+[2015-03-27T23:57:17Z]VxJasonxVwave: you're not using an SSH remote +[2015-03-27T23:57:32Z]VxJasonxVgit remote -v will say https://github.com/(yourusername)/(yourrepo) +[2015-03-27T23:57:55Z]VxJasonxVyou can do: git remote set-url origin git@github.com:yourusername/yourrepo.git if you want to use SSH access +[2015-03-27T23:58:09Z]VxJasonxVotherwise, you need to fill in your username and password for HTTP access +[2015-03-27T23:59:02Z]waveVxJasonxV: thanks!
message no. 86181
Posted by haasn in #github at 2015-03-27T02:53:31Z
What's the proper way to do this?
+[2015-03-28T02:15:49Z]Terabytehey, if two people pull the latest code from a repository. both make the same 1 line change on 2 different machines, and both commit at the same time. what does each person see? +[2015-03-28T02:30:20Z]thibaultchaNothing special until one pushes, and the other tries to merge the changes from the first one. There will be a conflict +[2015-03-28T02:30:44Z]gh-status[Yellow] The ongoing DDoS attack has shifted to include Pages and assets. We are updating our defenses to match. +[2015-03-28T02:49:20Z]bgmccollumif im hitting a handful of github urls in quick succession (via an ansible playbook), would that appear as DDoS attempts, and cause blocking / tarpitting? +[2015-03-28T04:24:04Z]DannyFritzthis ddos is nuts