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I'm working on a project based on CakePHP, that's hosted on GitHub. My project is being hosted on Bitbucket. Both of them use git. Basically I'd like to create a ‘fork’ (I don't know if I'm using the right terms, since I'm new to git) of CakePHP in my Bitbucket repository, in order to be able to get the updates without the need to download all the CakePHP zip/tar and replace the folder, then commit and push, but maybe with a ‘merge’(?).

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6 Answers 6

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It's not possible to send "pull request" across different sites today. I've added a feature request for this in the Bitbucket issue tracker: #3288. I suggest you add yourself as a follower if you want to track this.

However, you can still move the source from GitHub to Bitbucket without having to download any zip files or tarballs. You make a clone from GitHub and push to Bitbucket:

$ git clone https://github.com/cakephp/cakephp
$ cd cakephp
$ git push [email protected]:mg/cakephp.git master

I created mg/cakephp as an empty Git repository in Bitbucket first. That way you can push/pull changesets from GitHub to Bitbucket.

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  • 3
    Then How we can pull from the upstream ? Jul 17, 2014 at 5:48
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    @RuchirShukla: the same way, basically. You have to move the commits through your own machine by pulling from your upstream. You then push that to the other hosting site, thereby synchronizing the two. Jul 17, 2014 at 14:14
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    This worked great for me except I needed to cd cakephp in-between the two commands. Obvious for non-beginners, yes, but beginners might wonder why it isn't working. Feb 11, 2015 at 22:05
  • Can you make a youtube video of this to demonstrate? I couldn't replicate it. I was able to do these instructions but when I push and commit, it still trying to push it to the master instead of the forked branch.
    – Wax
    Dec 25, 2016 at 23:46
  • This does not work as a fork. Branches and Tags are NOT copied over to BitBucket.
    – JNAK
    Aug 23, 2018 at 17:03
98

The workflow below adds the github repository as a a new remote called sync and the bitbucket remote as origin. It also adds a branch called github to track the github repository and a branch called master to track the bitbucket repository. It assumes you have a bitbucket repository called "myrepository" which is empty.

Setup remotes

# setup local repo
mkdir myrepository
cd myrepository
git init

# add  bitbucket remote as "origin"
git remote add origin ssh://[email protected]/aleemb/myrepository.git

# add github remote as "sync"
git remote add sync https://github.com/aleemb/laravel.git

# verify remotes
git remote -v
# should show fetch/push for "origin" and "sync" remotes

Setup branches

# first pull from github using the "sync" remote
git pull sync

# setup local "github" branch to track "sync" remote's "master" branch
git branch --track github sync/master

# switch to the new branch
git checkout github

# create new master branched out of github branch
git checkout -b master

# push local "master" branch to "origin" remote (bitbucket)
git push -u origin master

Now you should have the local github branch tracking the github repo's master branch. And you should have the local master branch tracking the bitbucket repo (master branch by default).

This makes it easy to do a pull on the github branch, then merge those changes onto the master branch (rebase preferred over merge though) and then you can push the master branch (will push it to bitbucket).

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  • This doesn't seem to work but it's a good idea. Anyway to fix it to make it work?
    – bozdoz
    May 12, 2013 at 0:27
  • Local github branch tracks remote github master branch, then you push to remote bitbucket master? When does the push to github occur? @aleemb
    – bozdoz
    May 12, 2013 at 0:31
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    In Git 2.2.1 --set-upstream is deprecated...But this does work as long as you create the github branch before trying to set the upstream repo.
    – Ken Prince
    May 16, 2015 at 19:06
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    Instead of doing --set-upstream do: git fetch and git branch --track github sync/master Dec 16, 2015 at 14:25
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    I think what is missing is git checkout github and git checkout -b master after the git branch command. You will end up with those branches (git branch -a): github, master, remotes/origin/master, remotes/sync/master Jun 8, 2016 at 10:19
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If you want to keep your repo up to date, use two remotes: Github (upstream) and Bitbucket (origin) like this:

# Clone original CakePHP source code from Github
git clone --mirror https://github.com/cakephp/cakephp
cd cakephp
# Rename remote from `origin` to `upstream`
git remote rename origin upstream
# Add your Bitbucket repo (this is where your code will be pushed)
git remote add origin https://bitbucket/your/repo.git
# Push everything to Bitbucket
git push --mirror origin

To pull updates to CakePHP from Github:

git pull upstream master

To push your code changes to Bitbucket:

git push origin master
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  • I think you meant ` git clone mybitibucket/cakephp/cakephp` in the first git command, right? This is the way to go....
    – ribamar
    Sep 15, 2017 at 12:11
  • This is just great! Thanks a ton! Much appreciated
    – Aakanksha
    May 14, 2018 at 10:49
  • This also does not work. Branches and Tags are not included in Bitbucket.
    – JNAK
    Aug 23, 2018 at 17:27
  • @JoelKarunungan Good point! To push everything, including branches and tags, I think this should work: git push --all --mirror origin. Answer updated.
    – Zubin
    Aug 24, 2018 at 19:48
  • @Zubin did you try this? fatal: --all and --mirror are incompatible Also: git pull upstream master Throws a fatal error. fatal: Couldn't find remote ref master
    – JNAK
    Aug 25, 2018 at 5:57
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When creating a new repository in BitBucket, click the button Import repository at the top right. Enter the https url found when clicking Clone or download in Github for the repository you want to fork.

Give your repository a name, configure your privacy settings, and there you go!

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  • 3
    That's cloning, not forking, which is different thing.
    – entropid
    May 25, 2014 at 16:32
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    The feature is labeled 'Import repository' on Bitbucket, as of now. Jun 20, 2015 at 14:20
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    @entropid a fork is a clone of the original repo. In the git world, Forking == cloning
    – enorl76
    Jun 28, 2016 at 21:10
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    @enorl76 Not particularly when it comes to general use though.
    – Rig
    Nov 11, 2017 at 2:31
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    @enorl76 yes technically it is. But fork is a way to keep the clone "connected" to the original repository so to get update from it and eventually push on it. This is where the combination of 'origin' and 'upstream' links come to play a fundamental role. Github and Bitbucket then built all a set of tools around the upstream to make fork more productive and friendly, like the "push request" thing :)
    – Dan Niero
    Dec 4, 2017 at 10:01
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I have noticed that since @Martin Geisler 's answer, Bitbucket has enabled a feature to import repositories from github.com

I was able to successfully import a private repo from github.com into a private repo on bitbucket.org

Here are the steps:

  1. Click on the Create button and select Repository ('+' > Repository)
  2. Now, instead of creating a new repository select a import repository from the top right corner of the modal that pops up.
  3. fill in your github repo's URL and your authentication credentials on the new modal for importing the repository.
  4. That's it. Everything imports into bitbucket from github smoothly.

Note the import repository link on right top corner of the screenshot

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I'm guessing you just want to easily download the repository with your project... and that you will NOT be contributing the cakePHP, correct?

if so, you just need to add a external reference to your repo.

SVN:externals equivalent in GIT?

And later, even if you want to contribute to cakePHP, you can just do so at the original repo just fine.

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