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When I run:

git push origin branchname

What exactly is origin and why do I have to type it before the branch name?

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12 Answers 12

751

origin is an alias on your system for a particular remote repository. It's not actually a property of that repository.

By doing

git push origin branchname

you're saying to push to the origin repository. There's no requirement to name the remote repository origin: in fact the same repository could have a different alias for another developer.

Remotes are simply an alias that store the URL of repositories. You can see what URL belongs to each remote by using

git remote -v

In the push command, you can use remotes or you can simply use a URL directly. An example that uses the URL:

git push [email protected]:git/git.git master
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  • 2
    Can a single remote be an alias for multiple other remotes? What if I wanted one remote to push to multiple other remotes? For example, push to a primary repo, and a push to a backup repo? Would that be a reasonable thing to want in some situations? EDIT: There are several solutions here. Jul 21, 2017 at 7:07
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    What if I omit the "origin" keyword? When we say "git push", isn't it anyway going to push all commits to the remote repository? Adding the keyword "origin" seems redundant.
    – Mugen
    Jul 28, 2019 at 13:47
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    @Mugen In the docs for git push you can see that it first checks the config for that repository (which you can check with git config --list) for a key called branch.<branchname>.remote. If that's not set, "it defaults to origin" - git-scm.com/docs/git-push
    – Kenmore
    Aug 11, 2019 at 3:33
204

origin is not the remote repository name. It is rather a local alias set as a key in place of the remote repository URL.

It avoids the user having to type the whole remote URL when prompting a push.

This name is set by default and for convention by Git when cloning from a remote for the first time.

This alias name is not hard coded and could be changed using following command prompt:

git remote rename origin mynewalias

Take a look at http://git-scm.com/docs/git-remote for further clarifications.

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    What if I omit the "origin" keyword? When we say "git push", isn't it anyway going to push all commits to the remote repository? Adding the keyword "origin" seems redundant.
    – Mugen
    Jul 28, 2019 at 13:48
  • By default origin is already set, If you see "git remote -v"; Hence when you omit origin, it default connects to remote URL :-)
    – Krishna
    Jan 25, 2022 at 4:26
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Git has the concept of "remotes", which are simply URLs to other copies of your repository. When you clone another repository, Git automatically creates a remote named "origin" and points to it.

You can see more information about the remote by typing git remote show origin.

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    git commands are very confusing to beginners. I guess it has to do with the history of this version control system. So, question: Instead of git remote show origin, why not simply git show origin? There must be a reason, what is it? Thanks. Aug 19, 2015 at 13:26
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    @Stack0verflow: this is probably better asked as a new question so people can do the research if you're curious. 'git show' is already another command that shows a commit, and technically nothing would stop you having a branch called 'origin' in addition to having a remote called origin... Aug 20, 2015 at 16:43
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origin is the default alias to the URL of your remote repository.

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Origin is the shortname that acts like an alias for the url of the remote repository.

Let me explain with an example.

Suppose you have a remote repository called amazing-project and then you clone that remote repository to your local machine so that you have a local repository. Then you would have something like what you can see in the diagram below:

enter image description here

Because you cloned the repository. The remote repository and the local repository are linked.

If you run the command git remote -v it will list all the remote repositories that are linked to your local repository. There you will see that in order to push or fetch code from your remote repository you will use the shortname 'origin'. enter image description here

Now, this may be a bit confusing because in GitHub (or the remote server) the project is called 'amazing-project'. So why does it seem like there are two names for the remote repository?

enter image description here

Well one of the names that we have for our repository is the name it has on GitHub or a remote server somewhere. This can be kind of thought like a project name. And in our case that is 'amazing-project'.

The other name that we have for our repository is the shortname that it has in our local repository that is related to the URL of the repository. It is the shortname we are going to use whenever we want to push or fetch code from that remote repository. And this shortname kind of acts like an alias for the url, it's a way for us to avoid having to use that entire long url in order to push or fetch code. And in our example above it is called origin.

So, what is origin?

Basically origin is the default shortname that Git uses for a remote repository when you clone that remote repository. So it's just the default.

In many cases you will have links to multiple remote repositories in your local repository and each of those will have a different shortname.

So final question, why don't we just use the same name?

I will answer that question with another example. Suppose we have a friend who forks our remote repository so they can help us on our project. And let's assume we want to be able to fetch code from their remote repository. We can use the command git remote add <shortname> <url> in order to add a link to their remote repository in our local repository.

enter image description here

In the above image you can see that I used the shortname friend to refer to my friend's remote repository. You can also see that both of the remote repositories have the same project name amazing-project and that gives us one reason why the remote repository names in the remote server and the shortnames in our local repositories should not be the same!

There is a really helpful video 📹 that explains all of this that can be found here.

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    This really helped me understand so much better than the accepted answer! Thank you @Anna Skoulikari Jan 2, 2021 at 15:00
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Simple! "origin" is just what you nicknamed your remote repository when you ran a command like this:

git remote add origin [email protected]:USERNAME/REPOSITORY-NAME.git

From then on Git knows that "origin" points to that specific repository (in this case a GitHub repository). You could have named it "github" or "repo" or whatever you wanted.

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I was also confused by this, and below is what I have learned.

When you clone a repository, for example from GitHub:

  • origin is the alias for the URL from which you cloned the repository. Note that you can change this alias.

  • There is one master branch in the remote repository (aliased by origin). There is also another master branch created locally.

Further information can be found from this SO question: Git branching: master vs. origin/master vs. remotes/origin/master

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The best answer here:

https://www.git-tower.com/learn/git/glossary/origin

In Git, "origin" is a shorthand name for the remote repository that a project was originally cloned from. More precisely, it is used instead of that original repository's URL - and thereby makes referencing much easier.

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I would just add, that it becomes easy to understand if you think about remotes as locations other than your computer that you may want to move your code to.

Some very good examples are:

  • GitHub
  • A server to host your app

So you can certainly have multiple remotes. A very common pattern is to use GitHub to store your code, and a server to host your application (if it's a web application). Then you would have 2 remotes (possibly more if you have other environments).

Try opening your git config by typing git config -e

Note: press escape, then :, then q then enter to quit out

Example

Here's what you might see in your git configs if you had 3 remotes. In this example, 1 remote (called 'origin') is GitHub, another remote (called 'staging') is a staging server, and the third (called 'heroku') is a production server.

[core]
        repositoryformatversion = 0
        filemode = true
        bare = false
        logallrefupdates = true
        ignorecase = true
        precomposeunicode = true
[remote "origin"]
        url = https://github.com/username/reponame.git
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
[branch "master"]
        remote = origin
        merge = refs/heads/master
[remote "heroku"]
        url = https://git.heroku.com/appname.git
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/heroku/*
[remote "staging"]
        url = https://git.heroku.com/warm-bedlands-98000.git
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/staging/*

The three lines starting with [remote ... show us the remotes we can push to.

Running git push origin will push to the url for '[remote "origin"]', i.e. to GitHub

But similarly, we could push to another remote, say, '[remote "staging"]', with git push staging, then it would push to https://git.heroku.com/warm-bedlands-98000.git.

In the example above, we can see the 3 remotes with git remote:

git remote   
heroku
origin
staging

Summary or origin

Remotes are simply places on the internet that you may have a reason to send your code to. GitHub is an obvious place, as are servers that host your app, and you may have other locations too. git push origin simply means it will push to 'origin', which is the name GitHub chooses to default to.

As for branchname

branchname is simply what you're pushing to the remote. According the git push help docs, the branchname argument is technically a refspec, which, for practical purposes, is the branch you want to push.

  • Read more in the docs for git push by running: git push --help
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The other answers say that origin is an alias for the URL of a remote repository which is not entirely accurate. It should be noted that an address that starts with http is a URL while one that starts with git@ is a URI or Universal Resource Identifier.

All URLs are URIs, but not all URIs are URLs.

In short, when you type git remote add origin <URI> you are telling your local git that whenever you use the word origin you actually mean the URI that you specified. Think of it like a variable holding a value.

And just like a variable, you can name it whatever you want (eg. github, heroku, destination, etc).

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remote(repository url alias) → origin(upstream alias) → master(branch alias);

  • remote, level same as working directory, index, repository,

  • origin, local repository branch map to remote repository branch

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I for one got stuck on this early. Consider

git push origin master
git log origin..

Both are common idioms but the term origin is not being used the same way. The first is used as a remote alias, the second as a remote ref, more explicity written as git log origin/master~0..master~0 both of which mean give me what's in master not in origin/master with respect to the last fetch; however, it looks for the remote-ref head and branch head to make that comparison by default and in the first case assume the current checked out branch too.

The second command is invalid without that remote ref and the remote ref would be invalid without that remote but in practical use, the term origin can have this meaning too, or any other remote for that matter.

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