# Using Git ## Opening a Pull Request Most people submit pull requests to the tldr-pages project [using GitHub's web interface][pr-howto]. If you prefer, you can do most of the process using the command-line instead. The overall process should look somewhat like this: 1. Fork the tldr-pages/tldr repository on the GitHub web interface. 2. Clone your fork locally: `git clone https://github.com/{{your_username}}/tldr.git && cd tldr` 3. Create a feature branch, e.g. named after the command you plan to edit: `git switch -c {{branch_name}}` > [!WARNING] > It is bad practice to submit a PR from the `main` branch of your forked repository. Please create pull requests from a well-named feature branch. 4. Make your changes (edit existing files or create new ones) 5. Commit the changes (following the [commit message guidelines][commit-msg]): `git commit --all -m "{{commit_message}}"` 6. Push the commit(s) to your fork: `git push -u origin HEAD` 7. If you want to avoid setting the upstream every time and just run `git push`: `git config push.autoSetupRemote true` > [!WARNING] > Please avoid force-pushing since it makes the review process harder. 7. Go to the GitHub page for your fork and click the green "Compare & pull request" button. Please only send related changes in the same pull request. Typically a pull request will include changes in a single file **unless the pull request introduces translations**. (Exceptions are [occasionally acceptable][mass-changes]) [pr-howto]: ../CONTRIBUTING.md#submitting-a-pull-request [commit-msg]: ../CONTRIBUTING.md#commit-message [mass-changes]: https://github.com/tldr-pages/tldr/pulls?&q=is:pr+is:merged+label:"mass+changes" ## Updating your fork Forks of GitHub repositories aren't updated automatically. You should update your fork regularly to keep it up-to-date with the latest changes and avoid merge conflicts. There are two ways to update your fork. 1. Via the GitHub web interface. Click `Fetch upstream` and then `Fetch and merge` on the fork as shown below: ![Fetch and merge button in GitHub](../images/github-fetch-and-merge-button.png) 2. Using Git in the terminal: ```bash git switch main git remote add upstream https://github.com/tldr-pages/tldr.git # only run if you don't already have the upstream remote (check with "git remote -v") git fetch upstream main git merge upstream/main # in case you have any merge conflicts, click the link below to see how to resolve them git push ``` [How to resolve merge conflicts](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-pull-requests/addressing-merge-conflicts/resolving-a-merge-conflict-using-the-command-line) ## Changing the email of your last commit If the email that you used for the last commit isn't associated with your GitHub account, you can either add it [here](https://github.com/settings/emails) or change the email of the commit with the following commands: ```bash git commit --amend --author="Your Name " git push --force-with-lease ``` ## Changing the email of any commit(s) 1. Perform an [interactive rebase](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-rebase#Documentation/git-rebase.txt--i), specifying the reference of the earliest commit to modify as the argument. For example, if the earliest commit with the wrong email address was 6 commits ago, you can specify the commit hash (check it with `git log`) or just `HEAD~6`. ```bash git rebase --interactive HEAD~6 ``` 2. You'll see a list of commits starting from the referenced commit to `HEAD`. All of them will default to the instruction `pick`, this means using the commit as-is when replaying them. For the commits you want to edit, replace the word `pick` with `edit`, then save and exit the editor. 3. The branch will rewind to the referenced commit, then replay them until it reaches a commit with the `edit` instruction. Amend the commit for the correct email address, then continue rebasing. Repeat this step until you've successfully finished rebasing and replayed all commits. ```bash git commit --amend --author "Your Name " git rebase --continue ``` 4. Finally, because you modified the branch history, you'll need to force push back to your remote repository. ```bash git push --force-with-lease ``` [![asciicast](https://asciinema.org/a/fFMZzQOgJyfUf8HTnXyRj0v02.svg)](https://asciinema.org/a/fFMZzQOgJyfUf8HTnXyRj0v02)