Yup yup, usually you’re on a branch, sometimes a tag. I mean it’s all just pointers to references at the end of the day. I tend to treat Git like a story book, some folks still act like it’s SVN.
I think it depends what branch your local version of the repo is set to. If you’re already in master then it’ll push there, if you’re in a testing branch then you can push it straight to master instead by telling it to
git commit -m “changed somethings “
git push origin master
You forgot this
--force
flag.I’m too lazy, I use -f
Do you always have to do origin master? I’ve seen it where sometimes just git push works and other times not.
push origin your/branch
Pushes, you guessed it, your/branch!
Head is usually your checked out working branch if you’re not in a headless state, right?
Force push main, straight to jail🤣
Yup yup, usually you’re on a branch, sometimes a tag. I mean it’s all just pointers to references at the end of the day. I tend to treat Git like a story book, some folks still act like it’s SVN.
https://git-scm.com/docs/git-push#Documentation/git-push.txt-pushautoSetupRemote
I tired that, still was having issues, weeeird.
I think it depends what branch your local version of the repo is set to. If you’re already in master then it’ll push there, if you’re in a testing branch then you can push it straight to master instead by telling it to
I just meant it not auto creating a new matching named branch.
where it Just Works, the branch is set up to track a remote branch
https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Remote-Branches
uh in any actual company you almost never push to origin master. so I think it’s a joke.
Not with that attitude! /s
Depends on the configuration right?
You can work on your branch and then push that to integration for example.
I mean you’re not working on your local master/main branch right?
In most actually companies you can try push to origin master, but it’ll likely get rejected by the repo’s security policies.