If you've got local source code you want to add to a new remote new git repository without 'cloning' the remote first, do the following (I often do this - you create your remote empty repository in bitbucket/github, then push up your source)
Create the remote repository, and get the URL such as [email protected]:/youruser/somename.git
or https://github.com/youruser/somename.git
If your local GIT repo is already set up, skips steps 2 and 3
Locally, at the root directory of your source, git init
2a. If you initialize the repo with a .gitignore and a README.md you should do a git pull {url from step 1}
to ensure you don't commit files to source that you want to ignore ;)
Locally, add and commit what you want in your initial repo (for everything, git add .
then git commit -m 'initial commit comment'
)
to attach your remote repo with the name 'origin' (like cloning would do)
git remote add origin [URL From Step 1]
- Execute
git pull origin master
to pull the remote branch so that they are in sync.
- to push up your master branch (change master to something else for a different branch):
git push origin master
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