One problem I had while practicing git was syncing up a forked repository. This can come in handy for open source projects and collaborating in teams without permissions to directly push onto an original repo. I'm interested in open source, so I figured it would be a good thing to learn, and a good thing to document (because I am sure the details will skip my mind later).
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Make sure you are in the right place
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That was my first mistake. I was in the wrong directory so I got this error when I tried to merge.
fatal: refusing to merge unrelated histories
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That happened because I was telling git to merge one repo (my dotfiles repo) with the other (my apprenticeship repo). Here's some documentation on that error
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An easy way to check where you are is the command:
$ pwd
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Check your remote repos
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While your remote repo is a clone of the one on GitHub, it is still considered its own repo.
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Use the command:
$ git remote -v
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You should see this output:
origin <url of your forked repo> (fetch)
origin <url of your forked repo> (push)
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Then you can set upstream
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If you want to you can just fetch and then push, but then you will have to do the below commands every time your forked repo is out of sync
$ git fetch <url of original repo>
$ git push
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Setting upstream is an easier way of doing this, which can be good if you are going to be working on committing to the repo a lot.
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Set upstream command:
$ git remote add upstream <url of original repo>
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Check where you are again
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To understand what was happening, and to help me make sure I wasn't making the same mistake as before I checked my remote repos with:
$ git remote -v
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It should output
origin <url of your forked repo> (fetch)
origin <url of your forked repo> (push)
upstream <url of original repo> (fetch)
upstream <url of original repo> (push)
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I don't know why it has the fetched and pushed version of each
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Now every time you need to sync up your fork with the original repo all you have to type is
$ git fetch upstream
$ git merge upstream/master
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To make the process easier you can also set up aliases in your dotfiles
Hi there, thanks for this.