Cloning a repo from someone else's Github and pushing it to a repo on my Github

As Deefour says, your situation isn't much unlike the one in Change the URI (URL) for a remote Git repository. When you clone a repository, it is added as a remote of yours, under the name origin. What you need to do now (as you're not using the old source anymore) is change origin's URL:

$ git remote set-url origin http://github.com/YOU/YOUR_REPO

If the original repository would update often and you want to get those updates from time to time, then instead of editing origin it would be best to add a new remote:

$ git remote add personal http://github.com/YOU/YOUR_REPO

Or maybe even call the old one upstream:

$ git remote rename origin upstream
$ git remote add origin http://github.com/YOU/YOUR_REPO

Then, whenever you want to get changes from upstream, you can do:

$ git fetch upstream

As this the source is a sample repository (seems to be kind of a template to start off), I don't think there's a need to keep it nor fork it at all - I'll go with the first alternative here.


GitHub: git clone someone else's repository & git push to your own repository

I'm going to refer to someone else's repository as the other repository.


  1. Create a new repository at github.com. (this is your repository)

    • Give it the same name as the other repository.
    • Don't initialize it with a README, .gitignore, or license.
  2. Clone the other repository to your local machine. (if you haven't done so already)

    • git clone https://github.com/other-account/other-repository.git
  3. Rename the local repository's current 'origin' to 'upstream'.

    • git remote rename origin upstream
  4. Give the local repository an 'origin' that points to your repository.

    • git remote add origin https://github.com/your-account/your-repository.git
  5. Push the local repository to your repository on github.

    • git push origin master

Now 'origin' points to your repository & 'upstream' points to the other repository.

  • Create a new branch for your changes with git checkout -b my-feature-branch.
  • You can git commit as usual to your repository.
  • Use git pull upstream master to pull changes from the other repository to your master branch.

Delete git and re-init.

Your purpose is probably to put this repo on yours and make it yours.

The idea is to delete the .git/ and re-initialize.

  1. go to your cloned repo folder rm -rf .git
  2. re-initialize it and then add your remote and do your first push.
    git init
    git add .
    git commit -m "your commit message"
    git remote add origin 
    git push origin master
    

Tags:

Git

Github