How to add a local repo and treat it as a remote repo

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傲寒
傲寒 2020-11-27 09:15

I\'m trying to make a local repo act as a remote with the name bak for another local repo on my PC, using the following:

git remote add /home/sa         


        
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  • 2020-11-27 09:40

    It appears that your format is incorrect:

    If you want to share a locally created repository, or you want to take contributions from someone elses repository - if you want to interact in any way with a new repository, it's generally easiest to add it as a remote. You do that by running git remote add [alias] [url]. That adds [url] under a local remote named [alias].

    #example
    $ git remote
    $ git remote add github git@github.com:schacon/hw.git
    $ git remote -v
    

    http://gitref.org/remotes/#remote

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  • 2020-11-27 09:44

    I am posting this answer to provide a script with explanations that covers three different scenarios of creating a local repo that has a local remote. You can run the entire script and it will create the test repos in your home folder (tested on windows git bash). The explanations are inside the script for easier saving to your personal notes, its very readable from, e.g. Visual Studio Code.

    I would also like to thank Jack for linking to this answer where adelphus has good, detailed, hands on explanations on the topic.

    This is my first post here so please advise what should be improved.

    ## SETUP LOCAL GIT REPO WITH A LOCAL REMOTE
    # the main elements:
    # - remote repo must be initialized with --bare parameter
    # - local repo must be initialized
    # - local repo must have at least one commit that properly initializes a branch(root of the commit tree)
    # - local repo needs to have a remote
    # - local repo branch must have an upstream branch on the remote
    
    { # the brackets are optional, they allow to copy paste into terminal and run entire thing without interruptions, run without them to see which cmd outputs what
    
    cd ~
    rm -rf ~/test_git_local_repo/
    
    ## Option A - clean slate - you have nothing yet
    
    mkdir -p ~/test_git_local_repo/option_a ; cd ~/test_git_local_repo/option_a
    git init --bare local_remote.git # first setup the local remote
    git clone local_remote.git local_repo # creates a local repo in dir local_repo
    cd ~/test_git_local_repo/option_a/local_repo
    git remote -v show origin # see that git clone has configured the tracking
    touch README.md ; git add . ; git commit -m "initial commit on master" # properly init master
    git push origin master # now have a fully functional setup, -u not needed, git clone does this for you
    
    # check all is set-up correctly
    git pull # check you can pull
    git branch -avv # see local branches and their respective remote upstream branches with the initial commit
    git remote -v show origin # see all branches are set to pull and push to remote
    git log --oneline --graph --decorate --all # see all commits and branches tips point to the same commits for both local and remote
    
    ## Option B - you already have a local git repo and you want to connect it to a local remote
    
    mkdir -p ~/test_git_local_repo/option_b ; cd ~/test_git_local_repo/option_b
    git init --bare local_remote.git # first setup the local remote
    
    # simulate a pre-existing git local repo you want to connect with the local remote
    mkdir local_repo ; cd local_repo
    git init # if not yet a git repo
    touch README.md ; git add . ; git commit -m "initial commit on master" # properly init master
    git checkout -b develop ; touch fileB ; git add . ; git commit -m "add fileB on develop" # create develop and fake change
    
    # connect with local remote
    cd ~/test_git_local_repo/option_b/local_repo
    git remote add origin ~/test_git_local_repo/option_b/local_remote.git
    git remote -v show origin # at this point you can see that there is no the tracking configured (unlike with git clone), so you need to push with -u
    git push -u origin master # -u to set upstream
    git push -u origin develop # -u to set upstream; need to run this for every other branch you already have in the project
    
    # check all is set-up correctly
    git pull # check you can pull
    git branch -avv # see local branch(es) and its remote upstream with the initial commit
    git remote -v show origin # see all remote branches are set to pull and push to remote
    git log --oneline --graph --decorate --all # see all commits and branches tips point to the same commits for both local and remote
    
    ## Option C - you already have a directory with some files and you want it to be a git repo with a local remote
    
    mkdir -p ~/test_git_local_repo/option_c ; cd ~/test_git_local_repo/option_c
    git init --bare local_remote.git # first setup the local remote
    
    # simulate a pre-existing directory with some files
    mkdir local_repo ; cd local_repo ; touch README.md fileB
    
    # make a pre-existing directory a git repo and connect it with local remote
    cd ~/test_git_local_repo/option_c/local_repo
    git init
    git add . ; git commit -m "inital commit on master" # properly init master
    git remote add origin ~/test_git_local_repo/option_c/local_remote.git
    git remote -v show origin # see there is no the tracking configured (unlike with git clone), so you need to push with -u
    git push -u origin master # -u to set upstream
    
    # check all is set-up correctly
    git pull # check you can pull
    git branch -avv # see local branch and its remote upstream with the initial commit
    git remote -v show origin # see all remote branches are set to pull and push to remote
    git log --oneline --graph --decorate --all # see all commits and branches tips point to the same commits for both local and remote
    }
    
    
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  • 2020-11-27 09:47

    You have your arguments to the remote add command reversed:

    git remote add <NAME> <PATH>
    

    So:

    git remote add bak /home/sas/dev/apps/smx/repo/bak/ontologybackend/.git
    

    See git remote --help for more information.

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  • 2020-11-27 09:58

    If your goal is to keep a local copy of the repository for easy backup or for sticking onto an external drive or sharing via cloud storage (Dropbox, etc) you may want to use a bare repository. This allows you to create a copy of the repository without a working directory, optimized for sharing.

    For example:

    $ git init --bare ~/repos/myproject.git
    $ cd /path/to/existing/repo
    $ git remote add origin ~/repos/myproject.git
    $ git push origin master
    

    Similarly you can clone as if this were a remote repo:

    $ git clone ~/repos/myproject.git
    
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