![]() ![]() Create a _netrc file in %HOME%_netrc with this text all on one line: machine login username password mypassword.Set up a %HOME% environment pointing to C:\Users\yourloginname\.Instead of setting up a ~/.netrc file you need to: You can use git-gui as part of the msysgit package. You can simplify this step by cloning a URL like: $ git clone it's possible to list your password in the URL, we discourage this practice as it leaves your password in plain text in the shell history. You can list your user name in the Git repository URL, but this requires that you provide your password for every fetch and push. If you do not see an authentication prompt, you need to set up a ~/.netrc file that contains your user credentials: $ (umask 0277 cat > ~/.netrc <<EOF) On Mac OS X, you need to have git-credential-osxkeychain installed, and to set the following configuration: $ git config -global credential.helper osxkeychain More recent versions of Git prompt for a user name and password, and in some cases will cache the credentials in your operating system's default credential store. To push to a repository you need to authenticate. $ git config user.email can also add your email address to your GitHub account so that the Apache mirrors on GitHub link to your Gravatar and user account. $ git config -global user.email you're a long-time GitHub user you can set these configuration variables on a per-repository basis: $ git config user.name "My Name Here" Set up your name and email that Git will use when you make commits: $ git config -global user.name "My Name Here" The repository URLs are all of the form: Open a Jira ticket for Infra to request a private repository. See the Project Code Repository Policy for further details. The private repository is not for uses such as project code development not related to a security issue. ![]() writing a draft of the project Board report when there is a section that will appear in a tag.Projects can set up as many public repositories as their development work requires, using SelfServe.Įach project can also have a private repository space for working on sensitive issues such as: This document is chiefly about the read/write repositories. This document is a primer on using Git for an Apache Software Foundation project.
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