Sometimes you need to keep two upstreams in sync with eachother. For example, you might need to both push to your testing environment and your GitHub repo at the same time. In order to do this simultaneously in one git command, here's a little trick to add multiple push URLs to a single remote.
Once you have a remote set up for one of your upstreams, run these commands with:
git remote set-url --add --push [remote] [original repo URL]
git remote set-url --add --push [remote] [second repo URL]
Once set up, git remote -v
should show two (push) URLs and one (fetch) URL. Something like this:
$ git remote -v
origin [email protected]:bjmiller121/original-repo.git (fetch)
origin [email protected]:bjmiller121/original-repo.git (push)
origin [email protected]:bjmiller121/second-repo.git (push)
Now, pushing to this remote will push to both upstreams simultaneiously. Fetch and pull from this remote will still pull from the original repo only.
Tip: If you always want to push to both upstreams simultaneously, you might want to use the origin
remote. If you only sometimes want to push to both, you might use a remote name like both
to indicate that it will push to multiple repos.
Some Personal Extras:
git remote show origin - show origin urls push and fetch
git remote remove origin - remote origin urls
git remote add origin [url] - Add new push and fetch urls
git push --set-upstream origin master - push to new origin