Hello! I have a bare repository hosting on a local server and a few local clients with working copies of that repository. I was going to a business trip so I had to clone the repository on a new laptop before leaving. But I was in a great rush and did not have enough time to connect the new laptop to the local network (it's quite time-consuming). So, I just copied a working directory (from one of computers) to a flash drive and then to the laptop.
>From what can I see on the new laptop: - the git history is present - git status shows all files marked as modified. (this is not so, all the changes had been committed before I made a copy of a working directory) I need to implement some commits and then merge with the main repository when I'm back. Please advise on how to organise my workflow. My thoughts are the following: Variant 1: - Remove .git directory - Create a new local repository - Perform and commit the changes - When I'm back, link the bare repository and merge the repositories. Variant 2: - Fix the paths on the current repository (as I've mentioned before, all the files are marked as new now) - Perform and commit the changes - When I'm back, link the bare repository and merge the commits. Please advise the best variant on how to implement the desired. Also please advise the commands I should use to merge the repos (Variant 1) or commands to fix the paths and merge commits (Variant 2) Thanks in advance. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Git for human beings" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to git-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.