1058

Yesterday, I posted a question on how to clone a Git repository from one of my machines to another, How can I 'git clone' from another machine?.

I am now able to successfully clone a Git repository from my source (192.168.1.2) to my destination (192.168.1.1).

But when I did an edit to a file, a git commit -a -m "test" and a git push, I get this error on my destination (192.168.1.1):

git push                                                
[email protected]'s password: 
Counting objects: 21, done.
Compressing objects: 100% (11/11), done.
Writing objects: 100% (11/11), 1010 bytes, done.
Total 11 (delta 9), reused 0 (delta 0)
error: refusing to update checked out branch: refs/heads/master
error: By default, updating the current branch in a non-bare repository
error: is denied, because it will make the index and work tree inconsistent
error: with what you pushed, and will require 'git reset --hard' to match
error: the work tree to HEAD.
error: 
error: You can set 'receive.denyCurrentBranch' configuration variable to
error: 'ignore' or 'warn' in the remote repository to allow pushing into
error: its current branch; however, this is not recommended unless you
error: arranged to update its work tree to match what you pushed in some
error: other way.
error: 
error: To squelch this message and still keep the default behaviour, set
error: 'receive.denyCurrentBranch' configuration variable to 'refuse'.
To git+ssh://[email protected]/media/LINUXDATA/working
! [remote rejected] master -> master (branch is currently checked out)
error: failed to push some refs to 'git+ssh://[email protected]/media/LINUXDATA/working'

I'm using two different versions of Git (1.7 on the remote and 1.5 on the local machine). Is that a possible reason?

7

33 Answers 33

1220

The error message error: refusing to update checked out branch: refs/heads/master is emitted by the remote repository and it means you're trying to push code to remote non-bare repository that has different code currently checked out in the working directory. The best way to avoid this problem is to push to bare repositories only - this problem cannot ever happen with a bare repository.

You can simply convert your remote repository to bare repository (there is no working copy in the bare repository - the folder contains only the actual repository data).

Execute the following command in your remote repository folder:

git config --bool core.bare true

Then delete all the files except .git in that folder. And then you will be able to perform git push to the remote repository without any errors.

22
  • 4
    Thanks. I also needed this. I was following the submodules tutorial from the Git Community Book and hit this roadblock.
    – Shiki
    Sep 14, 2010 at 15:20
  • 7
    I wasn't sure whether you meant to delete files on the server, or the client ... so I didn't delete anything, and the problem goes away after just doing git config --bool core.bare true. Is there any particular reason some files need to be deleted? If so, can you be more precise about what needs to be deleted? Jul 22, 2011 at 4:19
  • 26
    It's the best possible answer and nobody else have provided it in the hole Interwebs. I think that we all googled the same error message and we all were extremely happy to read this. Jul 16, 2012 at 14:56
  • 43
    Although it got a whole lot of votes, I don't think this is a really adequate answer to that specific question. Instructing the user how to cleanly create a bare repo would be half as bad, but what if the files need to stay checked out, for example when it's the repository the user is working with on two computers? Mar 18, 2013 at 10:38
  • 9
    Changing the source repo to bare is overkill. All you need to do is push to a new branch in the source repo, as @Robert points out: stackoverflow.com/a/2933656/402949. Oct 7, 2013 at 1:16
770

I just had the same error while I began learning Git. Some of the other answers are clearly not for someone new to Git!

I am going to use non technical terms to get the idea across. Anyway, what is happening is that you have two repositories, one is the original you first made, and the other the work one you just made.

Right now you are in your work repository and are using the master branch. But you also happen to be "logged in" in your original repository to the same master branch. Now since you're "logged in" in the original, Git fears you might mess up because you might be working on the original and screw things up. So you need to return to the original repository and do git checkout someotherbranch, and now you can push with no problems.

16
  • 77
    +1 Much more helpful, thank you Robert. I didn't make sense to convert to a bare repo in my case. Simply have to 'deactivate' the branch you're attempting to push to. Makes sense.
    – Eric
    Feb 1, 2011 at 2:21
  • 34
    @FMaz008: just create a dummy branch (git checkout -b dummy)
    – Dror Cohen
    Apr 3, 2011 at 11:17
  • 16
    Man this is far better than most voted answer :) Thanks. Although the other answer makes good point also :) Nov 12, 2011 at 10:13
  • 115
    Just to make this clearer, in the repo that's the target of the push: git checkout -b tmp. Then in the source repo: git push. Then back in the target (optional): git checkout master; git branch -d tmp
    – Hari Honor
    May 19, 2012 at 14:57
  • 21
    Hari's comment is the simplest recipe. I just have to say that while git may be great in many ways, coming from svn or probably any other rvs, this whole thing is stunningly non-intuitive. Dec 5, 2012 at 21:50
132

The error message describes what has happened. More modern versions of Git refuse to update a branch via a push if that branch is checked out.

The easiest way to work between two non-bare repositories is either to

  1. always update the repositories by pull (or fetch and merge) or, if you have to,

  2. by pushing to a separate branch (an import branch) and then merging that branch into the master branch on the remote machine.

The reason for this restriction is that the push operation operates only on the remote Git repository, it doesn't have access to the index and working tree. So, if allowed, a push on the checked-out branch would change the HEAD to be inconsistent with the index and working tree on the remote repository.

This would make it very easy to accidentally commit a change that undoes all of the pushed changes and also makes it very difficult to distinguish between any local changes that have not been committed and differences between the new HEAD, the index and the working tree that have been caused by push moving HEAD.

3
  • 1
    Thanks. So how can I fix my problem? In my 192 box, i did '$ cd (project-directory) $ git init $ (add some files) $ git add .' and then in my 191 box, I did a 'git clone ' and edit some files and than try to 'git push'.
    – hap497
    May 12, 2010 at 7:24
  • 16
    Well, I described the possibilities in my answer. Either you can go to the 192 box and fetch from the 191 box (you might want to add the 191 box as a named remote - look at git remote add box191 <191url> ), or you can push from the 191 box to an alternatively named branch (e.g. git push origin master:refs/heads/upload ), then to the 192 box and merge (e.g. git merge upload ).
    – CB Bailey
    May 12, 2010 at 7:31
  • 4
    You actually now have a secure way to push to a non-bare repo with Git 2.3.0 (February 2015) and git config receive.denyCurrentBranch=updateInstead:stackoverflow.com/a/28262104/6309: you don't need option 2 anymore.
    – VonC
    Feb 1, 2015 at 12:38
127

Summary

You cannot push to the one checked out branch of a repository because it would mess with the user of that repository in a way that will most probably end with loss of data and history. But you can push to any other branch of the same repository.

As bare repositories never have any branch checked out, you can always push to any branch of a bare repository.

There are multiple solutions, depending on your needs.

Solution 1: Use a Bare Repostiory

As suggested, if on one machine, you don't need the working directory, you can move to a bare repository. To avoid messing with the repository, you can just clone it:

machine1$ cd ..
machine1$ mv repo repo.old
machine1$ git clone --bare repo.old repo

Now you can push all you want to the same address as before.

Solution 2: Push to a Non-Checked-Out Branch

But if you need to check out the code on your remote <remote>, then you can use a special branch to push. Let's say that in your local repository you have called your remote origin and you're on branch master. Then you could do

machine2$ git push origin master:master+machine2

Then you need to merge it when you're in the origin remote repo:

machine1$ git merge master+machine2

Autopsy of the Problem

When a branch is checked out, committing will add a new commit with the current branch's head as its parent and move the branch's head to be that new commit.

So

A ← B
    ↑
[HEAD,branch1]

becomes

A ← B ← C
        ↑
    [HEAD,branch1]

But if someone could push to that branch inbetween, the user would get itself in what git calls detached head mode:

A ← B ← X
    ↑   ↑
[HEAD] [branch1]

Now the user is not in branch1 anymore, without having explicitly asked to check out another branch. Worse, the user is now outside any branch, and any new commit will just be dangling:

      [HEAD]
        ↓
        C
      ↙
A ← B ← X
        ↑
       [branch1]

Hypothetically, if at this point, the user checks out another branch, then this dangling commit becomes fair game for Git's garbage collector.

5
  • 3
    One technical correction to "autopsy": git won't actually detach HEAD in the pushed-to repository. HEAD will still point to the branch, and the branch will in turn point to the new commit(s) pushed; but the working directory and index/staging-area will be unmodified. Whoever is working on the pushed-to repository now has to work hard to recover from the effects of the push: figure out whether there are any changes to save, and if so carefully arrange to save them.
    – torek
    Feb 23, 2014 at 15:40
  • To add additional information to your answer, there are very few reasons why you would want a remote repository that people push to to be non-bare, so using a bare repository is the best solution.
    – user456814
    Jun 28, 2014 at 17:52
  • 2
    Actually, I found many situations when I need to push to a non-bare repository, and I use the solution 2 quite a lot. Also, the branch where I push on the non-bare repository is in no way a temporary branch, it serves a similar purpose as a remote tracking branch. Aug 6, 2014 at 15:32
  • I created a GIT folder in my server which will host ALL repositories created by multiple users using SourceTree. I created a master repositories in my local PC. I added the remotes to the server folder and trying to push my repository into the server so another user can pull/fetch it to work on. I get the following error: ! [remote rejected] master -> master (branch is currently checked out) How can I check it in? Feb 24, 2015 at 18:08
  • 2
    @SearchForKnowledge, do you realize you're asking exactly the question I'm answering to?! Mar 28, 2015 at 0:17
69

You can get around this "limitation" by editing the .git/config on the destination server. Add the following to allow a git repository to be pushed to even if it is "checked out":

[receive]
denyCurrentBranch = warn

or

[receive]
denyCurrentBranch = false

The first will allow the push while warning of the possibility to mess up the branch, whereas the second will just quietly allow it.

This can be used to "deploy" code to a server which is not meant for editing. This is not the best approach, but a quick one for deploying code.

9
  • 7
    Using this to "deploy" code to a server won't work. Even if you disable the warning so you can push to the checked out branch, the working copy is NEVER updated on a push. Feb 8, 2011 at 17:46
  • 10
    I'm using the above method with cd .. && git reset --hard post-receive hook to deploy. Hackish, but works.
    – jholster
    Mar 23, 2011 at 8:30
  • 10
    the command line version of the latter would be git config receive.denyCurrentBranch warn Oct 7, 2012 at 9:45
  • 6
    This should be the accepted answer. Some of us know what we're doing and are not Git beginners. This is the answer for those people. Jun 10, 2016 at 21:49
  • 2
    Ha, but the question was not asked byt those people. Aug 19, 2016 at 2:08
59

git config --local receive.denyCurrentBranch updateInstead

https://github.com/git/git/blob/v2.3.0/Documentation/config.txt#L2155

Use that on the server repository, and it also updates the working tree if no untracked overwrite would happen.

It was added in Git 2.3 as mentioned by VonC in the comments.

I've compiled Git 2.3 and gave it a try. Sample usage:

git init server
cd server
touch a
git add .
git commit -m 0
git config --local receive.denyCurrentBranch updateInstead

cd ..
git clone server local
cd local
touch b
git add .
git commit -m 1
git push origin master:master

cd ../server
ls

Output:

a
b

Yay, b got pushed!

10
  • Does this have any problems with commiting changes that are not up to date with the server?
    – akozi
    Oct 24, 2018 at 19:06
  • @akozi I'm not sure what you mean, if you commit locally before pulling, it will behave exactly as a traditional --bare clone I think: --force is required to push, and it will make you "lose" commits on the remote. Oct 24, 2018 at 19:09
  • 1
    @CiroSantilli新疆改造中心六四事件法轮功 No worries now. I looked up the meaning of the options. I thought that updateInstead was synonymous with force.
    – akozi
    Oct 24, 2018 at 19:12
  • updateInstead is no longer a valid value for receive.denyCurrentBranch
    – Jeter-work
    Dec 6, 2018 at 16:38
  • 1
    This answer should be #1. I been going in circles for 3 days now, this finally solved my problem; Thank you!
    – Crimin4L
    Dec 19, 2023 at 21:37
46

I like the idea of still having a usable repository on the remote box, but instead of a dummy branch, I like to use:

git checkout --detach

This seems to be a very new feature of Git - I'm using git version 1.7.7.4.

1
  • 9
    And then after pushing your changes, you can use: git checkout master to get back to the master branch. It's only then that your changes are being applied.
    – MAZDAK
    Oct 31, 2014 at 11:05
31

I had the same issue. For me, I use Git push to move code to my servers. I never change the code on the server side, so this is safe.

In the repository, you are pushing to type:

git config receive.denyCurrentBranch ignore

This will allow you to change the repository while it's a working copy.

After you run a Git push, go to the remote machine and type this:

git checkout -f

This will make the changes you pushed be reflected in the working copy of the remote machine.

Please note, this isn't always safe if you make changes on in the working copy that you're pushing to.

2
  • thanks a log, I merge you suggestion denyCurrentBranch and put git checkout -f inside hooks folder like @jack-senechal posted here May 21, 2014 at 19:59
  • Is there a way to make the files appear on the Remote repository without going to it and doing this command? Namely by a command from the local?
    – Royi
    Mar 8, 2016 at 9:53
25

You can recreate your server repository and push from your local branch master to the server master.

On your remote server:

mkdir myrepo.git
cd myrepo.git
git init --bare

OK, from your local branch:

git push origin master:master
2
  • 4
    Thanks this was the solution for me as I had omitted '--bare' on remote server. It seems that answers to this question depend on whether you are using the remote server repo as a working directory or not and for the later case this is the correct answer.
    – Cas
    Feb 12, 2012 at 19:35
  • 2
    I don't understand :S I tried to create and clone a bare repo, but clone downloaded nothing and push uploaded nothing, so this is not working... :-) I read tutorials about bare repos, but they saying that a bare repo contains no files... That's definitely not what I'm looking for...
    – inf3rno
    May 13, 2012 at 10:40
25

What you probably did to cause this:

This kind of thing happens when you go to bang out a little program. You're about to change something which was already working, so you cast your level-3 spell of perpetual undoability:

machine1:~/proj1> git init

and you start adding/committing. But then, the project starts getting more involved and you want to work on it from another computer (like your home PC or laptop), so you do something like

machine2:~> git clone ssh://machine1/~/proj1

and it clones and everything looks good, and so you work on your code from machine2.

Then... you try to push your commits from machine2, and you get the warning message in the title.

The reason for this message is because the git repo you pulled from was kinda intended to be used just for that folder on machine1. You can clone from it just fine, but pushing can cause problems. The "proper" way to be managing the code in two different locations is with a "bare" repo, like has been suggested. A bare repo isn't designed to have any work being done in it, it is meant to coordinate the commits from multiple sources. This is why the top-rated answer suggests deleting all files/folders other than the .git folder after you git config --bool core.bare true.

Clarifying the top-rated answer: Many of the comments to that answer say something like "I didn't delete the non-.git files from the machine1 and I was still able to commit from machine2". That's right. However, those other files are completely "divorced" from the git repo, now. Go try git status in there and you should see something like "fatal: This operation must be run in a work tree". So, the suggestion to delete the files isn't so that the commit from machine2 will work; it's so that you don't get confused and think that git is still tracking those files. But, deleting the files is a problem if you still want to work on the files on machine1, isn't it?

So, what should you really do?

Depends upon how much you plan to still work on machine1 and machine2...

If you're done developing from machine1 and have moved all of your development to machine2... just do what the top-rated answer suggests: git config --bool core.bare true and then, optionally, delete all files/folders other than .git from that folder, since they're untracked and likely to cause confusion.

If your work on machine2 was just a one-time thing, and you don't need to continue development there... then don't bother with making a bare repo; just ftp/rsync/scp/etc. your files from machine*2* on top of the files on machine*1*, commit/push from machine*1*, and then delete the files off of machine*2*. Others have suggested creating a branch, but I think that's a little messy if you just want to merge some development you did on a one-time basis from another machine.

If you need to continue development on both machine1 and machine2... then you need to set things up properly. You need to convert your repo to a bare, then you need to make a clone of that on machine1 for you to work in. Probably the quickest way to do this is to do

machine1:~/proj1> git config --bool core.bare true
machine1:~/proj1> mv .git/ ../proj1.git
machine1:~/proj1> cd ..
machine1:~> rm -rf proj1
machine1:~> git clone proj1.git
machine1:~> cd proj1

Very important: because you've moved the location of the repo from proj1 to proj1.git, you need to update this in the .git/config file on machine2. After that, you can commit your changes from machine2. Lastly, I try to keep my bare repos in a central location, away from my work trees (i.e. don't put 'proj1.git' in the same parent folder as 'proj1'). I advise you to do likewise, but I wanted to keep the steps above as simple as possible.

2
  • Very detailed and helpful. My case was the last one, and your instructions worked like a charm.
    – pojda
    Jun 9, 2017 at 16:07
  • I'm in case 3 and I did something slightly different: mk git-server; mv .git git-server/proj.git and then git clone git-server/proj.git to both 1 and 2 (or git remote origin ...), using a proper ssh:// prefix for machine 2. This way I'll keep a bare master copy which will be like the one normally on GH or other HTTP server and I'll keep using push/pull on both machines.
    – zakmck
    May 16, 2018 at 15:54
19

With a few setup steps you can easily deploy changes to your website using a one-liner like

git push production

Which is nice and simple, and you don't have to log into the remote server and do a pull or anything. Note that this will work best if you don't use your production checkout as a working branch! (The OP was working within a slightly different context, and I think @Robert Gould's solution addressed it well. This solution is more appropriate for deployment to a remote server.)

First you need to set up a bare repository somewhere on your server, outside of your webroot.

mkdir mywebsite.git
cd mywebsite.git
git init --bare

Then create file hooks/post-receive:

#!/bin/sh
GIT_WORK_TREE=/path/to/webroot/of/mywebsite git checkout -f

And make the file executable:

chmod +x hooks/post-receive

On your local machine,

git remote add production [email protected]:mywebsite.git
git push production +master:refs/heads/master

All set! Now in the future you can use git push production to deploy your changes!

Credit for this solution goes to http://sebduggan.com/blog/deploy-your-website-changes-using-git/. Look there for a more detailed explanation of what's going on.

1
  • Your suggestion helped me a lot, but I didn't use bare, I follow this and merge with hooks (that you suggested) and worked perfectly. May 21, 2014 at 20:04
15

You should only be pushing to a bare repository. A bare repository is a repository that has no checked out branches. If you were to cd to a bare repository directory, you'd only see the contents of a .git directory.

3
  • 9
    There's nothing wrong with pushing to a non-checked out branch in a non-bare repository. This is a perfectly valid way of working.
    – CB Bailey
    May 12, 2010 at 6:12
  • Fair enough, that would work. But that is not what the user is doing. May 12, 2010 at 6:14
  • 13
    It's not the fact that he isn't using a bare repository that is 'wrong'; it is the fact that he is pushing to a checked out branch. There is no evidence that he has or wants a separate bare repository so your blanket statement that he should only be pushing to a non-bare repository is not giving the asker all the options; one of which might more easily solve his immediate problem.
    – CB Bailey
    May 12, 2010 at 6:26
13

Check your .git/config in the destination project:

$ cat .git/config 
[core]
    repositoryformatversion = 0
    filemode = true
    bare = false
    logallrefupdates = true
[receive]
    denyCurrentBranch = updateInstead

If the core. bare is false, you can set it to true:

$ git config core.bare true

and then in your local push to remote:

git push remote_repo   // suppose the destination repo is remote_repo

it will success, in the remote_repo you can check git version.

$ git log -1
commit 0623b1b900ef7331b9184722a5381bbdd2d935ba
Author: aircraft < [email protected]>
Date:   Thu May 17 21:54:37 2018 +0800

and now you can not use git in your "workspace":

$ git status
fatal: This operation must be run in a work tree

you should set bare.bare back to false.

$ git config core.bare false
1
  • What protection in being overridden when I do this?
    – Josiah
    Apr 15, 2021 at 18:05
10

You have 3 options

  1. Pull and push again:

    git pull; git push
    
  2. Push into different branch:

    git push origin master:foo
    

    and merge it on remote (either by git or pull-request)

    git merge foo
    
  3. Force it (not recommended unless you deliberately changed commits via rebase):

    git push origin master -f
    

    If still refused, disable denyCurrentBranch on remote repository:

    git config receive.denyCurrentBranch ignore
    
1
  • Option 2 work for me. remote git init local git push origin master:branch remote git merge DONE Apr 25, 2019 at 6:24
7

In fact, set the remote to a non-checked out branch is sufficient. After you checked out your remote in a different branch, you can push.

5

I had the same problem using Git to synchronise repositories on my Android phone and laptop. The solution for me was to do a pull instead of a push, as @CharlesBailey suggested.

git push origin master on the Android repository fails for me with the same error messages that @hap497 got because of a push to a nonbare checkout of a repository + working-copy.

git pull droid master on the laptop repository and working-copy works for me. Of course, you need to have previously run something like git remote add droid /media/KINGSTON4GB/notes_repo/.

0
5

Older versions of Git used to allow pushes to the currently checked out branch of a non-bare repository.

It turns out this was a terribly confusing thing to allow. So they added the warning message you see, which is also terribly confusing.

If the first repository is just acting as a server then convert it to a bare repository as the other answers recommend and be done with it.

If however you need to have a shared branch between two repos that are both in use you can achieve it with the following setup

Repo1 - will act as the server and also be used for development

Repo2 - will be for development only

Setup Repo1 as follows

Create a branch to share work on.

git branch shared_branch

To be safe, you should also create a $(REPO).git/hooks/update that rejects any changes to anything other than shared_branch, because you don't want people mucking with your private branches.

repo1/.git/hooks  (GIT_DIR!)$ cat update
#!/bin/sh
refname="$1"
oldrev="$2"
newrev="$3"

if [ "${refname}" != "refs/heads/shared_branch" ]
then
   echo "You can only push changes to shared_branch, you cannot push to ${refname}"
   exit 1
fi

Now create a local branch in repo1 where you will do your actual work.

git checkout -b my_work --track shared_branch
Branch my_work set up to track local branch shared_branch.
Switched to a new branch 'my_work'

(may need to git config --global push.default upstream in order for git push to work)

Now you can create repo2 with

git clone path/to/repo1 repo2 
git checkout shared_branch 

At this point you have both repo1 and repo2 setup to work on local branches that push and pull from shared_branch in repo1, without needing to worry about that error message or having the working directory get out of sync in repo1. Whatever normal workflow you use should work.

3

OK, in case you want a normal remote repository, then create an extra branch and check it out. Push it into one branch (which is not checked out) and merge it with one which is currently active later after pushing from locally.

For example, on a remote server:

git branch dev
git checkout dev

On the local setup:

git push 

On remote server:

git merge dev
2

Here is one test you can do to see how the bare server stuff work:

Imagine you have a workstation and a server with live site hosted on it, and you want to update this site from time to time (this also applies to a situation where two developers are sending their work back and forth through a bare middleman).

Initialization

Create some directory on your local computer and cd into it, then execute these commands:

# initialization
git init --bare server/.git
git clone server content
git clone server local
  1. First you create a bare server directory (notice the .git at the end). This directory will serve as a container for your repository files only.
  2. Then clone your server repository to a newly created content directory. This is your live/production directory which will be served by your server software.
  3. The first two directories resides on your server, the third one is a local directory on your workstation.

Workflow

Now here is the basic workflow:

  1. Enter the local directory, create some files and commit them. Finally push them to the server:

    # create crazy stuff
    git commit -av
    git push origin master
    
  2. Now enter the content directory and update the server's content:

    git pull
    
  3. Repeat 1-2. Here content may be another developer that can push to the server too, and local as you may pull from him.

2

Using this to push it to the remote upstream branch solved this issue for me:

git push <remote> master:origin/master

The remote had no access to the upstream repo so this was a good way to get the latest changes into that remote

1
  • 1
    More generally (as this is the net effect of the command), using git push <remote> master:newbranch. The idea is that you push a new branch to the remote, which can then be merged in. This way you avoid any of the inconsistency issues mentioned in the error message.
    – Clay
    May 6, 2019 at 17:14
1

I had to re-run git --init in an existing bare repository, and this had created a .git directory inside the bare repository tree - I realized that after typing git status there. I deleted that and everything was fine again :)

(All these answers are great, but in my case it was something completely different (as far as I can see), as described.)

1

I'm sure most people viewing this question will stop at the first two huge answers, but I'd still like to offer my solution.

I had an Eclipse + EGit web project setup when encountering the described error. What helped me was simply using the GitHub app, which seemed to magically resolve the issue. While EGit would always refuse the push, the GitHub desktop app would just shrug its shoulders and push my changes. Maybe it handles the multi-login-situation more gracefully.

1

An article I found that might be useful to others is Git in 5 minutes.

I had an Xcode project under Git version control that I wanted to push up to a Virtual Distributed Ethernet (VDE) I have in a DC. The VDE runs Centos 5.

None of the articles I read about Git talked about bare repositories. It all sounded so simple until I tried what I thought should be easy coming from an SVN background.

The suggestions here to make the remote repository bare worked. Even better for my requirements was to clone the Xcode project to projectname.git, copy that to the remote server; then pushes magically worked. The next step will be getting Xcode to push without errors about commits, but for now I'm okay doing it from Terminal.

So:

cd /tmp (or another other directory on your system)<br/>
git clone --bare /xcode-project-directory projectname.git<br/>
scp -r projectname.git [email protected]:repos/<br/>

To push changes from your Xcode project after you've committed in Xcode:

cd /xcode-project-directory<br/>
git push [email protected]:repos/projectname.git<br/>

I'm certain there is a smoother more sophisticated way of doing the above, but at a minimum this works. Just so everything is clear, here are some clarifications: /xcode-project-directory is the directory your xcode project is stored in. It's probably /Users/Your_Name/Documents/Project_Name. projectname is literally the name of the project, but it can be anything you care to call it. Git doesn't care, you will.

To use scp you need to have a user account on the remote server that's allowed SSH access. Anyone running their own server will have this. If you're using shared hosting or the like, you might be out of luck.

remotehost.com is the name of your remote host. You could as easily use its IP address. Just for further clarity I'm using Gitosis on the remote host with SSH keys, so I'm not prompted for passwords when I push. The article Hosting Git Repositories, the Easy (and Secure) Way tells you how to set all that up.

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The best way to do this is:

mkdir ..../remote
cd ..../remote
git clone --bare .../currentrepo/

This will clone the repository, but it won't make any working copies in .../remote. If you look at the remote, you'll see one directory created, called currentrepo.git, which is probably what you want.

Then from your local Git repository:

git remote add remoterepo ..../remote/currentrepo.git

After you make changes, you can:

git push remoterepo master
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I just ran into this problem with a deployment git repository on Heroku.

I don't know why Heroku has a non-bare repository on their side, but as a workaround I was able to reset the remote repository, and reupload.

You shouldn't use Heroku's copy of your repository as your only git repository for collaboration, but just in case, I'll say clearly: Do not do this unless you are sure you have a full copy of your repository stored securely somewhere other than Heroku. Doing a reset will delete the repository contents.

To reset:

  1. Install the Heroku toolbelt (which contains the command line client) if you haven't already.
  2. Install the heroku-repo plugin if you haven't already.

    heroku plugins:install https://github.com/heroku/heroku-repo.git
    
  3. Do the reset, which deletes the repository and creates a new, empty one

    heroku repo:reset
    
  4. Push to your Heroku remote as you normally would; it will reupload everything.

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  • You may need to install the Heroku repo tools for this to work. Do heroku plugins:install https://github.com/heroku/heroku-repo.git
    – Noah
    May 7, 2015 at 17:57
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You will need to change the config file on the remote server once you have created empty(bare) repository, say

root@development:/home/git/repository/my-project# cat config 

there you will see

[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = false
logallrefupdates = true

You will make this bare to false to true and I removed logallrefupdates = true (not sure of its use!)

to

[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = true

You may test following

$ git remote show origin
* remote origin
Fetch URL: my-portal@development:/home/XYZ/repository/XYZ
Push  URL: my-portal@development:/home/XYZ/repository/XYZ
HEAD branch: (unknown)

This HEAD branch: (unknown) will be shown if you are unable to PUSH. So if the HEAD branch is unknow, you should change bare to true and after push successful you can reuse the

git remote show origin

and you will see

 HEAD branch: master
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If you are using SSH key to connect into github, make sure that your SSH key is still there under your profile settings. For some reason, my key was cleared there and I couldn't push to my master branch. What I did is I just added my SSH key to settings/SSH keys again.

enter image description here

Command to view your existing key: cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub

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For me working solution is:

ON REMOTE:

git checkout -b some_tmp_name

ON LOCAL:

git push

ON REMOTE:

git checkout master
git branch -d some_tmp_name

But this is not the real solution it's just workaround.

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  • This a valid solution if you don't have a central repository.
    – Rick
    Mar 19, 2015 at 21:34
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Just in case someone finds it useful. For me it was a git server permissions issue. I checked out the project from the beggining and push a simple file and then I got the "Push rejected: Push to origin/master was rejected"

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Let me add my 50 cents, because the most voted answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/3251126/3455918 suggests a converting of remote repw to a bare repository, and what if it's not what I want?

In the end I have to have the same code on the remote machine but not just blobs of bytes somewhere in .git limbo.

The second-voted (as of this writing) solution https://stackoverflow.com/a/2933656/3455918 does the job but after testing this out I ended up having to constantly switch between branches on the remote machine to "free" the branch I want to push from my local machine to.

This worked for me:

Another solution that worked for me so far is not mine, credit is given to a user @kxr who commented on the first solution.

On the remote machine you have to make this command in the repo directory.

git config receive.denyCurrentBranch updateInstead

After this you are done!

Obviously, there might be some drawbacks of this solution but for a simple task of synchronizing your local machine code to your remote repo it's probably good enough.

I would be grateful if someone explaines in comments why it's totally fine to create a brand new repo on github, link your local folder to it and start doing git push origin master without errors.

But trying to make this same thing with the repo on the remote server yields and error:

! [remote rejected] master -> master (branch is currently checked out)

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  • Because on github, it's a bare repo, and theare no working tree.
    – hl037_
    Feb 20, 2023 at 9:13

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