The last point will create a new directory called “noresm” in the place you checked out the model. Go to that directory before executing any git-commands.
If you get error messages, verify that you can open the page https://github.com/metno/noresm in a web-browser. If you can not, you are probably not a github-user or not member of the noresm group on github.
Also do the following on all machines where you use git:
Note that with git, the main branch is no longer called “trunk”, it is called “master”!
When you have cloned the model, check that you have gotten what you wanted!
Check that your favourite branch is available using the command
git branch --all
(You should see the branch “master” on top with a star next to it. This is the branch you get by default. The other branches are listed below with remotes/origin/branchName, but you can not work on them until you check them out, see below)
To check out (locally) your favourite branch and to start working on it, write
git checkout -b myBranchName origin/myBranchName
(Note that myBranchName must be one of the branches listed by the above command)
If you don't user the “-b” option, you will get something which is not correct. Make sure you are tracking a remote branch. You can write
git branch -vv
to see which remote branch you are tracking. The output will be something like:
* myCheckedOutBranchName 1a08184 [origin/myCheckedOutBranchname] LatestCommitMessageOnBranch
Note that once a branch has been checked out using the -b option, you can switch between any of your checked out branches using the command
git checkout aCheckedOutBranchName
Note that in git, switching to a new branch change the files in your working directory. Git will warn you if you have any modified files before switching to a new branch. This is different from how svn works.
Modify the code (for example a file named myChangedFile.F90) and send back to your local repository through
git add myChangedFile.F90
git commit -m "aMessage"
The message should link to the issue on github, so if you fix issue number 100 by this code change, you would probably write something like
git commit -am "Did part of the work to resolve metno/noresm#100"
Verify, using the tool “gitk” that the changes make sense.
git pull
To be absolutely sure about branch names etc, you can do
git pull remoteName remoteBranchName:myLocalBranchName
which if your are picking up changes the master-branch would translate to
git pull origin master:master
This command assumes that your changes go to the remote branch named like your branch (which is most of the times the case)
git push
You can also do (to be completely sure):
git push remoteName myLocalBranchName:remoteBranchName
which if your are changing the master-branch would translate to
git push origin master:master
(The above command means push my changes to the remote named “origin” from my local branch named master to the remote branch named master. If you are changing another branch than master, you must obviously not write “master”.)