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Save aviaryan/5413425 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
By Avi Aryan | |
This Text explains how to get around with "debug the state of this repo" Error. | |
This text does not uses Cmd and Powershell, so it can be followed by a basic user. | |
If you face the above Error in GitHub for Windows, then ------ | |
* First Go to your local repo i.e. the repo's local folder. | |
* Show Hidden Files via the Folder Options. | |
* You will see a ".git" named folder in your local repo as soon as hidden files are set to be seen. | |
* Delete That. | |
* Now open Github for Windows. | |
* Now, if you click on that repo in Local Tab, you should get an Error that repo cant be found. | |
* | |
* There it is, click on Re-Clone Repository button. | |
* | |
* The Repo will be downloaded again, with all commits and saved by default in -- My Documents/GitHib/<RepoName> | |
Enjoy! |
I would assume that if you were to be writing code and using github you wouldn't be considered a "basic" user. Just fire up the console and do "git status" or "git pull", it will show you the problematic files which you might deal with manually or using git.
Using the console with "git status" and "git pull" seems to just override the error and fix the problem entirely.
and it does not work...
doesn´t work...
Doesn't work for me too. Console commands show no error but desktop app just simply failed to sync.
I had the same issue as the commenters... git status shows no errors, I can update via git pull, but I can't use the desktop app... Something about SSH agent failing to load... Had to reinstall and reclone the git....
Sometimes when using git pull
, it gives an error: "Permission denied". To fix this, make sure that no other processes are using those files (e.g. any watch compilers, text editors, web servers...)
Check https://github.com/settings/emails
if your email is set to private. Revert to public if it is.
This showed up when apparently I had a file that was too large in my commit. When I opened up powershell and used git push, it revealed the source of the error. Though I imagine the github desktop app throws this message for a variety of reason
Doesn't sound like much of a fix to me. Why would the software ask you to open a shell to debug if in fact there is no way to debug the issue? I have to say so far I find Git to be a bit of a hack and quite unimpressive as a version control technology.