Bernt Hansen norang.ca> writes:
> to update the stick with those commits. At work you clone the stick
> (once) and origin at work is the usb stick. Then you git fetch or git
> pull at work to get commits from the usb stick as needed.
>
> HTH,
> -Bernt
Bernt, many thanks. I'll need to give so
Paul Mead writes:
> Bernt Hansen norang.ca> writes:
>
>> I suggest you put bare repositories on the USB stick.
> ...
>
>
>
>> $ git push # update any existing branches on the usb stick
>>
>> On your work machine just clone the USB repo
>>
>> $ git clone /path/to/usb/org-mode.git
>>
>> and
Bernt Hansen norang.ca> writes:
> I suggest you put bare repositories on the USB stick.
...
> $ git push # update any existing branches on the usb stick
>
> On your work machine just clone the USB repo
>
> $ git clone /path/to/usb/org-mode.git
>
> and you should be all set.
Bernt, your
Paul Mead writes:
> Ian Barton manor-farm.org> writes:
>
>>
>> Use git clone to create a repo on your usb stick.
>>
>> Pull changes from Carsten' git repo to your usb stick.
>>
>> Pull changes from your usb stick to both your work and home computers.
>> In other words your usb stick is your
Ian Barton manor-farm.org> writes:
>
> Use git clone to create a repo on your usb stick.
>
> Pull changes from Carsten' git repo to your usb stick.
>
> Pull changes from your usb stick to both your work and home computers.
> In other words your usb stick is your own master repo.
>
It works!
Ian Barton manor-farm.org> writes:
> Use git clone to create a repo on your usb stick.
>
> Pull changes from Carsten' git repo to your usb stick.
>
> Pull changes from your usb stick to both your work and home computers.
> In other words your usb stick is your own master repo.
Ian, I hadn't
Nick Dokos hp.com> writes:
> There is another possibility that you might want to investigate: if
> there is a SOCKS proxy server available at work, you can arrange to pass
> git traffic through that.
Nice idea, sadly even the identity of the proxy server is hidden, so I guess
that may not be
David Thole gmail.com> writes:
>
> Paul,
>
> The way I've accomplished the task you're talking about is instead of
> trying to push and pull *to* the work machine, I use another machine with
> less restrictive firewalls to push and pull from. This is how I do it...
>
> Work <-> Web Server <