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How can I share a Git repo on Windows? The "correct" ways appear to be to run "git-daemon" (unix specific) or run ssh (unix specific) or run an http front end for Git. If I just have two Windows boxes and don't feel like installing Unix just to run Git, what is the optimal way to share the repos between the two boxes?

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  • This may not be a valid answer to your question, but unless the content under Git control is sensitive & you want to control access, then why not use a public hosting service like Github.com, Gitorious.org or Bitbucket.org? I used to keep all my git repos on my machine & serve them up through ssh using Cygwin, but then I discovered Github and honestly it's so much easier/convenient to use. Oct 29, 2012 at 4:32
  • Adam, I thought that git was a distributed versioning system, which means that you must have a local copy of the GitHub repository. (I installed git and GitHub Desktop and have no idea how to start using either one. When I type "git" in a command window, I get "file not found". So confusing for a newcomer to learn this stuff under Windows!) Jan 12, 2019 at 16:34

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If both machines are in the same LAN, you can put the repo in a directory shared via the regular Windows network protocol (SMB).

(Disclaimer: I'm not certain about locking semantics for SMB, so it could be that simultaneous writes to the repo could corrupt it. Then again, the same probably holds for Unix.)

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    That proved to be a workable and straightforward solution. Strange that it's completely neglected in the Git docs and books that I've browsed. Ah, well. Live and learn. Oct 30, 2012 at 3:02
  • Locking semantics are solved by sharing the repo on machine, and cloning it on the other, e.g. git clone file:///\\some-server\share\repofoldername\.git Dec 1, 2013 at 12:58
  • The problem with this approach is that it doesn't scale well. As the repository gets larger the speed deteriorates since the client needs to keep copying the repo files over to process them.
    – skeeve
    Aug 10, 2015 at 20:08
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If you want easiest way, you have to see at SCM-manager

The easiest way to share and manage your Git, Mercurial and Subversion repositories over http.

In order to have http-served repository with nice Web-frontend and management you have to have only Java (Java, not JRE)

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Another alternative instead of running a virtual machine is to run all the Unix stuff in Cygwin. With Cygwin you can set up an ssh server on your windows machine as well as gitolite. And it runs natively on your hardware instead of a virtual machine.

Cygwin installation is very straight forward. It's just a single executable that downloads the packages you need. Keep the installer around because it's what you'll use to add and remove software in Cygwin.

Running gitolite on Cygwin is not as simple but just google "cygwin gitolilte" and you'll find lots of tutorials.

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    I haven't had much success with Cygwin. Oct 29, 2012 at 16:41
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Git is a distributed version control system. So, in most situations, you don't need a dedicated program to serve the content in the repository, you just need a way to access the repository from both machines. One way of doing this is like @thomas suggested and placing a clone of the repository in a shared network location.

Another way that I have found successful in the past as a broke graduate student, is to use Dropbox as the "master" repository. Basically, you git clone your repository into your Dropbox directory, then you can setup Git on both machines to push/pull from the Dropbox repository. Dropbox will do the syncing magic in the background. This only works for mildly active repositories.

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What I have done in the past is just run a VM with a small linux client on one machine through virtual box. You only need to port forward the ssh port and you're good to go - no need for configuring the network to something complicated on the VM.

This will allow you to run things like gitolite to manage users.

For this and many other reasons, I've switched to running Linux for all my machines and just run windows in a VM when I need to do Windows development. Lots of great services that you can run on Linux are more easily connected to from the guest OS than the other way around.

If you will have only the 2 windows machines, you can add a url to the remote, but ensure it is done via the file protocol. ie:

 git remote add origin file:///\\some-server/share/repo.git

Some people claim that if you use just a path, git will try to make hard-links between the 2 repos. AFAIK, msysgit does not do this and you can use a path with no file protocol:

 git remote add origin /z/somepath/repo.git

if z is mapped to a share on the other machine. I didn't need to run a server in your scenario.

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    I think suggesting that the original poster move toward Linux as a solution to his two Windows computer problem, may be slightly out of scope for this question. Oct 29, 2012 at 4:35
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    It's what I did. Solved lots of issues. Remember what Git was written on. Oct 29, 2012 at 16:40

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