Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@amitbarai
amitbarai / git-deployment.md
Created June 8, 2020 20:41 — forked from noelboss/git-deployment.md
Simple automated GIT Deployment using Hooks

Simple automated GIT Deployment using GIT Hooks

Here are the simple steps needed to create a deployment from your local GIT repository to a server based on this in-depth tutorial.

How it works

You are developing in a working-copy on your local machine, lets say on the master branch. Most of the time, people would push code to a remote server like github.com or gitlab.com and pull or export it to a production server. Or you use a service like deepl.io to act upon a Web-Hook that's triggered that service.

@amitbarai
amitbarai / git-php-webhook.php
Created June 8, 2020 16:08 — forked from hawkins/git-php-webhook.php
A basic webhook for deploying updates to repos on Github to your local server
<?php
/**
* This script is for easily deploying updates to Github repos to your local server. It will automatically git clone or
* git pull in your repo directory every time an update is pushed to your $BRANCH (configured below).
*
* Read more about how to use this script at http://behindcompanies.com/2014/01/a-simple-script-for-deploying-code-with-githubs-webhooks/
*
* INSTRUCTIONS:
* 1. Edit the variables below
* 2. Upload this script to your server somewhere it can be publicly accessed
@amitbarai
amitbarai / git-php-webhook.php
Created June 8, 2020 16:08 — forked from marcelosomers/git-php-webhook.php
A basic webhook for deploying updates to repos on Github to your local server
<?php
/**
* This script is for easily deploying updates to Github repos to your local server. It will automatically git clone or
* git pull in your repo directory every time an update is pushed to your $BRANCH (configured below).
*
* Read more about how to use this script at http://behindcompanies.com/2014/01/a-simple-script-for-deploying-code-with-githubs-webhooks/
*
* INSTRUCTIONS:
* 1. Edit the variables below
* 2. Upload this script to your server somewhere it can be publicly accessed
@amitbarai
amitbarai / create-certs.sh
Created April 2, 2020 07:41 — forked from sethvargo/create-certs.sh
Use openssl to create an x509 self-signed certificate authority (CA), certificate signing request (CSR), and resulting private key with IP SAN and DNS SAN
# Define where to store the generated certs and metadata.
DIR="$(pwd)/tls"
# Optional: Ensure the target directory exists and is empty.
rm -rf "${DIR}"
mkdir -p "${DIR}"
# Create the openssl configuration file. This is used for both generating
# the certificate as well as for specifying the extensions. It aims in favor
# of automation, so the DN is encoding and not prompted.
@amitbarai
amitbarai / revert-a-commit.md
Created March 21, 2019 19:12 — forked from gunjanpatel/revert-a-commit.md
Git HowTo: revert a commit already pushed to a remote repository

Revert the full commit

Sometimes you may want to undo a whole commit with all changes. Instead of going through all the changes manually, you can simply tell git to revert a commit, which does not even have to be the last one. Reverting a commit means to create a new commit that undoes all changes that were made in the bad commit. Just like above, the bad commit remains there, but it no longer affects the the current master and any future commits on top of it.

git revert {commit_id}'

About History Rewriting

Delete the last commit

Deleting the last commit is the easiest case. Let's say we have a remote origin with branch master that currently points to commit dd61ab32. We want to remove the top commit. Translated to git terminology, we want to force the master branch of the origin remote repository to the parent of dd61ab32: