El 24/11/15 a las 13:33, Sven Schreiber escribió:
Am 24.11.2015 um 13:28 schrieb Hélio Guilherme:
>
>
> On Tue, Nov 24, 2015 at 12:02 PM, Sven Schreiber <svetosch(a)gmx.net
> <mailto:svetosch@gmx.net>> wrote:
>
> Sure? The commit stage itself seems to have worked.
>
>
> No, it didn't. Looking at the po changes in
>
http://sourceforge.net/p/gretl/git/ci/master/tree/
> I see my name and last commit 2 days ago.
>
When I say the "commit stage" I mean the "git commit" which according
to Allin's descriptions just commits to my local repo. The meaning of
"commit" thus would be different than in the old days (and the old
meaning would now be "git push"). I am aware that I have not managed
to upload anything on the server repo.
But perhaps I have some deeper misunderstanding than I thought...
Read
http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/~cottrell/gretl-git-basics.html, again.
Depending on how you clone the gretl tree, the access is read-only or
read-write.
In Linux, if you execute
git clone ssh://USERNAME@git.code.sf.net/p/gretl/git gretl-git
(you will need to give your SF password) the gretl-git directory will be
defined as rw, including a directory '.git' with a 'config' file which
contains the line
url = ssh://USERNAME@git.code.sf.net/p/gretl/git
and then you can use a 'git push' command in this 'gretl-git' directory.
--
Ignacio Díaz-Emparanza
Departamento de Economía Aplicada III (Econometría y Estadística)
Universidad del País Vasco - Euskalherriko Unibertsitatea, UPV/EHU
Tfno: (+34) 94 601 3732
http://www.ehu.eus/ea3