I just did git init
to initialize my folder as Git repository and then added a remote repository using git remote add origin URL
. Now I want to remove this git remote add origin
and add a new repository git remote add origin new-URL
. How can I do it?
16 Answers
Instead of removing and re-adding, you can do this:
git remote set-url origin git://new.url.here
See this question: How to change the URI (URL) for a remote Git repository?
To remove remote use this:
git remote remove origin
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12
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3This is the correct answer, there is some confusion caused by the phrasing of the title and the question itself. Oct 22, 2014 at 15:27
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3If you use Bitbucket instead of github you will delete the first "git://" part and directly write [email protected]:yourusername/reponame.git and of course change the place holders : "yourusername" and "reponame" with yours.– RecomerFeb 6, 2016 at 8:32
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1This is not the correct answer, the correct answer is: git remote set-url origin new.url.here. Having git:// will just cause a fatal error. Not sure why this was in the answer. Dec 31, 2021 at 21:43
If you insist on deleting it:
git remote remove origin
Or if you have Git version 1.7.10 or older
git remote rm origin
But kahowell's answer is better.
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95This is the actual answer to the question "how to remove remote origin from git repo".– baash05Sep 10, 2014 at 12:32
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1What if I have multiple URLs associated with origin, but only want to remove one of them?– MichaelDec 1, 2017 at 23:24
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2@Michael what exactly do you mean by "multiple URLs associated with origin"? How is the remote configured?– 1615903Dec 2, 2017 at 8:26
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@Michael You can achieve that using
git remote remove <name>
wherename
is the repo name, not the full URL Jan 22, 2022 at 11:05 -
rm
ingit remote rm
works in every git version I think, not just in old ones <2.– TimoFeb 24, 2022 at 21:35
To remove a remote:
git remote remove origin
To add a remote:
git remote add origin yourRemoteUrl
and finally
git push -u origin master
you can try this out,if you want to remove origin and then add it:
git remote remove origin
then:
git remote add origin http://your_url_here
if multiple remotes are set for a project like heroku and own repository then use the below command to check the available remote URLs inside the local project directory
git remote -v
it will display all the remote URLs like
heroku https://git......git
origin https://git......git
if you want to remove heroku remote then,
git remote remove heroku
it will remove heroku remote only if want to remove own remote repository
git remote remove origin
I don't have enough reputation to comment answer of @user1615903, so add this as answer: "git remote remove" does not exist, should use "rm" instead of "remove". So the correct way is:
git remote rm origin
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3
To remove just use this command
git remote remove origin
Add new
git remote add origin (path)
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just make sure to keep checking your current remote repository address using "git remote -v" otherwise you might end up removing the wrong remote repository. Apr 15, 2022 at 9:12
You can rename (changing URL of a remote repository) using :
git remote set-url origin new_URL
new_URL can be like https://github.com/abcdefgh/abcd.git
Too permanently delete the remote repository use :
git remote remove origin
To set a origins remote url-
git remote set-url origin git://new.url.here
here origin is your push url name. You may have multiple origin. If you have multiple origin replace origin as that name.
For deleting Origin
git remote rm origin/originName
or
git remote remove origin/originName
For adding new origin
git remote add origin/originName git://new.url.here / RemoteUrl
Another method
Cancel local git repository(Warning: This removes the history)
rm -rf .git
Then; Create git repostory again
git init
Then; Repeat the remote repo connect
git remote add origin REPO_URL
A warning though: This removes the history.
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worked like a charm for me. It's not the prettiest way of doing it, but the git remote rm was not working ... and the suggestion at the github page didn't work either. Thanks Oct 17, 2018 at 18:55
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1but then you loose all the history, right? in that case, why not pull in the code from the other/new repository?– RobMacSep 1, 2019 at 21:30
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4yes, it does remove the whole history. @Yasin should add some kind of warning with the answer. Jan 26, 2020 at 17:21
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Yeah, good solution if you want to also get rid of remote history, otherwise stick to other answers :)– MarkoJun 11, 2021 at 20:00
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1I do not recommend doing this, if you want to maintain the commit history– serupJan 18, 2022 at 9:01
first will change push remote url
git remote set-url --push origin https://newurl
second will change fetch remote url
git remote set-url origin https://newurl
Git aliases has been life saver:
Note: Default name origin if it is different than update according to your needs. I usually have "origin" for all repos
Step-1: Define git aliases ->
This command will help to view your existing "origin" and remote "URL"
git config --global alias.url "remote -v"
This will remove your existing remote "origin"
git config --global alias.ro "remote remove origin"
This will add new remote "origin"
git config --global alias.ao "remote add origin"
Step-2: How to use it ->
- open your terminal having git repo
- check existing origin/ url by running command
git url
e.g output:
IF-PERSONAL REPO:
[email protected]:<USERNAME>/<REPO-NAME>.git (fetch/push)
IF-ORGANIZATION:
origin [email protected]:<ORGANIZATION>/<REPO-NAME>.git (fetch/push)
- Remove existing origin and url by running command
git ro
- Add new remote origin by running command
git ao <URL>
e.g git ao [email protected]:<USERNAME>/<REPO-NAME>.git
Well, This method and technique worked fine for me:
Inside the .git folder of your project directory, change these files:
1 -> configs file
-> open it up
-> change the ref URL to the remote one.
(You must also set your remote origin
branch the same as the local
branch here inside this file. e.g: remote: main, local: main
)
2 -> git fetch
3 -> .git
-> refs
-> heads && remotes folder
-> make sure both in files, origins are the same inside both heads and
remotes folders. e.g: main or master
4 -> .git
-> refs
-> remotes
-> main
-> open it up:
Copy the content and paste it inside the main file of the heads
folder.
Finally:
Git fetch && git pull && git push
None of the answers worked for me as I had a global origin set, which seemed to override everything in all my repos. In the end, I just edited the .gitconfig file in C:\Users\user_name.