+ [2016-02-29T23:28:42Z] sagerdearia When I fork a github repo, and clone locally on my computer, if the initial github repo is updated, how can I `git pull` from my local clone of my forked repo?
+ [2016-02-29T23:34:57Z] gitinfo [!pull_upstream] To incorporate changes from an "upstream" or forked-from repository: git remote add upstream $URL; git fetch upstream; git merge upstream/$BRANCH. https://help.github.com/articles/syncing-a-fork/
+ [2016-02-29T23:36:43Z] duckie Hi guys
+ [2016-02-29T23:45:23Z] duckie hi guys

message no. 125538

Posted by tilpner in #github at 2016-02-29T23:17:31Z

Yes, I know it's possible. The sources should be public. I just want to make it a little more inconvenient to find them.
+ [2016-03-01T01:43:19Z] jberkus what do I need to enable to get notifications every time someone opens a PR or updates a PR against a certain project?
+ [2016-03-01T03:46:51Z] tp43_ Hi, I was wondering if it was necessary to add my ssh key to my ssh-agent. I'm not sure what that is, and maybe my system automatically does it
+ [2016-03-01T03:52:38Z] tp43_ looks like you do no have to spawn ssh-agent. I just did it and it didn't find any keys or add any
+ [2016-03-01T03:53:28Z] tp43_ I mean it worked without spawning ssh-agent. I just did ssh-add and it worked
+ [2016-03-01T04:06:43Z] tp43_ I think I Have my ssh keys stuff setup correctly now I would like to try and do a git init, git stage, git commit, git merge a hello world. Basically All I a looking for is to upload my web design to my account for safe storage, no tracking and stuff