I clearly do not understand git at all. This is what I'm getting:
git branch (outputs that I'm on master)
git checkout -b foo
echo "next line" >> file (file is an existing file)
git add file (stages)
git checkout master
git status (shows that file has "next line" and is staged!!)
git commit (commits the changes that were staged on branch foo!!)
git checkout foo
Here is the kicker. foo now doesn't show any changes made to file in the working directory OR staged.
So looks like - any changes you make, including modifying files and staging, happen to ALL branches. and when you COMMIT to a specific branch, those changes are discarded on all other branches except the one you committed on.
Is this actually what is going on? Can someone make this make sense to me? It sounds like completely screwy behavior and clearly I don't get the design idea that makes this a sensible thing to do.
Edit for explicit example:
$ mkdir element
$ cd element
$ git init
Initialized empty Git repository in /home/dan/element/.git/
$ echo "one" >> one
$ git add one
$ git commit -m msg
[master (root-commit) 36dc8b0] msg
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 one
$ git checkout -b fire
Switched to a new branch 'fire'
$ echo "next line" >> one
$ git checkout master
M one
Switched to branch 'master'
$ cat one
one
next line
$
Which patently contradicts this from the git pro book:
This is an important point to remember: Git resets your working directory to look like the snapshot of the commit that the branch you check out points to. It adds, removes, and modifies files automatically to make sure your working copy is what the branch looked like on your last commit to it.
It doesn't matter what branch you're on when you add a file, only when you commit it. So if you do this:
git add file
git checkout master
git commit
You have committed the file to the master branch.
Here's a complete example, with output. We start with a new repository:
$ git init
Initialized empty Git repository in /home/lars/tmp/so/repo/.git/
At this point, we're on the master
branch and we haven't yet added any files. Let's add a file:
$ date > file1
$ cat file1
Fri May 11 13:05:59 EDT 2012
$ git add file1
$ git commit -m 'added a file'
[master (root-commit) b0764b9] added a file
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 file1
Great, we now have a branch (master
) with one commit. Let's create the new branch:
$ git checkout -b foo
Switched to a new branch 'foo'
$ git branch
* foo
master
$ ls
file1
Now we'll add a line to file1
.
$ date >> file1
$ git status
# On branch foo
# Changes not staged for commit:
# (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
# (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
#
# modified: file1
#
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
This shows that the file has been modified, but not yet staged. Let's stage the file and commit it:
$ git add file1
$ git commit -m 'made a change'
[foo 761bed9] made a change
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
And re-run git status
:
$ git status
# On branch foo
nothing to commit (working directory clean)
At this point, the file looks like this:
Fri May 11 13:05:59 EDT 2012
Fri May 11 13:07:36 EDT 2012
If we switch back to the master
branch, we'll see the earlier version of the file without the second line:
$ git checkout master
Switched to branch 'master'
$ cat file1
Fri May 11 13:05:59 EDT 2012
Changes to a file are isolated to the branch on which they were committed.
In your updated example, this...
$ git checkout master
...does not generate an error because at this point, the version of 'one' in both master
and fire
is identical. The changes in the working directory would apply equally well to either version.
The staging area aka index is common to all branches, which explains your observation