Basically, due to events beyond my control, my remote repo was moved - I did a lot of work on my local copy in the meantime and now I really just want to overwrite everything in the remote repo with my local files.
However, I don't seem to be able to do this. The closest I can get is to pull and merge, but then it wants to walk me through some convoluted process for merging. I don't want to merge. I want to overwrite. I don't need a new branch - basically, I just want a fresh start.
The remote repo is on unfuddle.
I'm not an expert in github ecosystem, but why can't you just reset your remote repository url?
You might also need to configure your up-stream branch by looking in here.
for more on
git remote...
, please take a look here.You can remove the branch and recreate it, let's say the branch that you want to overwrite is
dev
:Remove the branch in your remote host(github)
Then just push your dev again:
I use Github for hosting, not familiar with unfuddle, but I think it'll works for the unfuddle, too. :)
Just as @melee mentioned, you can also use
(not sure whether the-f
is valid, but--force
is OK)to force overwrite the branch. I remember I did it before. Thanks @melee. :)
How to do this for master branch, without pulling data down from the remote repo:
Create a new folder, init git, add remote repo - don't pull or fetch!
mkdir clean_repo
git init
git remote add origin <remote-repo>
create (and switch to) empty local branch, add, commit and push a test file into this.
git checkout test
echo "test" > test
git add .
git commit -m "adding test"
git push origin:test
On github / bitbucket, change default branch to new branch
On local, switch to master branch, commit and push to remote repo / branch
git checkout -b master
git push origin --mirror