build without it. |
|
|
|
- "openssl". The git-rev-list program uses bignum support from |
|
openssl, and unless you specify otherwise, you'll also get the |
|
SHA1 library from here. |
|
|
|
If you don't have openssl, you can use one of the SHA1 libraries |
|
that come with git (git includes the one from Mozilla, and has |
|
its own PowerPC-optimized one too - see the Makefile), and you |
|
can avoid the bignum support by excising git-rev-list support |
|
for "--merge-order" (by hand). |
|
|
|
- "libcurl" and "curl" executable. git-http-pull and |
|
git-fetch-script use them. If you do not use http |
|
transfer, you are probabaly OK if you do not have |
|
them. |
|
|
|
- "GNU diff" to generate patches. Of course, you don't _have_ to |
|
generate patches if you don't want to, but let's face it, you'll |
|
be wanting to. Or why did you get git in the first place? |
|
|
|
Non-GNU versions of the diff/patch programs don't generally support |
|
the unified patch format (which is the one git uses), so you |
|
really do want to get the GNU one. Trust me, you will want to |
|
do that even if it wasn't for git. There's no point in living |
|
in the dark ages any more. |
|
|
|
- "merge", the standard UNIX three-way merge program. It usually |
|
comes with the "rcs" package on most Linux distributions, so if |
|
you have a developer install you probably have it already, but a |
|
"graphical user desktop" install might have left it out. |
|
|
|
You'll only need the merge program if you do development using |
|
git, and if you only use git to track other peoples work you'll |
|
never notice the lack of it.
|
|
|