Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@0xjac
Last active October 2, 2024 16:10
Show Gist options
  • Save 0xjac/85097472043b697ab57ba1b1c7530274 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save 0xjac/85097472043b697ab57ba1b1c7530274 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Create a private fork of a public repository

The repository for the assignment is public and Github does not allow the creation of private forks for public repositories.

The correct way of creating a private frok by duplicating the repo is documented here.

For this assignment the commands are:

  1. Create a bare clone of the repository. (This is temporary and will be removed so just do it wherever.)

    git clone --bare git@github.com:usi-systems/easytrace.git
  2. Create a new private repository on Github and name it easytrace.

    If you are unable to create a private repo, you can request unlimited private repos as a studant by getting the student pack from Github.

  3. Mirror-push your bare clone to your new easytrace repository.

    Replace <your_username> with your actual Github username in the url below.

    cd easytrace.git
    git push --mirror git@github.com:<your_username>/easytrace.git
  4. Remove the temporary local repository you created in step 1.

    cd ..
    rm -rf easytrace.git
  5. You can now clone your easytrace repository on your machine (in my case in the code folder).

    cd ~/code
    git clone git@github.com:<your_username>/easytrace.git
  6. If you want, add the original repo as remote to fetch (potential) future changes. Make sure you also disable push on the remote (as you are not allowed to push to it anyway).

    git remote add upstream git@github.com:usi-systems/easytrace.git
    git remote set-url --push upstream DISABLE

    You can list all your remotes with git remote -v. You should see:

    origin	git@github.com:<your_username>/easytrace.git (fetch)
    origin	git@github.com:<your_username>/easytrace.git (push)
    upstream	git@github.com:usi-systems/easytrace.git (fetch)
    upstream	DISABLE (push)
    

    When you push, do so on origin with git push origin.

    When you want to pull changes from upstream you can just fetch the remote and rebase on top of your work.

      git fetch upstream
      git rebase upstream/master

    And solve the conflicts if any

  7. Make your easytrace repo available in your Vagrant VM by adding the following to your Vagrantfile

    Replace "~/code/easytrace" with your local path to the easytrace repo.

    config.vm.synced_folder "~/code/easytrace", "/easytrace"
    
  8. Reload your VM to enable the synced folder (in the folder containing your Vagrant file).

    vagrant reload 
  9. The easytrace repo is available at /easytrace once you ssh into the machine.

@Rain-eslite
Copy link

Thank you!!

@liushuya7
Copy link

Use this one: https://github.com/new/import

Awesome! Thanks!

@laurentshrink
Copy link

I’m having trouble with creating a private fork of a public repo on GitHub. I followed the steps, but I’m unsure about setting up the remote configurations. Can someone clarify the correct process for this?

@d270rg
Copy link

d270rg commented Sep 22, 2024

Thanks

@paullok999
Copy link

Thanks for the tutorial!

@GoudronViande24
Copy link

GoudronViande24 commented Oct 2, 2024

frok

fork*

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment