remote: Repository not found.
can be a frustratingly misleading error message from github when trying to push to an HTTPS remote where you don't have write permissions.
Trying an SSH remote to the same repository shows a different response:
% git remote add ssh [email protected]:our-organisation/some-repository.git
% git fetch ssh
From github.com:our-organisation/some-repository
* [new branch] MO_Adding_ECS_configs -> ssh/MO_Adding_ECS_configs
* [new branch] update_gems -> ssh/update_gems
% git push ssh
ERROR: Repository not found.
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
Please make sure you have the correct access rights
and the repository exists.
"The correct access rights?"
Well why didn't you say so?
It's worth noting at this point that while the SSH failure mode in this scenario
is slightly better, I use HTTPS remotes over SSH because
GitHub recommend HTTPS over SSH.
I understand that GitHub uses "Not Found" where it means "Forbidden" in some
circumstances to prevent inadvertently reveling the existence of a private
repository.
Requests that require authentication will return 404 Not Found
, instead of
403 Forbidden
, in some places. This is to prevent the accidental leakage of
private repositories to unauthorized users.
--GitHub
This is a fairly common practice around the web, indeed it is defined:
The 404 (Not Found) status code indicates that the origin server did not find
a current representation for the target resource or is not willing to
disclose that one exists.
--6.5.4. 404 Not Found, RFC 7231 HTTP/1.1 Semantics and Content (emphasis mine)
What makes no sense to me is when I am authenticated with GitHub using a
credential helper
and I have access to that repository (having successfully cloned and fetched
it) that GitHub would choose to hide its existence from me because of missing
write permissions.
Checking https://github.com/our-organisation/some-repository/ using a web
browser confirmed that I didn't have write permissions to the repository. Our
team's GitHub administrators were able to grant my team write access in a short
time and I was able to push the branch up.
git remote add origin [email protected]:account-name/repo-name.git
. It exists in GitHub, and its a private repo.[remote "origin"]
section.