Incapaz de mestre Git-push para GitHub - 'origem' não parece ser um repositório git / permissão negada

StackOverflow https://stackoverflow.com/questions/922210

  •  06-09-2019
  •  | 
  •  

Pergunta

Esta questão está relacionada ao meu problema na rebase, ramo e mesclar , e para o problema

Como você pode comprometer-se a sua conta github como você tem um companheiro de equipe em sua lista de remoto?

Eu descobri que outras pessoas tiveram o mesmo problema. O problema parece estar relacionado com /etc/xinet.d /.

Problema: incapaz de empurrar o meu ramo local ao meu branch master no Github

Eu corro

git push origin master

I get

fatal: 'origin' does not appear to be a git repository
fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly

A mensagem de erro me sugere que o ramo 'origem' não é no meu repositório git local. Desta forma, o Git deixa de se conectar a Github.

Isso é estranho, já que eu não tenha removido o ramo 'origem'.

Minha árvore git é

  dev
* master
  ticgit
  remotes/Math/Math
  remotes/Math/master
  remotes/origin/master
  remotes/Masi/master

Como você pode empurrar a sua filial local para Github , enquanto você tem ramificação de um companheiro de equipe em seu local de Git?


A resposta de VonC resolve o problema principal. Eu coloquei um passphares para minhas chaves SSH.

Eu corro

$git push github master     

I get

Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly

Parece que eu preciso dar a senha para o Git de alguma forma.

Como você pode fazer Github pedir a sua senha em vez de confiar na chave ssh?

Foi útil?

Solução

What does

$ git config --get-regexp '^(remote|branch)\.'

returns (executed within your git repository) ?

Origin is just a default naming convention for referring to a remote Git repository.

If it does not refer to GitHub (but rather a path to your teammate repository, path which may no longer be valid or available), just add another origin, like in this Bloggitation entry

$ git remote add origin2 git@github.com:myLogin/myProject.git
$ git push origin2 master

(I would actually use the name 'github' rather than 'origin' or 'origin2')


Permission denied (publickey).
fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly

Check if your gitHub identity is correctly declared in your local Git repository, as mentioned in the GitHub Help guide. (both user.name and github.name -- and github.token)

Then, stonean blog suggests (as does Marcio Garcia):

$ cd ~/.ssh
$ ssh-add id_rsa

Aral Balkan adds: create a config file

The solution was to create a config file under ~/.ssh/ as outlined at the bottom of the OS X section of this page.

Here's the file I added, as per the instructions on the page, and my pushes started working again:

Host github.com
User git
Port 22
Hostname github.com
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
TCPKeepAlive yes
IdentitiesOnly yes

You can also post the result of

ssh -v git@github.com

to have more information as to why GitHub ssh connection rejects you.

Check also you did enter correctly your public key (it needs to end with '==').
Do not paste your private key, but your public one. A public key would look something like:

ssh-rsa AAAAB3<big string here>== tek...@gmail.com 

(Note: did you use a passphrase for your ssh keys ? It would be easier without a passphrase)

Check also the url used when pushing (git@github.com/..., not git://github.com/...)

Check that you do have a SSH Agent to use and cache your key.

Try this:

 $ ssh -i path/to/public/key git@github.com

If that works, then it means your key is not being sent to GitHub by your ssh client.

Outras dicas

This is a problem with your remote. When you do git push origin master, origin is the remote and master is the branch you're pushing.

When you do this:

git remote

I bet the list does not include origin. To re-add the origin remote:

git remote add origin git@github.com:your_github_username/your_github_app.git

Or, if it exists but is formatted incorrectly:

git remote rm origin
git remote add origin git@github.com:your_github_username/your_github_app.git

VonC's answer is best, but the part that worked for me was super simple and is kind of buried among a lot of other possible answers. If you are like me, you ran into this issue while running a "getting started with rails" tutorial and you had NOT setup your public/private SSH keys.

If so, try this:

  1. $>cd ~/.ssh

  2. $>ls

  3. If the output of ls is known_hosts and nothing else, visit: http://help.github.com/mac-key-setup/ and start following the instructions from the "Generating a key" section and down.

After running those instructions, my "git push origin master" command worked.

I have the same problem and i think the firewall is blocking the git protocol. So in the end I have to resort to using https:// to fetch and push. However this will always prompt the user to enter the password...

here is the example what working for me (just to share with those cant use git:// protocol :)

git fetch https://[user-name]@github.com/[user-name]/[project].git

if the above works, you can remove the origin and replace with

git remote rm origin  
git remote add origin https://[user-name]@github.com/[user-name]/[project].git

I think that's another case of git error messages being misleading. Usually when I've seen that error it's due to ssh problems. Did you add your public ssh key to your github account?

Edit: Also, the xinet.d forum post is referring to running the git-daemon as a service so that people could pull from your system. It's not necessary to run git-daemon to push to github.

I got the same problem and I just added the content of ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub to my account in GitHub. After that just try again git push origin master, it should work.

They key thing to remember is 'origin' is not the value you may need to be using... it worked for me when I replaced 'origin' with repo's name.

One possibility that the above answers don't address is that you may not have an ssh access from your shell. That is, you may be in a network (some college networks do this) where ssh service is blocked.In that case you will not only be able to get github services but also any other ssh services. You can test if this is the problem by trying to use any other ssh service.This was the case with me.

I had this problem and tried various solutions to solve it including many of those listed above (config file, debug ssh etc). In the end, I resolved it by including the -u switch in the git push, per the github instructions when creating a new repository onsite - Github new Repository

Licenciado em: CC-BY-SA com atribuição
Não afiliado a StackOverflow
scroll top