I am receiving this notice when I push updates from my local instance to remote master on GitHub:
remote: This repository moved. Please use the new location [new location]
Is there a way to fix this?
The simple way is:
git remote set-url origin [updated link url https://........git]
Alternatively, if you like the long way it is:
git remote rm origin
git remote add origin [updated link]
Changing a remote's URL GitHub documentation goes into further detail.
[email protected]:...git
or similar URL if connecting using ssh? My error message listed the new https
scheme URL, but it was the git@
URL that I actually needed to set as the origin. git remote show origin
will tell you what URL scheme you are using currently.
git push --set-upstream origin master
.
To check the current one:
git remote -v
Then to change it:
git remote set-url origin https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-REPO.git
This is an upgrade on the answers I found. Check the current one :
git remote -v
With the above command you will get a result like
origin https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-REPO (fetch)
origin https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-REPO (push)
Note this, here is the difference, it MAY NOT always be origin.
You write the command based on what you found. So if it was origin, Then you change it like :
git remote set-url origin https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-REPO
If it was upstream, you change it like:
git remote set-url upstream https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-REPO
What worked for me was breaking up my huge commit into smaller commits, starting with the file deletions.