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10 In working with the Android source files, you will use Repo for across-network operations. For example, with a single Repo command you can download files from multiple repositories into your local working directory.
40 To synchronize the files for all available projects:<br>$ repo sync <br><br>To
41 synchronize the files for selected projects:<br>$ repo sync <i>project1
47 Start a topic branch in your local work environment whenever you begin a change, for example when you begin work on a bug or new feature.<br><br>A topic branch is not a copy of the original files; it is a pointer to a particular commit. This makes creating local branches and switching among them a light-weight operation. By using branches, you canisolateone aspect of your work from the others. For an interesting article about using topic branches, see <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/howto/separating-topic-branches.txt">Separating topic branches</a>
68 To list the state of your files:<br>$ repo status <br><br>To see uncommitted edits:<br>$ repo diff <br><br>Therepo diffcommand shows every local edit that you have made that would <i>not</i>
74 If a repo sync shows sync conflicts:<br><ol><li>View the files that are unmerged (status code = U).
78 <li>Change into the relevant project directory, run git add and git commit for the files in question, and then "rebase" the changes. For example:<br>$ cd bionic <br>$ git add bionic/*<br>$ git commit <br>$ git rebase --continue <br><br></li>
87 Cleaning up your client files <br></h3>
118 ]<br><br><div>Installs Repo in the current directory. This creates a .repo/ directory that contains Git repositories for the Repo source code and the standard Android manifest files. The .repo/ directory also containsmanifest.xml, which is a symlink to the selected manifest in the .repo/manifests/ directory.<br><br>The -u argument specifies a URL from which to retrieve a manifest repository. For example:<br>$ repo init -u git://android.git.kernel.org/platform/manifest.git <br><br>To select a manifest file within the repository, use the -m option. (If no manifest name is selected, the default is default.xml.)For example:<br>$ repo init -ugit://android.git.kernel.org/platform/manifest.git-m dalkvik-plus.xml <br><br>To specify a revision, that is, a particular manifest-branch, use the -b option. For example:<br>$ repo init -ugit://android.git.kernel.org/platform/manifest.git-b release-1.0<br><br>To see other repo init options, run <br>$ repo help init <br><br><b>Note:</b>
124 ]<br><br><div>Downloads new changes and updates the working files in your local environment. After a successful repo sync, the code in specified projects will be up to date with the code in the remote repository.<br><br>You can specify project-list as a list of names or a list of paths to local source directories for the projects:<br>repo sync [<i>proj1</i>
129 ]<br><br>If you run repo sync without any arguments, it will synchronize the files for all the projects.<br><br></div>
223 <div><ul><li>In the left-most column, an uppercase letter indicates what is happening in the index (the staged files) when compared to the last committed state.<br><br></li>
317 At intervals, you use git commit to save a snapshot of the staged files and a log message that describes the change.<br><br><i>Manifest</i>
318 <br>A manifest file that contains a list of repositories and a mapping of where the files from these repositories will be located within your working directory. When you synchronize your files, the files contained in the repositories that are listed in the manifest will be pulled into your working directory.</div>