The difference is in target branch on remote server.
Let's assume you sit on branch foobar
.
git checkout foobar
..workwork..
git push origin HEAD
HEAD
the newest version of your current local branch. So, it means foobar
in this example. Therefore, this command will simply send foobar
to the remote server. On the remote server it will update/overwrite a branch that 'matches'*) the one you are sending. Usually, that will mean sending foobar
as foobar
. No suprises here.
On the other hand
git checkout foobar
..workwork..
git push origin HEAD:master
explictly instructs git to send your HEAD as master. That means, it will send the your most recent foobar
to the remote server as master
on the remote server. It's just it, exactly it. Your local master
will not change and will stay untouched. Remote foobar
, if it exists at all, will not change. However, remote master
will be now synced with your local foobar
*) it is the client (your local side) that decides which branch to choose on the remote side. Default mappings between local-branch and remote-branch are kept in your .git/config
file. It is absolutely possible to make your local branch aaa
send automatically to remote aaa
or to remote bbb
, so in fact I cannot tell you where exactly will git push origin xxxx
push the xxxx branch - it depends on the mappings - and you can alter them by --set-upstream
or by just editing the config file. On the other hand git push origin xxx:yyy
always means exactly that: send x as y.
As for the .gitignore
part - it has nothing to do. Neither pull nor push has anything to .gitignore
. Git-ignore does not prevent you from pushing anything anywhere. It only assists you in not committing unwanted files. Even in that context, it does not prevent you, as you can always add any file via git add -f
, and such files will be sent to any remotes during push just like normal file (which they, in fact, are).
Note that those 2 commands you've shown use different repos:
...git.heroku.com/$HEROKU_APP_NAME_PRODUCTION.git
...git.heroku.com/$HEROKU_APP_NAME.git
maybe this was what fooled you into thinking git-ignore made the difference?
.gitignore
- or any other specific content - can be updated; I'm curious what's leading you in that direction, because it sounds like there may be something else going on