Tom Gundersen, 2011-06-24 12:24:
On Fri, Jun 24, 2011 at 12:05 PM, Kurt J. Bosch
<[email protected]>  wrote:
Do you have a public git repo I could pull from to make my life simpler?

Sorry, no. Guess I would need to learn more about git first.

I changed the subject as this might be relevant to more people:

If you want me to apply a non-trivial number of patches to
initscripts, it would be very helpful if you could put them in a
public repo (if you can't that's ok, it just means it might take a bit
longer for me to apply them, and there is a bigger risk they might be
forgotten).

One way to do this is using github. Super quick guide:

1) signup at http://github.com/ (the free account is probably what you want)

2) upload your ssh pulickey to github:
“Account Settings”>  Click “SSH Public Keys”>  Click “Add another public key”

3) create repository called 'initscripts' ("Dashboard">  "New Repository")

4) add the newly created repository on your machine:
$ git remote add<username>  [email protected]:<username>/initscripts.git

5) push your local branch (let's say you called it 'work') to the
public repository
$ git push<username>  work
(if you have just been committing to the master branch, that's fine,
just push that instead:
$ git push<username>  master

-t
Done. But with two slight modifications:
* git remote add myorigin [email protected]:kujub/initscripts.git
  because:
  git remote add origin [email protected]:kujub/initscripts.git
  fatal: remote origin already exists.
* git push myorigin master
  (as said on git-hub after creating repo)
--
Kurt

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