This content originally appeared on flaviocopes.com and was authored by flaviocopes.com
I had this need. I wanted to create an exact copy of an existing website, and put it in a subdomain, as an archive.
Now this site is under version control, and I wanted to retain the Git history but also deploy it to a new GitHub repo, so I could deploy it separately, now both sites could go on their own destiny.
The website is a Hugo site, so I just copied the website folder into a separate folder, and that was it, locally.
So I went into the copied site folder in the terminal, and I ran
git remote -v
this listed the existing GitHub repository as the “origin” remote.
I ran:
git remote rm origin
This removed the origin remote, so running git remote -v
didn’t return anything any more.
Now since I use GitHub Desktop I just dragged the folder in that app, and I was able to create a new, different GitHub repository from there.
This content originally appeared on flaviocopes.com and was authored by flaviocopes.com
flaviocopes.com | Sciencx (2021-01-16T05:00:00+00:00) How to remove a Git remote. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2021/01/16/how-to-remove-a-git-remote/
Please log in to upload a file.
There are no updates yet.
Click the Upload button above to add an update.