First of all, installing the Xcode Command Line tools is probably not what you want. See this post for more information:
http://www.cocoanetics.com/2012/07/you-dont-need-the-xcode-command-line-tools/
You want to set up symbolic links or aliases that point to the versions of git (and svn etc.) that exist inside Xcode.app. This will cause you to automatically get newer versions when Xcode updates through the app store. Installing the command line tools will only confuse matters because you will end up with multiple versions of git lying around, and you will have to manually update the command line tools.
The commands you will need are:
sudo xcode-select --switch /Applications/Xcode.app # tells 'xcrun' where to look
And then in your shell profile, for example .bash_profile:
alias git='xcrun git' # use 'xcrun' to locate the git binary
Now running 'git' from the terminal will use the latest version inside Xcode.app.
$PATHenvironment variable to prioritize the custom installation over the one from Xcode. This will allow to update Git at any time. Also you avoid touching Apple's setup. – JJD Jan 21 at 14:48