Till now, both Tom and Jerry were using manual commands to compile their project. Now, Jerry decides to create Makefile for their project and also give a proper name to the file “string.c”.
[jerry@CentOS project]$ pwd /home/jerry/jerry_repo/project [jerry@CentOS project]$ ls README src [jerry@CentOS project]$ cd src/ [jerry@CentOS src]$ git add Makefile [jerry@CentOS src]$ git mv string.c string_operations.c [jerry@CentOS src]$ git status -s A Makefile R string.c −> string_operations.c
Git is showing R before file name to indicate that the file has been renamed.
For commit operation, Jerry used -a flag, that makes git commit automatically detect the modified files.
[jerry@CentOS src]$ git commit -a -m 'Added Makefile and renamed strings.c to string_operations.c ' [master 94f7b26] Added Makefile and renamed strings.c to string_operations.c 1 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) create mode 100644 src/Makefile rename src/{string.c => string_operations.c} (100%)
After commit, he pushes his changes to the repository.
[jerry@CentOS src]$ git push origin master
The above command will produce the following result −
Counting objects: 6, done. Compressing objects: 100% (3/3), done. Writing objects: 100% (4/4), 396 bytes, done. Total 4 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0) To gituser@git.server.com:project.git 7d9ea97..94f7b26 master −> master
Now, other developers can view these modifications by updating their local repository.