Day 11 : Advance Git & GitHub for DevOps Engineers: Part-2
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👋 Hello, and welcome to my DevOps journey! 🚀 I am Priyanka Varshney,🛠️ As an aspiring DevOps engineer, I'm all about bridging the gap between development and operations, making software delivery seamless and efficient. 💻🔧 On this Hashnode blog, I'll be sharing my learnings, experiences and adventures as I dive deep into the world of continuous integration, automation, and cloud technologies. ☁️⚙️ Let's connect, learn, and grow as a vibrant DevOps community. Follow my Hashnode blog, and let's embrace the DevOps adventure together! 🤝🔗
Git Stash:
Git stash is a command that allows you to temporarily save changes you have made in your working directory, without committing them. This is useful when you need to switch to a different branch to work on something else, but you don't want to commit the changes you've made in your current branch yet.
To use Git stash, you first create a new branch and make some changes to it. Then you can use the command git stash to save those changes. This will remove the changes from your working directory and record them in a new stash. You can apply these changes later. git stash list command shows the list of stashed changes.
You can also use git stash drop to delete a stash and git stash clear to delete all the stashes.
Cherry-pick:
Git cherry-pick is a command that allows you to select specific commits from one branch and apply them to another. This can be useful when you want to selectively apply changes that were made in one branch to another.
To use git cherry-pick, you first create two new branches and make some commits to them. Then you use the git cherry-pick <commit_hash> command to select the specific commits from one branch and apply them to the other.
Resolving Conflicts:
Conflicts can occur when you merge or rebase branches that have diverged, and you need to manually resolve the conflicts before git can proceed with the merge/rebase. git status command shows the files that have conflicts, git diff command shows the difference between the conflicting versions and git add command is used to add the resolved files.
Task-01:
Create a new branch and make some changes to it.
Use git stash to save the changes without committing them.
Switch to a different branch, make some changes and commit them.
Use git stash pop to bring the changes back and apply them on top of the new commits.

Task-02:
In version01.txt of the development branch add the below lines after “This is the bug fix in development branch” that you added in Day10 and reverted to this commit.
Line2>> After bug fixing, this is the new feature with minor alterations”
Commit this with the message “ Added feature2.1 in development branch”
Line3>> This is the advancement of the previous feature
Commit this with the message “ Added feature2.2 in development branch”
Line4>> Feature 2 is completed and ready for release
Commit this with the message “ Feature2 completed”
All these commit messages should be reflected in the Production branch too which will come out from the Master branch (Hint: try rebase).

Task-03:
In the Production branch Cherry-picked Commit “Added feature2.2 in development branch” and added the below lines in it:

The line to be added after Line3>> This is the advancement of the previous feature
Line 4>>Added a few more changes to make it more optimized.
Commit: Optimized the feature

Thank you for reading :)
Priyanka Varshney