Solutions Log

So I only have to figure things out once.

Creating a Happy Git Environment on OS X Leopard

Configure things:

git config --global user.name "Your Name"
git config --global user.email "you@example.com"
git config --global alias.co checkout
git config --global apply.whitespace nowarn

Setup an SSH key

ssh-keygen

Hit return a couple of times – leave password blank if you want.

cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | pbcopy

Paste that code into your settings page on your repository host(s).

Set up Global Git Config on your GitHub account page (the same place you pasted your SSH key). You’ll type in some stuff that looks like this:

git config --global github.user [your_username]
git config --global github.token [your_token]

Get happy Git colors. Paste the following into your ~/.gitconfig file:

[color]
    branch = auto
    diff = auto
    status = auto
[color "branch"]
    current = yellow reverse
    local = yellow
    remote = green
[color "diff"]
    meta = yellow bold
    frag = magenta bold
    old = red bold
    new = green bold
[color "status"]
    added = yellow
    changed = green
    untracked = cyan

Create a ~/.gitexcludes file and paste in this:

.DS_Store

There, now you don’t have to ignore that every time.

Bash Fanciness

Add the following to your ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc:

source /usr/local/git/contrib/completion/git-completion.bash
GIT_PS1_SHOWDIRTYSTATE=true
export PS1='[\u@mbp \w$(__git_ps1)]\$ '

That will add tab auto-completion for Git branches, display the current branch on your prompt, and show a ‘*’ after the branch name if there are unstaged changes in the repository, and a ‘+’ if there are staged (but uncommitted) changes. It will look something like this:

[user@computer ~/Sites/example.com (master*)]$ 

Bonus

If you want to have a different email address for a particular project (a personal project on your work computer, perhaps?), just run this command inside that project’s folder:

git config user.email "you@example.com"

It’s the same command as before, this time just omitting the --global.

Sources

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