This was working great for me on several machines, but it did not work on
one machine[1][2].

Adding something like this to git-review.conf fixes the problem:

[updates]
check=off

Željko
--
1: https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55732
2: https://bugs.launchpad.net/git-review/+bug/1243044


On Sat, Jun 1, 2013 at 12:14 AM, Ori Livneh <o...@wikimedia.org> wrote:

> Hey,
>
> The new version of git-review released today (1.22) includes a patch I
> wrote that makes it possible to work against a single 'origin' remote. This
> amounts to a workaround for git-review's tendency to frighten you into
> thinking you're about to submit more patches than the ones you are working
> on. It makes git-review more pleasant to work with, in my opinion.
>
> To enable this behavior, you first need to upgrade to the latest version of
> git-review, by running "pip install -U git-review". Then you need to create
> a configuration file: either /etc/git-review/git-review.conf (system-wide)
> or ~/.config/git-review/git-review.conf (user-specific).
>
> The file should contain these two lines:
>
> [gerrit]
> defaultremote = origin
>
> Once you've made the change, any new Gerrit repos you clone using an
> authenticated URI will just work.
>
> You'll need to perform an additional step to migrate existing repositories.
> In each repository, run the following commands:
>
>   git remote set-url origin $(git config --get remote.gerrit.url)
>   git remote rm gerrit
>   git review -s
>
> Hope you find this useful.
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