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I'm new to git and am confused by the documentation.

I've successfully set up a repository and can change and commit just fine. However, I'm still lost on how to push my repository to my server. Does the other server need to have git on it as well?

Basically, my company has an installation of magento which will be going live, I recommended we set up another server with version control before going live. What would be the best way to do that using git?

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May I present... Git and Magento 101! Gitgento!

Since it looks like you're midstream with your project, you might need to cherry-pick advice here and apply it to your situation.

First things first - get your Mage .gitignore file going. I use this one from GitHub.

Second - under ideal circumstances (which you may or not have), I highly suggest you check in a working, vanilla install of Magento to the master branch. That way when an update comes out, you can checkout the master branch and try to upgrade from there without your modifications. Then, consider creating branches for your staging servers. In my personal experience, we've setup three servers, prod, dev, and stage - each has a copy of the repository on it, and each runs git.

Third - you're going to need a central repository to communicate between the servers. Consider gitolite (gitosis isn't updated anymore), as it will act as the "remote" repository and allow you to have some control over who (and what) can access the code base, down to the branch level. Get that setup and take a look at how you can leverage git-hooks to synchronize your servers automatically.

Don't be afraid to house the repository on your production server - just be sure to disallow access to the .git directory, otherwise your repo will be out in the open. Hope this helps!

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  • Thanks for this. This certainly helps me with my configuration, but how do I make my local git repo communicate with the server's? Something about an alias?
    – Adam Grant
    Dec 7, 2011 at 5:19
  • Those are generally referred to as remotes. As for the actual process, checkout this link: thelucid.com/2008/12/02/… - specifically the part about git remote add origin - you'd set the gitolite server up as a remote and begin pushing/pulling to it. It is rather trivial, luckily!
    – Nic
    Dec 7, 2011 at 5:25
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Yes, you need something like gitolite or gitosis in your server. You can read the following link -

http://progit.org/book/ch4-8.html

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  • Agreed. When I was looking for a remote solution, gitosis came up - I was deferred in the same way to gitolite, and I'm really glad I did. gitolite is an amazing and elegant piece of software.
    – Nic
    Dec 7, 2011 at 4:49
  • Awesome, I'll look into that now.
    – Adam Grant
    Dec 7, 2011 at 4:56
  • @Jefromi the link I gave has gitolite tutorial and I also mentioned gitolite first.
    – Rifat
    Dec 7, 2011 at 5:05
  • Okay, I looked into this and I'm not sure how this is supposed to help me. It looks like it makes the workflow better, but I need to take a magento installation already in place and populated and connect it with a local repository from which I can commit changes. Thank you
    – Adam Grant
    Dec 7, 2011 at 17:44

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