Having separate GitHub and Bitbucket Accounts on the same machine - github

Now while this can be considered duplicate at the first glance, I request everybody to please go through the description.
I want to push to separate Bitbucket and GitHub accounts.
While I understand that we can have a global config (say its the primary account - Bitbucket) and a local config for a repository (GitHub) after setting separate SSH-keys for both, is there a way we could configure multiple email-id's/userNames in the .gitconfig file ?
Note: I have separate emails/username's for the GitHub and Bitbucket account.
Any help would be appreciated.

You can have multiple ssh keys setup for pushing to multiple repository hosting services (like I describe in "Use SSH keys from command line during push for GitHub?")
But if you want to push to GitHub and Bitbucket from the same local repo (one commit, 2 pushes), then you would need to chose one username/email for your commit, which can only have one set of author/email metadata associated to it.
If you are pushing from different repo, then yes, each one can have its own local Git config setting, with different user name/email.

Related

Two names for the same github repo

Is it possible to create an alias or redirect to a GitHub repo?
For instance, is have the repo org/my-repo, and i want that when i clone the repo org/my-repo-2 (that does not exist), the repo org/my-repo will actually be cloned.
I need it to support a CI/CD process for two separate services that use the same repo, but each one of should be deployed with a different configuration. I want the repo alias to prevent adding conditions to my code.

Copy the entire master branch from one GitHub enterprise server to another GitHub enterprise server in a different location

We have two hosted GitHub enterprise servers on VMWare servers in a distinct location. We would like to copy all master branch from one GitHub enterprise server to another GHE (maybe every day once). Also, we need to configure alerts to notify in case of copy failure, network issues, etc.
Could you please help me to implement this?
git clone --bare https://github-dev.assr.com/assr-ghactions/setup-java.git
git push --mirror https://github-qa.assr.com/assr-ghactions/setup-java.git

Un-fork GitHub project into new GitHub project not associated with the original [duplicate]

How can I make GitHub forget or disassociate that my repo was originally a fork of another project?
I forked a project in GitHub. I can now see "forked from whatever/whatever". The parent repository "whatever/whatever" is no longer maintained. I have been allowed to continue use of the code base of the original repository to create an independent repository.
Is there a way to detach my project from the original repository?
Update Jan 2022:
Use the GitHub chatbot-virtual-assistant at https://support.github.com/contact?tags=rr-forks&subject=Detach%20Fork&flow=detach_fork
First answer:
You can contact github support and ask them to switch your repository to "normal mode".
On this page, "Commit was made in a fork" paragraph, it is explained that one has to go through support to switch. Therefore, it is likely that there is no way to do that by yourself (unless you destroy and recreate your repo which is explained before... if you do so be careful if you have tickets or a wiki attached to your project as they will be deleted!).
You could duplicate the forked repository to a new repository (without the fork dependency) from the GitHub UI, then remove the original forked one:
Sign in to GitHub
Select the + sign in the top right corner and select Import repository.
Import your forked repository. The new repository won't have the fork dependency.
Delete the original, forked repository in the repository settings.
NOTE: This approach will not preserve issues and pull requests.
Make sure you have all the important branches and tags on your local repo, delete the github repo, recreate the repository through usual means (no forking) and push the local repository back with git push --all. Note that if you have local branches that you don't want to publish, might be worth to create a temporary clean local clone for the operation.
However, this will also get rid of wiki and issues. As the wiki is in fact it's own repository, it can be handled similarly by cloning it and then recreating and pushing. The repo address is on wiki's Git Access page (git#github.com:user/repo.wiki.git).
This leaves issues. They can be exported through the API, but as far as I know, you can only create issues and comments with your person, so importing them perfectly is impossible.
So, if you need issues to be preserved, you should go through github support as Thomas Moulard suggests.
I got the similar problem, and ended up using this github help page to solve it. I didn't mind about the wiki and issues tracker as it was for my blog using a theme kindly developed by another user.
To detach a forked repo and use it as your own after several commits without losing the whole history:
git clone --bare git#github.com:user/forked_repo.git
Create a new empty reposity new-repository on the github website.
And push a mirrored version:
cd user.github.com.git/
git push --mirror git#github.com:user/new-repository.git
One can rename on github, the forked_repository with another name to keep it as backup and check updates if needed. Or simply delete it.
Renaming the new-repository to the original name does the job. As a side effect, your commits now appear in your history.
Log in to GitHub with your credentials.
Go to https://support.github.com/contact?tags=rr-forks&subject=Detach%20Fork&flow=detach_fork.
Choose "Detach", then enter the URL or repo name of the fork as your-user-name/repository-name, and answer the other questions of the virtual assistant.
You will get an email with a ticket number where you can check the status of your request. You will also be notified per email once your repo has been deforked.
Most repository settings will stay unchanged, including user permissions, stargazers, issues, PRs, discussions, etc.
Using the info from aurelien and Clayton, I was able to do this with the following:
$ git clone --bare https://github.com/my/forked_repo.git
<delete forked_repo on GitHub>
<recreate repo on GitHub using same name>
$ cd forked_repo.git
$ git push --mirror
Here's the documentation for git clone --bare:
Make a bare Git repository. That is, instead of creating <directory> and placing the administrative files in <directory>/.git, make the <directory> itself the $GIT_DIR. This obviously implies the -n because there is nowhere to check out the working tree. Also the branch heads at the remote are copied directly to corresponding local branch heads, without mapping them to refs/remotes/origin/. When this option is used, neither remote-tracking branches nor the related configuration variables are created.
Here's the documentation for git push --mirror:
Instead of naming each ref to push, specifies that all refs under refs/ (which includes but is not limited to refs/heads/, refs/remotes/, and refs/tags/) be mirrored to the remote repository. Newly created local refs will be pushed to the remote end, locally updated refs will be force updated on the remote end, and deleted refs will be removed from the remote end. This is the default if the configuration option remote.<remote>.mirror is set.
Note: like the other git based answers, this will not copy over issues that are not part of the git repo such as the wiki and issues. Per Tapio:
The wiki is a separate git repo and can be handled in a similar fashion per Tapio. The address is: git#github.com:user/repo.wiki.git.
Issues can be exported via the GitHub API but there are issues recreating them since they can only be created by your user, so imports will lose information.
This only applies to GitHub Enterprise, not on github.com
Logged in to an account that has admin privileges:
Go to the repository that you need to detach: https://<ghe url>/<org>/<repo>
Click on the “Site Admin” rocket on the top right corner
Click "Collaboration" on the top menu bar
Click on “Network” on the left pane
Click on “Make Root” in the Network Structure pane
Accept
This was tested on GitHub Enterprise 2.9
If you do not need any past commits (I didn't in my case), you can just:
fork the project
make a local copy of the fork (I used my IDE to do that)
delete the git folder from your local copy
commit the project as you normally would a new project.
You can just delete the fork from your github account after. Took me all of one minute and worked like a charm.

How to sync remote github repository from one accoun to another remote repository created under second account

I basically have two github private repositories in two different account and I want to set a provision in such way that when the code is pushed to first repository it should automatically available in (sync with) second repository created under different account.
I have referred https://github.com/makefu/repo-sync but didn't help.
Any one has steps to achieve this?
The fact that the mirror GitHub repo is under a different account does not matter, as long as your process has the right credentials (username/password).
If you are alone working on that repo, you can simply push to two different repos, as long as your git credential helper has both credentials memorized.
If you are not alone, and your remote repo can be updated (push) from multiple sources, you need to register a GitHub webhook, and setup a listener able to push events.
You can find an example in webhook.py mentioned in RalfJung/git-mirror.
The idea is to trigger a git fetch repo1 + git push --mirror repo2 in order to keep repo2 in sync with repo1.

Getting started with GitHub and Eclipse (spring source toolsuite 2.7.1)

I am new with both Git and GitHub so please bear with me.
I have an empty repository on GitHub with an automatically created branch (gh-pages), which, I understand, is supposed to be used with GitHub's pages functionality.
Now what I would like to do is to create and eclipse project from which I could commit/push to this repository.
What is confusing me that I can't see any option to create a remote branch on github. I suppose pushing my source to gh-pages won't be a good idea. BTW, I also don't understand why the GitHub pages is feature is implemented as a branch? Aren't branches supposed to be merged with each other at some point. Clearly it wouldn't make any sense to merge github pages into my project. Wouldn't it be better to have a folder within my project for this purpose.
I googled and found this link but being a git noob I am not sure if that's what I want to do. I would like to use Eclipse as my primary interface to git and github only falling back to command line or other interfaces when there is no other option.
OK I think I have figured it out. Basically, what you need is to define a remote ref that need not exist before hand.
Create a project
Team->Share it to a local repository
In the repository view (Window->Show View-> Git -> Repositories) select the local repository and right click on remotes
Select new remote (configure push). Type origin in the remote name. Press OK
Change URL. Copy/paste the ssh uri from github. Select ssh protocol (make sure you have ssh key defined in eclipse SSH preferences, and uploaded to github)
Now the last part is to add Ref mapping. Click on Add.. in ref mapping section of screen. And enter refs/heads/master in both local and remote branches.
Or may be the refs/heads/master on both side isn't a good idea :)
I see, cloning a github repo that doesn't have gh-pages branch is simpler as it automatically creates this remote fetch spec
Remote Fetch Specification +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Maybe this is what I need to enter in the step 6 above
Ok as it turned out the original idea of "refs/heads/master in both local and remote branch" was correct. Pushing with this configuration is showing my changes in git hub correctly. The second option on the other hand is failing silently.
Branches typically are used in the way you described, but nothing says they must be used that way. This is just the way github chose to let you manage your page content, and it works quite well. It's kind of similar to hosting multiple repos on one SVN server.
As for creating new repos, if you create a repo in github and then clone it, you'll have an empty repo locally that already points to github with a remote named "origin". This is a convenient way to start out, since you don't have to mess with adding a remote yourself. At this point, your repo has no commits and no branches in it. When you make the first commit, it will automatically establish a branch named "master". I don't know how eclipse is set up by default, but from the command line with default settings, you have to explicitly push new branches to a remote or else they won't get pushed at all. I.e. making the first commit and doing git push will just fail with a message like "No refs in common and none specified; doing nothing". Instead, you have to git push origin master to tell it to establish the "master" branch in remote "origin" (aka github). Thereafter, just a git push will work fine.
Hope that clears up some of your confusion.