Instead of doing:
git push origin --all && git push nodester --all && git push duostack --all
Is there a way to do that with just one command?
Create an all
remote with several repo URLs to its name:
git remote add all origin-host:path/proj.git
git remote set-url --add all nodester-host:path/proj.git
git remote set-url --add all duostack-host:path/proj.git
Then just git push all --all
.
This is how it looks in .git/config
:
[remote "all"]
url = origin-host:path/proj.git
url = nodester-host:path/proj.git
url = duostack-host:path/proj.git
git fetch --all
right after doing such push.
all
remote as they become available, whereas git remote | xargs -L1 git push --all
will automatically pick up any new remotes.
all
whenever you send a commit, just use "origin" instead of "all": git remote set-url --add origin nodester-host:path/proj.git
git remote | xargs -L1 git push --all
git remote | xargs -L1 -I R git push R
git config --global alias.pushall '!git remote | xargs -L1 git push --all'
Running git pushall
will now push all branches to all remotes.
xargs: illegal option -- l
on OSX. Figured it out, you need git remote | xargs -L1 git push
man xargs
says option -l
is deprecated since it's not in the POISX spec.
!
means the following is not an internal git command, but an external shell command.
If you want to always push to repo1, repo2, and repo3 but always pull only from repo1, set up the remote 'origin' as
[remote "origin"]
url = https://[email protected]/path/to/repo1
pushurl = https://[email protected]/path/to/repo1
pushurl = https://[email protected]/path/to/repo2
pushurl = https://[email protected]/path/to/repo3
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
Configure at command line:
$ git remote add origin https://[email protected]/path/to/repo1
$ git remote set-url --push --add origin https://[email protected]/path/to/repo1
$ git remote set-url --push --add origin https://[email protected]/path/to/repo2
$ git remote set-url --push --add origin https://[email protected]/path/to/repo3
If you only want to pull from repo1
but push to repo1
and repo2
for a specific branch specialBranch
:
[remote "origin"]
url = ssh://[email protected]:7999/yyy/repo1.git
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
...
[remote "specialRemote"]
url = ssh://[email protected]:7999/yyy/repo1.git
pushurl = ssh://[email protected]:7999/yyy/repo1.git
pushurl = ssh://[email protected]:7999/yyy/repo2.git
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
...
[branch "specialBranch"]
remote = origin
pushRemote = specialRemote
...
See https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config#git-config-branchltnamegtremote.
git push
without any arguments.
As a CLI Alternative to editing the .git/config file, you could use the following commands:
# git remote add all origin-host:path/proj.git
# git remote set-url --add all nodester-host:path/proj.git
# git remote set-url --add all duostack-host:path/proj.git
The same git push all --all
works here as well.
You have accomplished the same as answer #1. You have just done it with Command Line instead of raw editing of the config file.
I wrote a short bash function to push to many remotes in one call. You can specify a single remote as a parameter, multiple remotes separated by spaces or don't specify any to have it push to all remotes.
This can be added to your .bashrc or .bash_profile.
function GitPush {
REMOTES=$@
# If no remotes were passed in, push to all remotes.
if [[ -z "$REMOTES" ]]; then
REM=`git remote`
# Break the remotes into an array
REMOTES=$(echo $REM | tr " " "\n")
fi
# Iterate through the array, pushing to each remote
for R in $REMOTES; do
echo "Pushing to $R..."
git push $R
done
}
Example: Let's say your repo has 3 remotes: rem1, rem2 and rem3.
# Pushes to rem1
GitPush rem1
# Pushes to rem1 and rem2
GitPush rem1 rem2
# Pushes to rem1, rem2 and rem3
GitPush
You can utilize git hooks - especially pre-push
: add non-origin pushes to .git/hooks/pre-push
.
If you already have an existing repository with origin
as the default remote and want to push to multiple remote repositories by just calling git push
(or with the git sync button of your IDE / text editor) first add the current origin
URL (that is used for all operations e.g. push
, pull
, fetch
) as a push-specific remote origin URL:
git remote set-url --push --add origin "$(git remote get-url --push origin)"
... and then add each other remote repository to the push-specific URLs like that:
git remote set-url --push --add origin "[email protected]:username/repo-name.git"
Now all fetch and pull operations will only fetch from your original remote repository.
But with a simple git push
git pushes your latest changes to all remote repositories you've added right now.
all
remote to push on all your remotes see: stackoverflow.com/a/18637593/802365