Collaborating

Overview

Teaching: 25 min
Exercises: 0 min
Questions
  • How can I use version control to collaborate with other people?

Objectives
  • Clone a remote repository.

  • Collaborate pushing to a common repository.

For the next step, get into pairs. One person will be the “Owner” and the other will be the “Collaborator”. The goal is that the Collaborator add changes into the Owner’s repository. We will switch roles at the end, so both persons will play Owner and Collaborator.

Practicing By Yourself

If you’re working through this lesson on your own, you can carry on by opening a second terminal window. This window will represent your partner, working on another computer. You won’t need to give anyone access on Bitbucket, because both ‘partners’ are you.

The Owner needs to give the Collaborator access. On Bitbucket, click the settings button on the right, then select Collaborators, and enter your partner’s username.

Adding Collaborators on Bitbucket

To accept access to the Owner’s repo, the Collaborator needs to go to their email and click the link in the invitation email. Once there she can accept access to the Owner’s repo.

Next, the Collaborator needs to download a copy of the Owner’s repository to her machine. This is called “cloning a repo”. To clone the Owner’s repo into her git-novice folder, the Collaborator enters:

$ git clone https://vlad@bitbucket.org/vlad/planets.git ~/git-novice/vlad-planets

Replace ‘vlad’ with the Owner’s username.

After Creating Clone of Repository

The Collaborator can now make a change in her clone of the Owner’s repository, exactly the same way as we’ve been doing before:

$ cd ~/git-novice/vlad-planets
$ nano pluto.txt
$ cat pluto.txt
It is so a planet!
$ git add pluto.txt
$ git commit -m "Add notes about Pluto"
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
 create mode 100644 pluto.txt

Then push the change to the Owner’s repository on Bitbucket:

$ git push origin master
Counting objects: 4, done.
Delta compression using up to 4 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done.
Writing objects: 100% (3/3), 306 bytes, done.
Total 3 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
To https://vlad@bitbucket.org/vlad/planets.git
   9272da5..29aba7c  master -> master

Note that we didn’t have to create a remote called origin: Git uses this name by default when we clone a repository. (This is why origin was a sensible choice earlier when we were setting up remotes by hand.)

Take a look to the Owner’s repository on its Bitbucket website now (maybe you need to refresh your browser.) You should be able to see the new commit made by the Collaborator.

To download the Collaborator’s changes from Bitbucket, the Owner now enters:

$ git pull origin master
remote: Counting objects: 4, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done.
remote: Total 3 (delta 0), reused 3 (delta 0)
Unpacking objects: 100% (3/3), done.
From https://vlad@bitbucket.org/vlad/planets
 * branch            master     -> FETCH_HEAD
Updating 9272da5..29aba7c
Fast-forward
 pluto.txt | 1 +
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
 create mode 100644 pluto.txt

Now the three repositories (Owner’s local, Collaborator’s local, and Owner’s on Bitbucket) are back in sync.

A Basic Collaborative Workflow

In practice, it is good to be sure that you have an updated version of the repository you are collaborating on, so you should git pull before making our changes. The basic collaborative workflow would be:

  • update your local repo with git pull origin master,
  • make your changes and stage them with git add,
  • commit your changes with git commit -m, and
  • upload the changes to Bitbucket with git push origin master

It is better to make many commits with smaller changes rather than of one commit with massive changes: small commits are easier to read and review.

Switch Roles and Repeat

Switch roles and repeat the whole process.

Comment Changes in Bitbucket

The Collaborator has some questions about one line change made by the Owner and has some suggestions to propose.

With Bitbucket, it is possible to comment the diff of a commit. To the left the line of code to comment, a blue comment icon (a plus within a speech bubble) appears to open a comment window.

The Collaborator posts its comments and suggestions using Bitbucket interface.

Version History, Backup, and Version Control

Some backup software can keep a history of the versions of your files. They also allows you to recover specific versions. How is this functionality different from version control? What are some of the benefits of using version control, Git and Bitbucket?

Key Points

  • git clone copies a remote repository to create a local repository with a remote called origin automatically set up.