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// Reference: http://www.blackdogfoundry.com/blog/moving-repository-from-bitbucket-to-github/ | |
// See also: http://www.paulund.co.uk/change-url-of-git-repository | |
$ cd $HOME/Code/repo-directory | |
$ git remote rename origin bitbucket | |
$ git remote add origin https://github.com/mandiwise/awesome-new-repo.git | |
$ git push origin master | |
$ git remote rm bitbucket |
If you're using bitbucket make sure the login is whatever it says in your https://bitbucket.org/account (not your email address) and generate an app password, that worked for me.
Give this guy a nobel prize 🙌
If you're using bitbucket make sure the login is whatever it says in your https://bitbucket.org/account (not your email address) and generate an app password, that worked for me.
What @jpgarza93 said, give the man a nobel prize! I was pulling my hair out why it failed! Worked as a charm after this comment!
If you're using bitbucket make sure the login is whatever it says in your https://bitbucket.org/account (not your email address) and generate an app password, that worked for me.
+1, tysm
+1, this did most of what I needed.
My local branch had trouble tracking after this, though that might be because I wanted to rename the trunk branch from master to main while I was doing this, so I also had to run
$ git branch -u origin/main
after setting up the new origin to get the branch to track.
FWIW, Atlassian now tells me that this was a false alarm. Once they figured out how to let me update the expiration date of my credit card, all was fine with my current Bitbucket product. I'm not going to even try to hazard a guess as to its name. The Atlassian site is among the worst I've ever tried to navigate.