Created
October 28, 2013 23:12
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GitHub - initialize from existing directory
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Create the remote repository, and get the URL such as | |
[email protected]:/youruser/somename.git or https://github.com/youruser/somename.git | |
If your local GIT repo is already set up, skips steps 2 and 3 | |
Locally, at the root directory of your source, git init | |
Locally, add and commit what you want in your initial repo | |
(for everything, | |
git add . | |
git commit -m 'initial commit comment' | |
to attach your remote repo with the name 'origin' (like cloning would do) | |
git remote add origin [URL From Step 1] | |
Execute git pull origin master to pull the remote branch so that they are in sync. | |
to push up your master branch (change master to something else for a different branch): | |
git push origin master |
This is helpful. But on one occasion git pull origin master
had refused with fatal: refusing to merge unrelated histories
.
This explanation from StackOverflow helped with the problem. I have just used git pull origin master --allow-unrelated-histories
to make it work.
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Thanks for this, solved my problem. git push --force origin master is a good one to remember.