672

I am having a very strange problem with git and github. When I try and push, I am getting:

git push -u origin master
ERROR: Repository not found.
fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly

I added the remote:

git remote add origin [email protected]:account-name/repo-name.git

Any ideas?

11
  • 7
    Yes that is how I got the git remote add origin [email protected]:account-name/repo-name.git. It exists in GitHub, and its a private repo.
    – Justin
    Apr 12, 2012 at 1:51
  • 1
    did you double check your user and repo names? Apr 12, 2012 at 1:54
  • 2
    did u change your github user name
    – Ankit
    May 5, 2012 at 3:28
  • 4
    Any chance this is related to the read/write permissions on the repo? I have a read only repo and I get this message when I try to push something
    – Michael
    Feb 20, 2014 at 5:29
  • 6
    I had the same problem. I solved it by updating the .git/config file. I put the username in the URL key of [remote "origin"] section. Jul 10, 2018 at 10:59

72 Answers 72

5

Just use the SSH remote url instead of the HTTPS

0
4

Changing the content of the .git/config file helps as Alex said above. I experienced the same problem and I think it was because I changed my Github username. The local files could not be updated with the changes. So perhaps anytime you change your username you might consider running

git remote add origin your_ssh_link_from_github

I hope this helps ;)

4

If anybody faced the issue at github.com check if you have accepted an invitation after repo owner allowed commits to you. Until you accept invitation repo will be invisible for you. So you'll get ERROR: Repository not found.

3
  • Thanks, this fixed my problem.
    – Glen
    Mar 4, 2017 at 12:08
  • 1
    Same thing here, I would expect the error message to be something like "You don't have permission to write" or something like that. Thanks for pointing that out! Mar 24, 2017 at 18:46
  • Software by Linus is not a software that does expected things.
    – Nakilon
    Aug 3, 2018 at 7:51
4

Normally it happens because the project is private and you have not rights to write it. I had the same "problem" a few times, and it was for that reason. If the project it is yours, just create a private and a public key following this link: https://docs.github.com/en/github/authenticating-to-github/generating-a-new-ssh-key-and-adding-it-to-the-ssh-agent and add them to the "SSH and Key" section on gitHub, then you will be able to push to the repo. In the other hand if the project it is not your, ask the owner to give you the rights for it.

4

Before following this, make sure you've write permission to the repo. If you're still getting the error, do the following :

  1. Generate a personal access token from your account from Settings > Developer Settings > Personal Access tokens. Keep the token safe somewhere.

  2. Go to your repository and run the following:

    git remote rm origin

  3. Then add a new origin along with your username:

    git remote add origin https://[email protected]/REPOSITORY_LINK.git

  4. Now when you push the code, a prompt will show up asking for your password or personal access token. Paste the token that we generated in the first step in the field, and we're done.

4

My solution was this:

git remote rm origin
git remote add origin https://[email protected]/username/reponame.git

Similar to Emi-C's answer but without passwords.

1
  • Or you can just edit the URL in .git/config under [remote "origin"] Feb 10, 2022 at 4:50
4

If you are sure you already have SSH access to this repository.

Do

git clone https://[email protected]/path_to/myRepo.git
4
eval "$(ssh-agent -s)"

It was my own repo - there should be enough access. For other repos I was able to pull & push with no problem. It was solved by starting ssh-agent over again. I use macos.

4

In my case it was because of that I added the same SSH key in another GitHub account also. Steps to check and fix

  1. Check it: ssh -T [email protected]. If it shows the correct username then the issue is different. If it is another account then do step 2.
  2. Simply go to another account and delete ssh keys from there.
  3. Use different keys for different accounts. Github really mix up them.
3

Had this same issue when working on a MacBook Pro.

When I try to clone or push to a repository, I get the error below:

git clone https://github.com/mytech/mytech_frontend.git

Cloning into 'mytech_frontend'...
remote: Repository not found.
fatal: repository 'https://github.com/mytech/mytech_frontend.git/' not found

This often happens if the computer already has github.com credentials configured in the CLI for another user.

Here's how I solved it:

For Git Clone

First, be sure you have access to the repository either as:

  • a member of the organization in which the repository resides OR
  • a collaborator of the repository

Next, clone the repository using:

git clone https://github.com/path_to/my-repo.git

if you have an existing GitHub account on the computer/terminal, when you try to clone from a repository with another GitHub account you will encounter the same error, so you need to modify your git clone command to:

git clone https://my-username:'personal-access-token'@github.com/path_to/my-repo.git

Example:

git clone https://promisepreston:'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'@github.com/promisepreston/my-writings.git

For Git Push

List the existing repo remote location:

git remote -v 

Output:

origin  https://github.com/my-username/my-repo.git (fetch)
origin  https://github.com/my-username/my-repo.git (push)

Remove the existing remote location:

git remote remove origin

Add the repo remote location again using this pattern:

git remote add origin https://my-username:'personal-access-token'@github.com/path_to/my-repo.git

Example:

git remote add origin https://promisepreston:'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'@github.com/promisepreston/my-writings.git
2

I had the same problem. My issue was misunderstanding that I had to first create the empty repo on github before pushing to it. Doh! Including this here for anyone else who doesn't realize.

0
2

go to your project folder then search for the .git folder, then open the config file with notepad and check if there is your link to the github repo under: [remote "origin"], if it is different then the repo in your github then just edit it, or open a new repo with the name in the in config file

0
2

I had this issue and realized I was using a different account from the one whose repo it was. Logging in as the original user resolved the issue.

1
  • In my case I had set up 2 accounts and added entries in .ssh/config for alias work and personal and forgotten about it .So; changing the origin part in .git/config of the project directory so that I had work instead of 'github.com' solved the issue.Problem was that while cloning I had used [email protected]:blahblah and not git@work:blahblah.
    – sourabh
    Apr 2, 2017 at 15:56
2

If you use private repository check you connection user, it must have permission for use repository.

1

My solution may be useful to some of you.

I got the same error after updating my macbook's OS to Yosemite. My problem got fixed by recreating my ssh key. You can do this by following step 2 of this page: https://help.github.com/articles/generating-ssh-keys/

1

So for me, my password had a ` (tick) in it and PhpStorm was removing the character before sending the git push:

Lets say for this example my password is _pa``ssword_

Phpstorm would output the following:

https://_username_:[email protected]/_username_/repo.git

instead of

https://_username_:_pa``[email protected]/_username_/repo.git

Changed password to something not using the ` character. WORKS!!!

1

I needed to kill credential-helper processes (were multiple) and it solved the issue after providing credentials once again.

killall git-credential-cache--daemon

1

I am having the same problem and tried many ways but at last, I have got to know that I don't have sufficient permissions to push or pull on this repo and one more way to check if you are having the permissions or not is you were not able to see settings option in that repo and if you were having permissions then you will be able to see settings option

Thanks! this is what I observed

1

enter image description here

Step 1:

Copy the link from the HTTPS

Step 2:

in the local repository do

git remote rm origin

Step 3:

replace github.com with [email protected] in the copied url

Step 4:

git remote add origin url
1

I (and many others) have had this problem since may 2021. Something seems to have changed in actions/checkout@v2 (GitHub issue: https://github.com/actions/checkout/issues/254)

I resolved it by changing the way the runner authenticates to the repo by using this step.

- name: Bump version
    env:
      NODE_AUTH_TOKEN: ${{secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN}}
    run: |
      npm run release
      git remote rm origin
      git remote add origin https://${{github.actor}}:${{secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN}}@github.com/project/repo.git
      git remote -v # for debug only 
      git show-ref # for debug only 
      git push --follow-tags origin HEAD:master

All you need to do is to change the repo url. Username and password will be replaced at runtime by the GitHub runner. This works for both actions/checkout@v1 and actions/checkout@v2 (haven't tested others).

Also many snippets you find online already come with a permission restriction that will prevent you from pushing back to the repo

permissions:
   packages: write
   contents: read

Make sure you remove this or grant your action contents:write permission if you need to push a tag or commit release notes and package bumps.

1

My problem was that I created a personal developer token without permissions

1

In my case this was caused by git using the wrong ssh private key. I was given access to the repository under a specific github user account I am using for school. My default ssh private key was unfortunately linked to a different github account.

If you do ssh -T [email protected] ssh will automatically use your id_rsa private key to connect to github.

Using ssh -i ~/.ssh/<some-key> -T [email protected] should result in github greeting you with the account you linked to that key.

So what happened in my case was that git was using my default ssh private key which was linked to the wrong github account which didn't have access to the private repository I was trying to access.

To solve this I told git to use the correct ssh command in the local git config for my repo using the command: git config core.sshCommand "ssh -i ~/.ssh/<correct private key here>"

Viewing the git configuration git config -l should show that the line was properly added.

1
  • Definitely the most understandable answer for ssh noobs like me. Thanks 🙏 Jan 18, 2023 at 19:41
1

This answer is specific to IntelliJ products such as IDEA / WebStorm / PHPStorm when using organizations.

I had this problem with WebStorm when trying to push to a repository that was part of an organization, meanwhile pushing to a repository within my normal private account worked.

Also, pushing to my organizational repository with IntelliJ IDEA worked

So I thought this could only be something related to a setting that differs between both IDEs, and I found out that I had the checkbox "Use credential helper" enabled in WebStorm, and disabled in IDEA.

enter image description here

Disabling the credential helper made it working!!

1
  • I'm facing this issue again, but now with Git Bash, while IntelliJ works May 19, 2022 at 18:30
1

If you had everything automated by vscode before and now it's no longer working, Try signing out of your connected github account on vscode and signing back in to the right github account that has access to that repository.

Here is where you sign out and sign back in.

enter image description here

0

If you include your username and the repo name we can reasonably help you, at the moment we have no reason to think the repo does actually exist.

Additionally, if the repo is private and you don't have access to it, github returns "Does not exist" to avoid disclosing the existance of private repos.

EDIT: If you're not able to clone it because it's saying it doesn't exist and it's private, it's because you're not sending authentication. Ensure that your public key is added to your keyring, or use HTTP basic auth for the time being.

2
  • He stated that it's private, so giving the repo name won't help much.
    – eykanal
    Apr 12, 2012 at 2:08
  • my approach will certainly verify that ;) Apr 12, 2012 at 2:12
0

I faced same error after updating my ubuntu to next version

I just deleted my sshkey on github account and then re added an sshkey to that account.

0

I was getting the same error coz I change my github user name, then I do this:

git remote -v

then:

git remote set-url newname newurl 
git push -u origin master

this time I was able to push to the repository. I hope this helps.

2
  • Thanks for your answer. I want to try this. What values do I put in newname, newurl? Does this change my user name on the repository at github.com?
    – grooble
    Mar 9, 2013 at 5:14
  • fixed with alex aguilar's answer above.
    – grooble
    Mar 9, 2013 at 7:46
0

first Create a new repository on the command line, name like Ademo.git

Create a new repository on the command line

touch README.md git init git add README.md git commit -m "first commit" git remote add origin https://github.com/your_name/Ademo.git git push -u origin master

Push an existing repository from the command line

git remote add origin https://github.com/your_name/Ademo.git git push -u origin master

0

Create a Fork

If don't have write access to that repository, you don't need it. Create a fork by following these instructions -- it's your own clone of the repository which you can modify freely.

After creating the fork, you can then clone that repo to your computer.

git clone [email protected]:<your-git-handle>/<repository>.git
// It will be cloned to your machine where you run the command 
// under a <repository> folder that it will create.

Checkout a new branch and make changes.

git checkout -b my-new-feature

To submit your changes to the original repository, you'll need to make sure that they're pushed

/* make changes */
git commit -am "New Feature: Made a new feature!"
git push origin my-new-feature

To get these changes into the original repository that you forked from, you can submit a Pull Requests by following these instructions. A Pull Request basically, you request that the user with write access to a repository pull down the changes you've made. Think of it like "I request that you pull my changes into your repo."


Note: Your fork will not stay up-to-date with all of the changes going on in the original repository, though. You'll have to pull down those changes periodically -- but this is easy.

After creating the fork, you can link to repo that you've forked from so that you can pull in it's changes and keep stay current.

git remote add upstream [email protected]:<git-user-handle>/<repository>.git

Once you've done that, keeping in sync with the changes made on the original repo is quite easy.

git checkout master         // checkout your local master
git pull upstream master    // fetch changes from the master branch of the repo you forked from.. which is linked to your fork under the alias "upstream" (common naming convention)
git push origin master      // push the pulled changes onto your local master
git checkout -b new-branch  // create a new branch and start making changes
0

This can also happen because GitHub itself is down. Make sure to check status.github.com to see if the problem might lie on their side.

On October 22nd 2018 you couldn't push to GitHub for several hours.

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