In the graphic at TS 14:35, you show "S1" in the "staging area", But at TS 14:45, git status shows "S1" is modified but not staged. Is there a difference between being in the "staging area" and "being staged?"
this is the best explanation i have seen so far, already known some stuff but the way you explained it was excelent, still helping people 10 years later so thanks
Great presentation. Looking forward for similar presentation with OVN :) You are talented to quickly explain networking stuff. I finally know how networking works in OpenStack :)
David, I'm looking for any kind of software that I could use for a school project to emulate a load of internet of things devices so that I can pen test them. Can you recommend what the best ones for the job might be?
I might be a bit late, but this is a great video so I had to leave a comment. It is by far the best one I've seen on Git, carefully explaining basic concepts while also making it practical. Excellent work, David! Thank you for sharing it with us.
How can we configure the switch to have a layer 3 forwarding, but we want the HTTP traffic destined to host h3 to be blocked, while the HTTP traffic destined to hosts h1 and h2 stays allowed?
The vlan are locally significant, the use of these vlans doesn't impose a limit of 4096 tenants on each compute node? vxlan can have a very much larger number of tenants but what happens when the limit of local vlans on the compute are reached? Is there any way of using another technology locally?
When trying to restore S2 from a previous commit, doesn't git checkout <commit hash> <file> lead to a detached HEAD? How did the subsequent commit of that restoration continue at the end of the branch rather than from <commit hash>?
fast forward to 2023 :- 18:49 : currently '$ git rm <filename>' does two thing in following order (removal from tracked --> commit) 19:50 : alternative to git checkout --S1 would be '$ git restore <filename>' 22:14 : alternative to git reset HEAD S1 would be '$ git restore --staged<filename>' Now you can see a parallel b/w git diff & git diff --staged vis-a-vis git restore & git restore --staged
Thanks for this. I'm a long-time SVN user migrating to Git and although I've used it in other teams, administering the migration process has me in a right pickle. Looking forward to the next two videos.