Pull from a repository
Let’s now pull the latest change (that we just pushed in the previous step) from the remote repository to our local repository (i.e., the "tutorial" directory).
Now that our remote repository is up to date with the changes from tutorial2
. let’s pull the change and synchronize our initial repository directory, tutorial
.
To execute a pull, use the git pull command. If you do not include the repository name, the pull will be executed on the repository under the alias origin
.
$ git pull origin main
Username:
Password:
From https://example.backlog.com/git/BLGGIT/tutorial.git
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
Updating ac56e47..3da09c1
Fast-forward
sample.txt | 1 +
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
Verify that the history is updated with the git log command.
$ git log
commit 3da09c1134a41f2bee854a413916e4ebcae7318d
Author: username
Date: Thu Jul 12 18:02:45 2022 +0900
append description of the add command
commit ac56e474afbbe1eab9ebce5b3ab48ac4c73ad60e
Author: username
Date: Thu Jul 12 18:00:21 2022 +0900
first commit
The new commit is now listed under this repository’s history log.
Open the file sample.txt
and check the content.
Anyone can learn Git with this tutorial and Backlog
add: Register a change in an index
You will see add: Register a change in an index
added to the content.