Question

I have a local repository I'm working on and its remote is hosted on GitHub. I recently created a branch and started working on it, making several commits and now wish to push the branch to GitHub and be able to pull it to another cloned repository.

What needs to be done to accomplish this?

If this is not possible using GitHub, I'd be happy to know how to do it normally.

Was it helpful?

Solution

git push origin <local-branch-name>:<remote-branch-name>

Substitute for <local-branch-name> and <remote-branch-name>. They may be same or different, as you wish.

OTHER TIPS

As you have set up the remotes already, the command is just

git push origin branch-name

on the first push.

Afterward, using git push origin would push all branches with the matching name on remote.

Make sure that your remote URL is using SSH syntax and not just Git protocol syntax. If you run,

git remote show origin

the URL printed should look something like,

git@github.com:yourname/projectname.git

You need the URL too to look like that if you want to be able to push. If you are just a public user (without write access) the URL will look like,

git://github.com/yourname/projectname.git

If yours looks like the latter then you can manually edit it in your projects .git/config file.

if you need to pull any branch code from remotely to locally

$git pull origin branch_name

while if you need to push code to your branch

you need to check is your code successfully save you can check by

$git status

than

$git add -A

after this make commit to your branch

$git commit -m "this is initial change"

than(Last) push your code to your branch by:

$git push origin branch_name
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