In this guide, we will discuss Git Environment Setup.
The environment of any tool consists of elements that support execution with software, hardware, and network configured. It includes operating system settings, hardware configuration, software configuration, test terminals, and other support to perform the operations. It is an essential aspect of any software.
It will help you to understand how to set up Git for first use on various platforms so you can read and write code in no time.
The Git config command
Git supports a command called git config that lets you get and set configuration variables that control all facets of how Git looks and operates. It is used to set Git configuration values on a global or local project level.
Setting user. name and user. email is the necessary configuration option as your name and email will show up in your commit messages.
Setting username
The username is used by Git for each commit.
$ git config --global user.name "Himanshu Dubey"
Setting email id
Git uses this email id for each commit.
$ git config --global user.email "himanshudubey481@gmail.com"
There are many other configuration options that the user can set.
Setting editor
You can set the default text editor when Git needs you to type in a message. If you have not selected any of the editors, Git will use your default system’s editor.
To select a different text editor, such as Vim,
$ git config --global core.editor Vim
Checking Your Settings
You can check your configuration settings; you can use the git config –list command to list all the settings that Git can find at that point.
$ git config -list
This command will list all your settings. See the below command line output.
Output
HiMaNshU@HiMaNshU-PC MINGW64 ~/Desktop $ git config --list core.symlinks=false core.autocrlf=true core.fscache=true color.diff=auto color.status=auto color.branch=auto color.interactive=true help.format=html rebase.autosquash=true http.sslcainfo=C:/Program Files/Git/mingw64/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt http.sslbackend=openssl diff.astextplain.textconv=astextplain filter.lfs.clean=git-lfs clean -- %f filter.lfs.smudge=git-lfs smudge --skip -- %f filter.lfs.process=git-lfs filter-process --skip filter.lfs.required=true credential.helper=manager gui.recentrepo=C:/Git user.email=dav.himanshudubey481@gmail.com user.name=Himanshu Dubey
Colored output
You can customize your Git output to view a personalized color theme. The git config can be used to set these color themes.
Color.ui
$ Git config -global color.ui true
The default value of color.UI is set as auto, which will apply colors to the immediate terminal output stream. You can set the color value as true, false, auto, and always.
Git configuration levels
The git config command can accept arguments to specify the configuration level. The following configuration levels are available in the Git config.
- local
- global
- system
–local
It is the default level in Git. Git config will write to a local level if no configuration option is given. Local configuration values are stored in the .git/config directory as a file.
–global
The global level configuration is a user-specific configuration. User-specific means, it is applied to an individual operating system user. Global configuration values are stored in a user’s home directory. ~ /.gitconfig on UNIX systems and C:\Users\\.gitconfig on windows as a file format.
–system
The system-level configuration is applied across an entire system. The entire system means all users on an operating system and all repositories. The system-level configuration file is stored in a gitconfig file off the system directory. $(prefix)/etc/gitconfig on UNIX systems and C:\ProgramData\Git\config on Windows.
The order of priority of the Git config is local, global, and system, respectively. It means when looking for a configuration value, Git will start at the local level and bubble up to the system level.
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