Recently I had a scenario where I was in a detached HEAD state. I wanted to push this to a fork on github in order to share some work-in-progress code with a teammate. I had no need for a local branch name for this particular commit.
Clearly, this would not work:
git push sandy-github HEAD
That makes sense, as I wasn't specifying a name for the remote branch.
But I don't understand why this did not work:
git push sandy-github HEAD:mynewbranch
This resulted in the following error:
error: unable to push to unqualified destination: mynewbranch The destination refspec neither matches an existing ref on the remote nor begins with refs/, and we are unable to guess a prefix based on the source ref. error: failed to push some refs to '[email protected]:sandyarmstrong/myreponame.git'
I ended up having to do:
git push sandy-github HEAD:refs/heads/mynewbranch
This worked. From the docs:
git push origin master:refs/heads/experimental
Create the branch experimental in the origin repository by copying the current master branch. This form is only needed to create a new branch or tag in the remote repository when the local name and the remote name are different; otherwise, the ref name on its own will work.
I just don't understand why this was necessary. I'm guessing there's something important about git I'm misunderstanding here. Why is this trickier syntax necessary just because the names don't match? Why isn't the HEAD:mynewbranch
syntax sufficient to let git know that it should generate a new branch on the remote named "mynewbranch"?