thank you!
On Sun, Oct 18, 2015 at 10:07 PM, Charles Manning
wrote:
> It all comes down to what protocol you're using to push.
>
> If you have them attached via nfs, then you can just push with no problems.
>
> Since you talk about ssh-agent I expect you're using the git protocol with
> ssh.
>
>
It all comes down to what protocol you're using to push.
If you have them attached via nfs, then you can just push with no problems.
Since you talk about ssh-agent I expect you're using the git protocol with
ssh.
What you need to do is set up the remote device to accept passwordless ssh
logins,
I'm using a fedora and ubuntu. Ubuntu as the server.
On Sun, Oct 18, 2015 at 6:38 PM, Konstantin Khomoutov <
flatw...@users.sourceforge.net> wrote:
> On Sat, 17 Oct 2015 02:45:28 -0700 (PDT)
> liu wen wrote:
>
> > I have two laptop A and B, I want to create a shared repository on A,
> > and I ca
On Sat, 17 Oct 2015 02:45:28 -0700 (PDT)
liu wen wrote:
> I have two laptop A and B, I want to create a shared repository on A,
> and I can clone/pull/push the shared repo on B.
> is it possible? if so, what are the clone command like?
>
> and do I need to enter password again and again? can I a
On 17/10/2015 10:45, liu wen wrote:
> I have two laptop A and B, I want to create a shared repository on A,
> and I can clone/pull/push the shared repo on B.
> is it possible? if so, what are the clone command like?
>
> and do I need to enter password again and again? can I avoid entering
> pass
I have two laptop A and B, I want to create a shared repository on A, and I
can clone/pull/push the shared repo on B.
is it possible? if so, what are the clone command like?
and do I need to enter password again and again? can I avoid entering
password( like ssh-agent)?
thanks
--
You received