Expected Behavior
I edited file1, committed, and did this
$ git push
NOTICE: Only authorized blah blah blah...
Counting objects: 7, done.
Delta compression using up to 4 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (7/7), done.
Writing objects: 100% (7/7), 676 bytes | 0 bytes/s, done.
Total 7 (delta 4), reused 0 (delta 0)
To ssh://me@server:/opt/git/fooBar.git
28ad03d..73ae492 master -> master
$
Problem
Then I edited file2 in the same project, committed and did this:
$ git push
NOTICE: Only authorized blah blah blah...
Counting objects: 10, done.
Delta compression using up to 4 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (8/8), done.
Writing objects: 100% (10/10), 1.42 KiB | 0 bytes/s, done.
Total 10 (delta 4), reused 0 (delta 0)
^C
Notice how I had to CTRL-C (^C
) at the end? That's because it never completed. This is NOT the expected behavior.
Failed Coping Mechanisms
So I:
cd ..
mv fooBar/ fooBar_bak/
git clone ssh://me@server:/opt/git/fooBar.git
cd fooBar
Edit some other text file (just added a blank line), pushed, and it worked. This means I did a successful push from/to the same local/remote repositories before and after the failed push.
But edit file2 it didn't like before? The push never completes. Same thing with file3 which it doesn't like either. I don't see anything special about these files.
Well, file2 and file3 are UTF-8 and file1 is ASCII, but that shouldn't matter. Should it?
I tried all the solutions at git push hangs after Total line but none worked for me.
I didn't really understand the output of strace -efile -f git push
but nothing jumped out at me.
I waited. But this is not a big repo or a big file.
I'm using Ubuntu 16.04 with git version 2.7.4 on my machine and git version 1.7.1 on the CentOS server. I don't have msysgit, git-for-windows, or cygwin installed.
git push -u origin master
didn't work either.
git config http.postBuffer 524288000
didn't make any difference.
GIT_CURL_VERBOSE=1
and GIT_TRACE=1
had no effect.
git config --global core.askpass "git-gui --askpass"
didn't do anything, probably because I don't have git-gui installed.
@RonanDejhero's suggestion here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/21032615/1128668 was what allowed me to see that some files can be changed, committed and pushed and some cannot. I tried copying the changed files, changing the files manually, and making slightly different changes: no good.
On the server I did sudo chown -R me.git-users /opt/git/
but that didn't make a difference either. When I've had problems like this in the past, that seemed to help.
I did a git gc
in my local repo and on the server in /opt/git/fooBar.git. No joy.
Update
I deleted my local repo, cloned, edited file2 (which git didn't like being edited before) by only adding a blank line. Committed, pushed, it worked! Then I commented out a dozen lines of unused code, committed pushed, and it worked! Could I have introduced a character or something that git didn't like?
Total
line, is the other end to come back and say "yes, I have accepted your ref updates" or "no, I reject your updates" (one reply per branch or tag update you're sending, which in this case is just the one branch). The problem is thus at the other end, probably due to a faulty hook. It needs to be diagnosed from that end.