- Open the Terminal Application
- Type in
sudo -i
and type in your Mac Administrator account password.sudo
gives you root level or administrator level privileges.
dsconfigad -show
# The commands below are a guide to remove a large file that has been | |
# accidentally committed to a Git repository's history. If the file is | |
# larger than 100 MB, GitHub will prevent you from pushing your latest | |
# commits. The annotated steps below should help you remove the large | |
# file from your commit history, even if you've made new commit since. | |
# Some Git users advise against rebasing. You can safely use it here | |
# because you haven't published your changes yet. | |
# So, you first need to rebase your current branch onto the point that |
Go to Bitbucket and create a new repository (its better to have an empty repo) | |
git clone git@bitbucket.org:abc/myforkedrepo.git | |
cd myforkedrepo | |
Now add Github repo as a new remote in Bitbucket called "sync" | |
git remote add sync git@github.com:def/originalrepo.git | |
Verify what are the remotes currently being setup for "myforkedrepo". This following command should show "fetch" and "push" for two remotes i.e. "origin" and "sync" | |
git remote -v |
sudo -i
and type in your Mac Administrator account password. sudo
gives you root level or administrator level privileges.dsconfigad -show