349

I have a remote gitosis server and a local git repository, and each time I make a big change in my code, I'll push the changes to that server too.

But today I find that even though I have some local changes and commit to local repository, when running git push origin master it says 'Everything up-to-date', but when I use git clone to checkout files on the remote server, it doesn't contain latest changes. And I have only one branch named "master" and one remote server named "origin".

PS: This is what git displays when running ls-remote, I'm not sure whether it helps

$ git ls-remote origin
df80d0c64b8e2c160d3d9b106b30aee9540b6ece        HEAD
df80d0c64b8e2c160d3d9b106b30aee9540b6ece        refs/heads/master
$ git ls-remote .
49c2cb46b9e798247898afdb079e76e40c9f77ea        HEAD
df80d0c64b8e2c160d3d9b106b30aee9540b6ece        refs/heads/master
df80d0c64b8e2c160d3d9b106b30aee9540b6ece        refs/remotes/origin/master
3a04c3ea9b81252b0626b760f0a7766b81652c0c        refs/tags/stage3
6
  • stackoverflow.com/q/5170225/343495
    – Drew
    May 3, 2012 at 4:07
  • Worth double-checking you're in the right directory! Esp. when you have submodules you can mistake git responses from parent..
    – geotheory
    Mar 3, 2017 at 11:48
  • In my case I was getting error while commit which I did not notice and tried to push code
    – Zohab Ali
    Aug 1, 2018 at 7:37
  • 11
    forgot to commit?
    – llama
    Jan 18, 2019 at 11:36
  • 1
    I have no idea how this happened, but resetting the commit (git reset), closing my console window and returning back from where I started helped me out
    – O-9
    Apr 13, 2021 at 10:27

32 Answers 32

326

Are you working with a detached head by any chance?

As in:

detached head

indicating that your latest commit is not a branch head.

Warning: the following does a git reset --hard: make sure to use git stash first if you want to save your currently modified files.

$ git log -1
# note the SHA-1 of latest commit
$ git checkout master
# reset your branch head to your previously detached commit
$ git reset --hard <commit-id>

As mentioned in the git checkout man page (emphasis mine):

It is sometimes useful to be able to checkout a commit that is not at the tip of one of your branches.
The most obvious example is to check out the commit at a tagged official release point, like this:

$ git checkout v2.6.18

Earlier versions of git did not allow this and asked you to create a temporary branch using the -b option, but starting from version 1.5.0, the above command detaches your HEAD from the current branch and directly points at the commit named by the tag (v2.6.18 in the example above).

You can use all git commands while in this state.
You can use git reset --hard $othercommit to further move around, for example.
You can make changes and create a new commit on top of a detached HEAD.
You can even create a merge by using git merge $othercommit.

The state you are in while your HEAD is detached is not recorded by any branch (which is natural --- you are not on any branch).
What this means is that you can discard your temporary commits and merges by switching back to an existing branch (e.g. git checkout master), and a later git prune or git gc would garbage-collect them.
If you did this by mistake, you can ask the reflog for HEAD where you were, e.g.

$ git log -g -2 HEAD

While git push says "everything up-to-date", you still can technically push a detached HEAD, as noted in the comments by Jonathan Benn

 git push origin HEAD:main

You have to specify the destination branch, since the source is not a branch, and does not have an upstream target branch.

7
  • 6
    It's not entirely clear to me how I got into this state (doing some mucking with git-svn at the moment), but this was enough to get me back to the right place. Thanks. Jul 2, 2010 at 16:21
  • 1
    @John You need to be in a branch in order to push. As long as you are in a detached HEAD mode, that would not work. Reset your branch to where you are: git branch -f myBranch HEAD, then checkout said branch, and push it. In your case, myBranch might be master if you were in the process of merging nodeAPI.
    – VonC
    Dec 18, 2019 at 6:52
  • 1
    Please beware of losing every local changes after running this command!! Consider doing some git stash & code backup before doing anything like this.
    – kta
    Jun 8, 2020 at 21:20
  • 1
    @kta Good point: I have edited the answer to make that warning visible.
    – VonC
    Jun 8, 2020 at 21:41
  • 1
    It's still possible to push to origin when your local Git is in a detached HEAD state: git push origin HEAD:master Apr 6, 2022 at 15:51
224

Err.. If you are a git noob are you sure you have git commit before git push? I made this mistake the first time!

4
  • 18
    It was git commit -a -m "your message goes here" in my case May 27, 2016 at 12:00
  • 1
    I LOVE ( sarcasm) every time that I am wanting to add a new project to a github I sometimes forget and the error message leads me to think I did something really wrong - then of course DUH! commit Only happens to me when I am created new backup repositories and I forget Nov 4, 2016 at 6:47
  • 2
    @FoxMcCloud Commiting is an important step to be conscious of, I'm sure you'll learn to love it if you haven't already :) ~ git add -A, git diff --staged, scrolls through changes hmm looking very good, git commit -m 'bam!', git push
    – AFOC
    Sep 27, 2019 at 18:50
  • 1
    In my case (silly) I was hit by the "Tell me who you are" after git commit. Git requires you to re-run git commit in that case.
    – universvm
    Mar 8 at 11:37
88

Maybe you're pushing a new local branch?

A new local branch must be pushed explicitly:

git push origin your-new-branch-name

Just one of those things about git... You clone a repo, make a branch, commit some changes, push... "Everything is up to date". I understand why it happens, but this workflow is extremely unfriendly to newcomers.

5
  • 5
    Thanks! This fixed my issue "everything up-to-date" with a new branch I had
    – Pangu
    Aug 25, 2015 at 21:50
  • What the heck is meant by "your-new-branch-name"? Ps: You are soooo right about newcomers. Jan 2, 2018 at 23:36
  • @user1863152 that's the name of the new local branch you created. Sounds like you didn't do that, so check other answers here. Jan 3, 2018 at 11:10
  • Totally agree with "this workflow is extremely unfriendly to newcomers". I am struggling with this since 1 hour. I setup remote and local repo. Made changes to local REAME file and try to push it to remote and nothing changes in remote.
    – G_real
    Jul 2, 2019 at 22:24
  • This doesn't quite work, because in a detached HEAD state you need to specify the local branch/reference to use. Apr 6, 2022 at 15:56
69

My issue was that my local branch had a different name than the remote branch. I was able to push by doing the following:

$ git push origin local-branch-name:remote-branch-name

(Credit to https://penandpants.com/2013/02/07/git-pushing-to-a-remote-branch-with-a-different-name/)

1
  • The specific command for this case would be: git push origin HEAD:master Apr 6, 2022 at 15:52
37
$ git push origin local_branch:remote_branch

Explanation

I had the same error & spent hours trying to figure it out. Finally I found it. What I didn't know is that pushing like this git push origin branch-x will try to search for branch-x locally then push to remote branch-x.

In my case, I had two remote urls. I did a checkout from branch-x to branch-y when trying to push from y locally to x remote I had the message everything is up to date which is normal cause I was pushing to x of the second remote.

Long story short to not fall in this kind of trap you need to specify the source ref and the target ref:

$ git push origin local_branch:remote_branch

Update:

If you have to run this command every time you push your branch, you maybe need to set the upstream between your local & remote branch with the following :

$ git push --set-upstream origin local_branch:remote_branch

Or

$ git push -u origin local_branch:remote_branch
4
  • 'git push upstream dev:master' This means it will push source from dev to master. Right? Jan 7, 2019 at 10:24
  • 2
    This helped me, I had another local branch named as the remote branch, what caused confusion. Mar 6, 2019 at 11:15
  • Ok this is definitely working for me but I am having to do this every time I want to push something to the remote. How do I fix it once and for all? Oct 20, 2019 at 15:20
  • you maybe need to set the upstream between your local & remote branch with the following : $ git push --set-upstream origin local_branch:remote_branch
    – Melchia
    Oct 20, 2019 at 19:03
29

Another situation that is important to be aware of: The sort of default state for git is that you are working in the "master" branch. And for a lot of situations, you'll just hang out in that as your main working branch (although some people get fancy and do other things).

Anyway, that's just one branch. So a situation I might get into is:

My active branch is actually NOT the master branch. ... But I habitually do the command: git push (and I had previously done git push origin master, so it's a shortcut for THAT).

So I'm habitually pushing the master branch to the shared repo ... which is probably a good clean thing, in my case ...

But I have forgotten that the changes I have been working on are not yet IN the master branch !!!

So therefore everytime I try git push, and I see "Everything up to date", I want to scream, but of course, it is not git's fault! It's mine.

So instead, I merge my branch into master, and then do push, and everything is happy again.

0
23

I have faced same issue. As I didn't add changes to staging area. And I directly tried to push the code to remote repo using command :

git push origin master

And it shows the message Everything up-to-date.

to fix this this issue, try these steps

  1. git add .
  2. git commit -m "Bug Fixed"
  3. git push -u origin master
0
7

See VonC's answer above - I needed an extra step:

$ git log -1
- note the SHA-1 of latest commit
$ git checkout master
- reset your branch head to your previously detached commit
$ git reset --hard <commit-id>

I did this, but when I then tried to git push remoterepo master, it said "error: failed to push some refs. To prevent you from losing history, non-fast-forward updates were rejected, Merge the remote changes (e.g. 'git pull') before pushing again."

So I did 'git pull remoterepo master', and it found a conflict. I did git reset --hard <commit-id> again, copied the conflicted files to a backup folder, did git pull remoterepo master again, copied the conflicted files back into my project, did git commit, then git push remoterepo master, and this time it worked.

Git stopped saying 'everything is up to date' - and it stopped complaining about 'fast forwards'.

4

Another very simple yet noobish mistake of mine: I simply forgot to add a message -m modifier in my commit. So I wrote:

git commit 'My message'

Instead of correct:

git commit -m 'My message'

NOTE: It does NOT throw any errors! But you will not be able to push your commits and always get Everything up to date instead

1
  • 1
    I don't realize why I make a simple mistake like this and need stackoverflow to find how to solve it. just reminder for myself in future, make sure do "git status" to check if you have commit it or not. Aug 11, 2020 at 5:15
3

From your git status, you probably has a different situation from mine.

But anyway, here is what happened to me.. I encountered the following error:

fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
Everything up-to-date

The more informative message here is that the remote hung up. Turned out it is due to exceeding the http post buffer size. The solution is to increase it with

git config http.postBuffer 524288000

3

Super rare - but still: On Windows, it might be that packed-refs has a branch with one letter case (i.e dev/mybranch), while refs folder has another case (i.e Dev/mybranch) when core.ignorecase is set to true.

The solution is to manually delete the relevant row from packed-refs. Didn't find a cleaner solution.

1
  • That was an issue for me too. Ended up with renaming folders with incorrect case inside .git folder (logs/refs/heads, refs/heads). Aug 21, 2019 at 11:51
2

I have faced a similar situation; when I made the changes and tried to git push origin master, it was saying everything was up to date.

I had to git add the changed file and then git push origin master. It started working from then on.

1
  • 5
    Wouldn't you have to git commit that added file before pushing? Aug 21, 2012 at 23:32
2

I ran into this myself when I merged a branch on Github and continued to develop in it locally. My fix was a little different than the others that have been suggested.

First I branched a new local branch off my old local branch (that I couldn't push). Then I pushed the new local branch to the origin server (Github). I.e.

$ git checkout -b newlocalbranch oldlocalbranch
$ git push origin newlocalbranch

This got the changes to show up on Github, albeit in newlocalbranch rather than oldlocalbranch.

2

I had this problem today and it didn't have anything to do with any of the other answers. Here's what I did and how I fixed it:

A repository of mine recently moved, but I had a local copy. I branched off of my local "master" branch and made some changes--and then I remembered that the repository had moved. I used git remote set-url origin https://<my_new_repository_url> to set the new URL but when I pushed it would just say "Everything up to date" instead of pushing my new branch to master.

I ended up solving it by rebasing onto origin/master and then pushing with explicit branch names, like this:

$ git rebase <my_branch> origin/master
$ git push origin <my_branch>

I hope this helps anyone who had my same problem!

2

In my case I had 2 remote repos.

git remote -v
originhttps https://asim_kt@...
originhttps https://asim_kt@...
origin  ssh:[email protected]:...
origin  ssh:[email protected]:...

Both repo was same. Just one was https other was ssh. So removing the unwanted one, (In my case ssh. since I used https because ssh wasn't working!) fixed the issue for me.

2

I had a situation where I was on a feature branch and my coworker created his own feature branch as well. I ran git fetch -a and then git push origin <coworkers_branch>. This kept telling me that everything was up to date.

I fixed it by checking out into <coworkers_branch> and then pulling from my feature branch, and then committing and pushing back to <coworkers_branch>.

I honestly hope this helps someone, because I spent much more time than I should have with this.

2
git branch -M <desired branch>

This did the trick for me.

1

Verify you haven't goofed your remote URL.

I just wanted to also mention that I ran into this after enabling Git as a CVS in a local Jenkins build configuration. It appears that Jenkins checked out the most recent commit of the branch I gave it and also reset my remote to correspond to the paths I gave it to the repo. Had to checkout my feature branch again and fix my origin remote url with 'git remote set-url'. Don't go pointing a build tool to your working directory or you'll have a bad time. My remote was set to a file path to my working directory, so it naturally reported everything up-to-date when I attempted to push changes with the same source and destination.

1

Another possibility is that you named a directory in your .gitignore file that got excluded. So the new commits wouldn't be pushed. It happened to me that I named a directory to ignore "search", but that was also a directory in my source tree.

1

There is a quick way I found. Go to your .git folder, open the HEAD file and change whatever branch you were on back to master. E.g. ref: refs/heads/master

1
  • Actually setting it to refs/heads/master broke my repository. But setting it to what I thought to be the HEAD commit gave the following message: Warning: you are leaving 1 commit behind, not connected to any of your branches. I was able to take the commit over into a new branch and merge it back to the master.
    – schmijos
    Nov 9, 2018 at 7:14
1

My mistake was different than everything so far mentioned. If you have no idea why you would have a detached head, then you probably don't. I was working on autopilot with git commit and git push, and hadn't read the output from git commit. Turns out, it was an error message because I forgot -am.

[colin] ~/github/rentap.js [master] M % git commit 'figured out some more stuff with the forms in views and started figuring out row and mode in models so also made matching routes and controllers'
error: pathspec 'figured out some more stuff with the forms in views and started figuring out row and mode in models so also made matching routes and controllers' did not match any file(s) known to git.
[colin] ~/github/rentap.js [master] M % git push
Enter passphrase for key '/home/colin/.ssh/id_ecdsa': 
Everything up-to-date

Fixed it by putting -am where I usually do:

[colin] ~/github/rentap.js [master] M % git commit -am 'figured out some more stuff with the forms in views and started figuring out row and mode in models so also made matching routes and controllers'
1

I had the same issue. In my case it was caused by having to names for the same remote. It created the standard 'origin', but I've been using 'github' as my remote for a long time, so that was there too. As soon as I removed the 'origin' remote, the error went away.

1

here, my solution is different from the above. i haven't figured out how this problem happen, but i fixed it. a little unexpectedly.

now comes way:

$ git push origin  use_local_cache_v1
Everything up-to-date
$ git status
On branch test
Your branch is ahead of 'origin/use_local_cache_v1' by 4 commits.
  (use "git push" to publish your local commits)
  ......
$ git push
fatal: The upstream branch of your current branch does not match
the name of your current branch.  To push to the upstream branch
on the remote, use

    git push origin HEAD:use_local_cache_v1

To push to the branch of the same name on the remote, use

    git push origin test
    
$ git push origin HEAD:use_local_cache_v1    
Total 0 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote:

the command that works for me is

$git push origin HEAD:use_local_cache

(hope you guys get out of this trouble as soon as possible)

1

I had multiple remotes. All but one pushed correctly, so I knew I didn't have a detached HEAD or commit issues.

Instead, I had accidentally given two remotes the same URL. The remote with the duplicated URL failed because I was pushing to a URL that had already been pushed to!

Using git remote -v showed my list of remotes and their URLs, where I realized the issue.

Resetting the failing remote to its correct URL fixed the issue:
git remote set-url <remote-name> <correct-url>

1

Another rather infuriating situation to be aware of, when you've checked everything else and it still persists, you may suffer from branch.autoSetupMerge=always. From the docs:

always — automatic setup is done when the starting point is either a local branch or remote-tracking branch;

With this setting, checking out a new local branch based on main will mark your upstream as your starting point (in my case, main). So every time I tried to push, I got Everything up to date.

The fix: git config --global branch.autoSetupMerge simple. According to the docs,

simple — automatic setup is done only when the starting point is a remote-tracking branch and the new branch has the same name as the remote branch. This option defaults to true.

With this and the rest of my config, and fixing the remote tracking on affected branches, I can resume pushing new local branches to my remote.

0

Another possibility is that you have commits that don't affect the directory you're pushing. So in my case I had a structure like

- .git
- README.md
- client/
 - package.json
 - example.js
- api/
 - requirements.txt
 - example.py

And I made a commit to master modifying README.md, then ran git subtree push --prefix client heroku-client master and got the message Everything up-to-date

0

We need to add the files and commit the already changed/added files execute below commands

git add . or git add nameoffile #it will add the existing files in the project

git commit -m "first commit" #commiting all the files in the project

git push origin master

0
0

I was working with Jupyter-Notebook when I encountered this deceptive error.

I wasn't able to resolve through the solutions provided above as I neither had a detached head nor did I have different names for my local and remote repo.

But what I did have was my file sizes were slightly greater than 1MB and the largest was almost ~2MB.

I reduced the file size of each of the file using How can I reduce the file size of my iPython notebook? technique.

It helped reduce my file size by clearing the outputs. I was able to push the code, henceforth as it brought my file size in KBs.

0

In my case, the cause of the trouble was that I was performing the git push/pull commands from a symlink folder in git bash! I was in a symlink folder inside a git project pointing to another git project, and the git pull/push commands were answering Everything up-to-date. When I moved (cd) to the actual folder's path (not through the symlink), git push/pull commands worked.

0

For another potentially rare case, but worth mention - when you have pre-commit hooks configured in your local environment (scanning code for errors, e.g. for Python safety, flake8, black, isort, bandit etc...), if one of them fails, your commit also failed. This should be obvious in the console, but since the errors from the hooks can flood the console, you may not be aware you commit won't work until the pre-commit hooks are configured to ignore the issues or the issues are addressed.

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