git config --global http.version HTTP/1.1
git config --global http.postBuffer 157286400
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Save daopk/0a95772d582cafb202142ff7871da2fc to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
On WSL, switch to SSH.
First create ssh keys: cd ~/.ssh ssh-keygen -o -t rsa -C "email@example.com" (email address doesn't actually matter, you can put whatevers)
Then print the relevant info: cat id_rsa.pub
Copy paste this into Github->Upper right menu->Settings SSH and GPG keys -> New SSH Key -> title = anything, keytype = authorization, paste the key into the box
You will then have to verify your idenitiy.
Then tell git to use SSH: git config --global url."git@github.com:".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
Everything should work now
@cwm9cwm9 didn't work, how to undo it?
worked for me with this commands and then changing directory to another.
git config --global http.version HTTP/1.1
git config --global http.postBuffer 157286400
You can try increasing post buffer size using
git config --global http.postBuffer 157286400
Thanks great solutionn
Thanks a lot for the solution ...it worked for me
git config --global http.postBuffer 524288000
Thank you so much! This was exactly what I needed. Well done.
On WSL, switch to SSH.
First create ssh keys:
cd ~/.ssh
ssh-keygen -o -t rsa -C "email@example.com"
(email address doesn't actually matter, you can put whatevers)
Then print the relevant info:
cat id_rsa.pub
Copy paste this into
Github->Upper right menu->Settings
SSH and GPG keys -> New SSH Key -> title = anything, keytype = authorization, paste the key into the box
You will then have to verify your idenitiy.
Then tell git to use SSH:
git config --global url."git@github.com:".insteadOf "https://github.com/"
Everything should work now