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What is the difference between origin and upstream on GitHub?

When a git branch -a command is executed, some branches it displays have a prefix of origin (remotes/origin/..) while others have a prefix of upstream (remotes/upstream/..).

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4 Answers 4

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This should be understood in the context of GitHub forks (where you fork a GitHub repo on GitHub before cloning that fork locally).

From the GitHub page:

When a repo is cloned, it has a default remote called origin that points to your fork on GitHub, not the original repo it was forked from.
To keep track of the original repo, you need to add another remote named upstream

git remote add upstream https://github.com/<aUser>/<aRepo.git>

(with aUser/aRepo the reference for the original creator and repository, that you have forked)

Note: since Sept. 2021, the unauthenticated git protocol (git://...) on port 9418 is no longer supported on GitHub.

You will use upstream to fetch from the original repo (in order to keep your local copy in sync with the project you want to contribute to).

git fetch upstream

(git fetch alone would fetch from origin by default, which is not what is needed here)

You will use origin to pull and push since you can contribute to your own repository.

git pull
git push

(again, without parameters, 'origin' is used by default)

You will contribute back to the upstream repo by making a pull request.

fork and upstream

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  • 15
    It also helps knowing what upstream is generally: stackoverflow.com/questions/2739376/…
    – VonC
    Mar 10, 2012 at 20:59
  • 2
    @MaxRydahlAndersen true, but I like using Git without wrapper, so I will keep that convention (upstream vs. origin) for now.
    – VonC
    Apr 3, 2013 at 6:41
  • 39
    By far the best explanation of how forks work that I have seen. You get my upvote.
    – CodeChimp
    Jul 23, 2015 at 13:02
  • 14
    Great work on the visual. Very straight forward and understandable answer. This was exactly what I was looking for.
    – tayopi
    Jul 20, 2016 at 17:19
  • 3
    @iamrudra if git remote -v shows the same url for origin and upstream, then yes, you are pushing to the same remote repo.
    – VonC
    Aug 11, 2016 at 7:08
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In a nutshell answer.

  • origin: the fork
  • upstream: the forked
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What is the difference between origin and upstream on GitHub?

In the context of GitHub, "origin" and "upstream" refer to two different repositories.

"Origin" typically refers to your own fork of a repository. When you fork a repository on GitHub, you create a copy of it in your own account. This copy is called a fork, and the original repository is called the upstream repository. When you clone your fork to your local machine, Git automatically sets up a remote called "origin" that points to your fork on GitHub.

"Upstream" refers to the original repository that you forked from. This is the repository that you originally copied when you created your fork. You can set up a remote called "upstream" that points to this repository, which allows you to keep your fork up to date with any changes that are made to the upstream repository.

"origin" refers to your own fork of a repository, while "upstream" refers to the original repository that you forked from.

Let's say you want to contribute to an open-source project on GitHub called "example-project" that is owned by another user. To contribute to this project, you would typically fork the repository to your own account, clone it to your local machine, make changes, and then submit a pull request to the original repository.

Here's how the "origin" and "upstream" repositories come into play:

  1. Fork the repository: You go to the "example-project" repository on GitHub and click the "Fork" button. This creates a copy of the repository in your own account, which is now called "your-username/example-project".

  2. Clone the repository: You clone your fork of the repository to your local machine using the git clone command. This sets up a local copy of the repository on your machine.

  3. Set up "origin" remote: When you clone your fork, Git automatically sets up a remote called "origin" that points to your fork on GitHub. This allows you to push changes to your fork using the git push command.

  4. Set up "upstream" remote: To keep your fork up to date with any changes that are made to the original repository, you can set up a remote called "upstream" that points to the original repository. You can do this using the git remote add command. For example:

    git remote add upstream https://github.com/original-user/example-project.git

This sets up a remote called "upstream" that points to the original repository.

  1. Fetch changes from "upstream": To get any changes that have been made to the original repository, you can run the git fetch command with the "upstream" remote. For example:

    git fetch upstream

This fetches any changes that have been made to the original repository.

  1. Merge changes into your fork: Once you've fetched changes from the original repository, you can merge them into your fork using the git merge command. For example:

    git merge upstream/main

This merges any changes that have been made to the "main" branch of the original repository into your local copy of the repository.

  1. Push changes to "origin": Once you've made changes to your local copy of the repository, you can push them to your fork on GitHub using the git push command. For example:

    git push origin main

This pushes any changes that you've made to the "main" branch of your fork to your fork on GitHub.

  1. Submit a pull request: Once you've pushed your changes to your fork, you can submit a pull request to the original repository. This allows the owner of the original repository to review and merge your changes into their repository.

In summary, "origin" refers to your own fork of the repository, while "upstream" refers to the original repository that you forked from. By setting up "upstream" as a remote, you can keep your fork up to date with any changes that are made to the original repository.

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after cloning a fork you have to explicitly add a remote upstream, with git add remote "the original repo you forked from". This becomes your upstream, you mostly fetch and merge from your upstream. Any other business such as pushing from your local to upstream should be done using pull request.

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  • can't do pull request from local, local first has to be uploaded to repository/remote..
    – oOo
    Dec 1, 2020 at 23:41
  • N/B - The pull request mentioned in my comment above implies to making a contribution from your forked version on your git to the original repo(in this case the upstream of your local)
    – Jude Ukana
    Dec 6, 2020 at 18:12
  • I created a repo on github, cloned it to my local, then created a branch(locally), made some changes to code, when I tried to push to remote from the branch newly created, it says fatal: The current branch branchName has no upstream branch. push the current branch and set the remote as upstream, like - git push --set-upstream origin branchName. There is nothing related to fork here, so what is upstream here? Anyone can help? Oct 7, 2021 at 10:47
  • did you try - "git push -u origin <branch>" ?
    – Jude Ukana
    Oct 8, 2021 at 22:14
  • @Md.HabiburRahman if you have created a new local branch, search for the git syntax that would push your newly crated branch as well as create a new remote branch at the same time. Also to answer your comment on upstream, there is no upstream in this case because you didn't fork the repo.
    – Jude Ukana
    Nov 3, 2021 at 9:25

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