I forked a project, made some changes, and got a pull request accepted. But now, the project I forked moved to another repository and is a fork of that repository.
That is:
Original -> MyFork
Now:
NewOriginal -> Original -> MyFork
How would I get it to the following?
NewOriginal -> MyFork
Locally you can just change the target of the original repository is located at. Usually that repository is called upstream, so you would do this:
git remote set-url upstream git://example.com/NewOriginal.git
Depending on what host you are using (that is, where your fork is located), there might be some additional internal links, you can't change so easily. For example on Github, the fork is directly linked to the original you forked from. In that case you need to fork the new project again, and work with the new fork.
In that case however you can easily change the URL of the origin repository as well, and just push everything you changed before in your old fork into your new fork.
NOTE: The following solution is incomplete as you'll lose all wiki content and issues specific to your fork.
You can achieve this using the following steps:
- Pull down all branches and tags from your existing fork.
- Delete your repository on GitHub.
- Fork from the new repository.
- Update the remote URL if necessary.
- Push all your local branches and tags to the new repository.
Update the remote URL in your repository:
git remote set-url origin <url to NewOriginal, e.g. git://…/bla.git>
Assuming you performed the proper forking and adding upstream see githubHelpOnFork ; to just change the upstream URL, do:
verify what your current upstream and origin looks like :
git remote -v
if you see upstream listed and you want just change its url, do what @poke suggested (if not follow the helpGithub link above to add a new upstream) :
git remote set-url upstream git://example.com/NewOriginal.git
then verify that upstream is pointing to the new URL
git remote -v