Pushing to a different git repo
You have to add an other remote
. Usually, you have an origin
remotes, which points to the github (maybe bitbucket) repository you cloned it from. Here's a few example of what it is:
https://github.com/some-user/some-repo
(the.git
is optional)[email protected]:some-user/some-repo
(this is ssh, it allows you to push/pull without having to type your ids every single time)C:/some/folder/on/your/computer
Yes! You can push to an other directory on your own computer.
So, when you
$ git push origin master
origin
is replaced with it's value: the url
So, it's basically just a shortcut. You could type the url yourself each time, it'd do the same!
Note: you can list all your remote
s by doing git remote -v
.
For your problem
How can I then get different-repo to push remotely to different-repo because currently it is pushing to react.
I'm guessing you want to create a second repository, right? Well, you can create an other remote
(or replace the current origin
) with the url to this repo!
Add an other remote
— recommended
git remote add <remote-name> <url>
So, for example:
$ git remote add different-repo https://github.com/your-username/your-repo
And then, just
$ git push different-repo master
Change the origin
remote
git remote set-url <remote-name> <url>
So
git remote set-url origin https://github.com/your-username/your-repo
Here different-repo is the first repo from which you created/cloned the child repo react
So by default child repo react will have its default remote as different-repo where you can push/pull changes.
Here child repo will maintain all the commit history of parent repo within its .git folder
If you want to push the changes to different repo from this react repo then add another remote(you can add as many as remotes here and also can delete the old remotes)
Add new Remote to react
git remote add <remote-name> <url>
If you want to remove the old remote
git remote remove <remote_name>