+[2016-06-02T22:23:56Z]Bateramosremove the message +[2016-06-02T22:24:15Z]jhassso you could have just said "yes" to my question ;) +[2016-06-02T22:24:39Z]jhassrun git rebase upstream/master and force push to your branch +[2016-06-02T22:25:50Z]Bateramosthx a lot, I will try this right away +[2016-06-02T22:44:39Z]Bateramosjhass, thanks a lot for the help! This solve my problem. I was really struggling with this for hours.
message no. 137929
Posted by jhass in #github at 2016-06-02T22:24:39Z
run git rebase upstream/master and force push to your branch
+[2016-06-03T00:04:07Z]JnNyHi, so I'm trying to do a git push, but didn't realize how big one of the files were, so the push failed. If I do git rm, I believe that will delete the files from my directory, which I don't want as I'm only pushing a few files. How can I remove this file from the list of files I did 'git add' for, without deleting the actual files? +[2016-06-03T00:05:31Z]insidious15hey +[2016-06-03T01:02:01Z]JnNyNevermind. I just started from scratch. I feel like there should be a way to do that though. +[2016-06-03T01:05:25Z]Sparkhi, if I made a github repo by cloning a bitbucket mercurial repo, is it possible to then keep it synced? +[2016-06-03T01:05:56Z]Disconsentednot automaticlly