Hello Helio,
Thanks for your friendly response!
If I use -sudo- in front of any of these commands, it's because I get stuff
like this in response:
clive@clivubu:~/gretl-git$ git commit
fatal: could not open '.git/COMMIT_EDITMSG': Permission denied
clive@clivubu:~/gretl-git$ git commit
I'm going to bed, so I'll pick this up again tomorrow evening!
Thanks,
C
On 27 October 2015 at 00:08, Hélio Guilherme <helioxentric(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
(we should move this discussion to the gretl-devel mailing list)
clive@clivubu:~/gretl-git$ sudo git push
> fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
>
> Please make sure you have the correct access rights
> and the repository exists.
>
>
You really like to sudo git ;)
(no need for sudoing git!)
If I got right you wanted to push changes (none) to the "simple"
repository, so you set it as default.
But probably your repository is "origin". You may check what repositories
you have with:
git remote -v
To know what branches you do:
git branch -a
When I want to push my changes I do:
# before I selected the branch I am working at, for example "master", with
"git checkout master"
git add -i
# interactively select what files to push
git commit
# actually put them on the queue to push
git push origin master
# select the repository and branch and upload changes
> That's not happened before and this is a clean gretl-git folder from
> Sunday night. Thoughts?
>
> The files you have on your disk are new files (and they ARE NOT to be
pushed). It happens the same in my system.
This git stuff is a new thing in this project and we must set the
.gitignore file with the extensions and directories to be ignored (either
on our own systems and on github/sourceforge).
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--
Clive Nicholas
"My colleagues in the social sciences talk a great deal about methodology.
I prefer to call it style." -- Freeman J. Dyson