This is the key to knowing what was happening:
[48a989d 8762548] scenes
For each commit, Git prints a few messages:
$ git commit -m bar
[master 04ce966] bar
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
The first line has, in square brackets, your current branch name—in this case, mine was master
—and the new commit's hash ID, abbreviated to something reasonably short, in this case 04ce966
.
The second line has a summary of what changed in existing, new, and deleted files, and any additional lines give you more information about what else might have changed, specifically new and/or removed files.
Your Git printed:
48a989d
as the first word in the square brackets. That means you were on a branch named 48a989d
. This is not a very good branch name—it looks a lot like a commit hash—but it is a valid branch name, just as cafedad
or feedbed
or cabbabe
are all both valid branch names and potentially valid abbreviated commit hashes as well. So you committed these files, creating a new commit in branch 48a989d
, then pushed using the name master
, which had not changed.
Checking out master
, putting the files in there, committing, and pushing succeeded. You can now run git branch
to see this odd 48a989d
branch, or just git branch -D 48a989d
to forcibly delete it if you are sure that there is nothing of value in it.
Edit: I'd recommend using git branch
to see it, then running git branch -m 48a989d some-better-name
to change its name to something more obvious and to work with it, if you want to work with it.
git status
orgit branch