Just a clarification (using git version 1.7.9.5 on ubuntu 12.04):
Git will add/remove remotes. These are remote instances of git with a server attached.
git remote add myremote git://remoteurl
You can then fetch said git repository like so:
git fetch myremote
It seems this creates a branch named 'myremote', however the remote for the branch is not automatically set. To do this, you must do the following:
First, verify that you have this problem, i.e.
git config -l | grep myremote
You should see something like:
remote.myremote.url=git://remoteurl
remote.myremote.fetch=+refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/myremote/*
branch.myremote.remote=.
branch.myremote.merge=refs/heads/master
If you see branch.myremote.remote=.
, then you should proceed:
git config branch.myremote.remote myremote
git checkout myremote
git pull
You should now be up to date with the remote repository, and your pulls/pushes should be tied to the appropriate remote. You can switch remotes in this manner, per branch. [Note][1]
According to a The Official Git Config Documentation, you can set up a default push branch (just search remote.pushdefault on that page), however keep in mind that this will not affect repositories/branches which already exist, so this will work but only for new repositories/branches. You should remember that --global
will set user-specific repository defaults (~/.gitconfig), --system
will set system-wide repository defaults (/etc/gitconfig), and no flag will set configuration options for the current repository (./.gitconfig).
Also it should be noted that the push.default config option is for configuring ref-spec behavior, not remote behavior.
[1]: git branch --set-upstream myotherremote
would usually work here, however git will complain that it will not set a branch as its own remote if git branch --set-upstream myremote
is used. I believe however that this is incorrect behavior.