The Bash Shell
Bash is a commonly-used shell that gives you the power to do tasks more quickly.
- Download the Git for Windows installer.
- Run the installer and follow the steps below:
- Click on "Next" four times (two times if you've previously installed Git). You don't need to change anything in the Information, location, components, and start menu screens.
-
From the dropdown menu, "Choosing the default editor used by Git", select "Use the Nano editor by default" (NOTE: you will need to scroll
up to find it) and click on "Next". - On the page that says "Adjusting the name of the initial branch in new repositories", ensure that "Let Git decide" is selected. This will ensure the highest level of compatibility for our lessons.
- Ensure that "Git from the command line and also from 3rd-party software" is selected and click on "Next". (If you don't do this Git Bash will not work properly, requiring you to remove the Git Bash installation, re-run the installer and to select the "Git from the command line and also from 3rd-party software" option.)
- Select "Use bundled OpenSSH".
- Ensure that "Use the native Windows Secure Channel Library" is selected and click on "Next".
- Ensure that "Checkout Windows-style, commit Unix-style line endings" is selected and click on "Next".
- Ensure that "Use Windows' default console window" is selected and click on "Next".
- Ensure that "Default (fast-forward or merge) is selected and click "Next"
- Ensure that "Git Credential Manager" is selected and click on "Next".
- Ensure that "Enable file system caching" is selected and click on "Next".
- Click on "Install".
- Click on "Finish" or "Next".
-
If your "HOME" environment variable is not set (or you don't know what this is):
- Open command prompt (Open Start Menu then type
cmd
and press Enter) -
Type the following line into the command prompt window exactly as shown:
setx HOME "%USERPROFILE%"
- Press Enter, you should see
SUCCESS: Specified value was saved.
- Quit command prompt by typing
exit
then pressing Enter
- Open command prompt (Open Start Menu then type
This will provide you with both Git and Bash in the Git Bash program.
You already have bash or zshell installed as part of macOS and can use that for learning the Unix shell.
The default shell is usually Bash and there is usually no need to install anything.
To see if your default shell is Bash type echo $SHELL
in
a terminal and press the Enter key. If the message printed
does not end with '/bash' then your default is something else and you
can run Bash by typing bash
.
Git
Git is a version control system that lets you track who made changes to what when and has options for easily updating a shared or public version of your code on GitLab. You will need a web browser.
You will need an account at the UW GitLab instance for parts of the Git lesson. An account should be provisioned for you when you log in with your netid. See the Gitlab Knowledgebase for additional information about setting up an account.
Git should be installed on your computer as part of your Bash install (see the Shell installation instructions).
Please open the Terminal app, type git --version
and press
Enter/Return. If it's not installed already,
follow the instructions to Install
the "command line
developer tools". Do not click "Get Xcode", because that will
take too long and is not necessary for our Git lesson.
After installing these tools, there won't be anything in your /Applications
folder, as they and Git are command line programs.
For older versions of OS X (10.5-10.8) use the
most recent available installer labelled "snow-leopard"
available here.
(Note: this project is no longer maintained.)
Because this installer is not signed by the developer, you may have to
right click (control click) on the .pkg file, click Open, and click
Open in the pop-up dialog.
If Git is not already available on your machine you can try to
install it via your distro's package manager. For Debian/Ubuntu run
sudo apt-get install git
and for Fedora run
sudo dnf install git
.