This question seems like a duplicate but it's really not. Just a slight difference that keeps on repeating. git keeps on telling me: "please tell me who you are", even after setting it up. when I run git commit
, this is what I get....
$ git commit
*** Please tell me who you are.
Run
git config --global user.email "you@example.com"
git config --global user.name "Your Name"
to set your account's default identity.
Omit --global to set the identity only in this repository.
fatal: unable to auto-detect email address (got 'Obby@ObbyWorkstation.(none)')
But when I run git config --global -l
, it gives me all my details...
$ git config --global -l
user.name=myname
user.mail=me.myself@gmail.com
http.proxy=proxy.XX.XX.XX:XXXX
I have changed my name, email and proxy but they are appearing fine when I run the command, even in the .gitconfig file I can see the values are set. what could be the missing thing, because I cannot commit at all. Every time it keeps asking me who I am ?
@sheu told me something that i changed, but still the same problem. when i set --local
, still git commit
asks me the same question. this is the output
$ git config --local -l
core.repositoryformatversion=0
core.filemode=false
core.bare=false
core.logallrefupdates=true
core.symlinks=false
core.ignorecase=true
core.hidedotfiles=dotGitOnly
user.name=myname
user.mail=me.myself@gmail.com
That’s a typo. You’ve accidently set
user.mail
with no e. Fix it by settinguser.email
in the global configuration withYou're setting the global git options, but the local checkout possibly has overrides set. Try setting them again with
git config --local <setting> <value>
. You can look at the.git/config
file in your local checkout to see what local settings the checkout has defined.Do you have a local
user.name
oruser.email
that's overriding the global one?If so, remove them
The local settings are per-clone, so you'll have to unset the local
user.name
anduser.email
for each of the repos on your machine.