GitHub - completely messed up the local files of gitHub in my computer





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I created a repo in the wrong folder. Meaning the User folder in OS where all the user folders are from pics, videos to documents. So I pushed that all to gitHub without knowing and now I can't create a repo anymore because the files that I work with are in the documents folder, which is inside the User Folder. And it will imply that I'm creating a repo within a repo. So when I go to terminal and I run git status, it shows me this:



# On branch master
# Your branch and 'origin/master' have diverged,
# and have 2 and 4 different commits each, respectively.
#
# Changes not staged for commit:
# (use "git add/rm <file>..." to update what will be committed)
# (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
#
# deleted: Documents/m3/m3---Best-Game-Ever
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/CCLab_2/cclab_sketch_1/src/Boxes.cpp
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/CCLab_2/cclab_sketch_1/src/Boxes.h
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ball_bouncing/Ball.cpp
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ball_bouncing/Ball.h
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/bouncing_ball_classes/src/ball.cpp
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/bouncing_ball_classes/src/ball.h
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround.cpp
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround.h
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround2.cpp
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround2.h
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround.cpp
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround.h
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround2.cpp
# deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround2.h
# deleted: README.md
#
# Untracked files:
# (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
#
# .Trash/
# .bash_history
# .dropbox/
# .openmdao/
# .ssh/
# Documents/2nd_semester/
# Documents/Arduino/
# Documents/OpenMDAO/
# Documents/Personal/
# Documents/T.A/
# Documents/gitHub/
# Documents/mySite/
# Documents/openFrameworks/
# Documents/resources/
# Documents/webcam-pulse-detector-master/
# Dropbox/
# Library/
# Music/
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")


Needless to say I'm never able to pull anything. It says that everything is up to date. At certain point I had a repo that uploaded those folders without the files to gitHub but I deleted that.



Any suggestions?










share|improve this question













migrated from stackoverflow.com May 24 '13 at 0:23


This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.

























    8















    I created a repo in the wrong folder. Meaning the User folder in OS where all the user folders are from pics, videos to documents. So I pushed that all to gitHub without knowing and now I can't create a repo anymore because the files that I work with are in the documents folder, which is inside the User Folder. And it will imply that I'm creating a repo within a repo. So when I go to terminal and I run git status, it shows me this:



    # On branch master
    # Your branch and 'origin/master' have diverged,
    # and have 2 and 4 different commits each, respectively.
    #
    # Changes not staged for commit:
    # (use "git add/rm <file>..." to update what will be committed)
    # (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
    #
    # deleted: Documents/m3/m3---Best-Game-Ever
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/CCLab_2/cclab_sketch_1/src/Boxes.cpp
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/CCLab_2/cclab_sketch_1/src/Boxes.h
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ball_bouncing/Ball.cpp
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ball_bouncing/Ball.h
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/bouncing_ball_classes/src/ball.cpp
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/bouncing_ball_classes/src/ball.h
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround.cpp
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround.h
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround2.cpp
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround2.h
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround.cpp
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround.h
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround2.cpp
    # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround2.h
    # deleted: README.md
    #
    # Untracked files:
    # (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
    #
    # .Trash/
    # .bash_history
    # .dropbox/
    # .openmdao/
    # .ssh/
    # Documents/2nd_semester/
    # Documents/Arduino/
    # Documents/OpenMDAO/
    # Documents/Personal/
    # Documents/T.A/
    # Documents/gitHub/
    # Documents/mySite/
    # Documents/openFrameworks/
    # Documents/resources/
    # Documents/webcam-pulse-detector-master/
    # Dropbox/
    # Library/
    # Music/
    no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")


    Needless to say I'm never able to pull anything. It says that everything is up to date. At certain point I had a repo that uploaded those folders without the files to gitHub but I deleted that.



    Any suggestions?










    share|improve this question













    migrated from stackoverflow.com May 24 '13 at 0:23


    This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.





















      8












      8








      8


      0






      I created a repo in the wrong folder. Meaning the User folder in OS where all the user folders are from pics, videos to documents. So I pushed that all to gitHub without knowing and now I can't create a repo anymore because the files that I work with are in the documents folder, which is inside the User Folder. And it will imply that I'm creating a repo within a repo. So when I go to terminal and I run git status, it shows me this:



      # On branch master
      # Your branch and 'origin/master' have diverged,
      # and have 2 and 4 different commits each, respectively.
      #
      # Changes not staged for commit:
      # (use "git add/rm <file>..." to update what will be committed)
      # (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
      #
      # deleted: Documents/m3/m3---Best-Game-Ever
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/CCLab_2/cclab_sketch_1/src/Boxes.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/CCLab_2/cclab_sketch_1/src/Boxes.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ball_bouncing/Ball.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ball_bouncing/Ball.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/bouncing_ball_classes/src/ball.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/bouncing_ball_classes/src/ball.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround2.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround2.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround2.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround2.h
      # deleted: README.md
      #
      # Untracked files:
      # (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
      #
      # .Trash/
      # .bash_history
      # .dropbox/
      # .openmdao/
      # .ssh/
      # Documents/2nd_semester/
      # Documents/Arduino/
      # Documents/OpenMDAO/
      # Documents/Personal/
      # Documents/T.A/
      # Documents/gitHub/
      # Documents/mySite/
      # Documents/openFrameworks/
      # Documents/resources/
      # Documents/webcam-pulse-detector-master/
      # Dropbox/
      # Library/
      # Music/
      no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")


      Needless to say I'm never able to pull anything. It says that everything is up to date. At certain point I had a repo that uploaded those folders without the files to gitHub but I deleted that.



      Any suggestions?










      share|improve this question














      I created a repo in the wrong folder. Meaning the User folder in OS where all the user folders are from pics, videos to documents. So I pushed that all to gitHub without knowing and now I can't create a repo anymore because the files that I work with are in the documents folder, which is inside the User Folder. And it will imply that I'm creating a repo within a repo. So when I go to terminal and I run git status, it shows me this:



      # On branch master
      # Your branch and 'origin/master' have diverged,
      # and have 2 and 4 different commits each, respectively.
      #
      # Changes not staged for commit:
      # (use "git add/rm <file>..." to update what will be committed)
      # (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
      #
      # deleted: Documents/m3/m3---Best-Game-Ever
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/CCLab_2/cclab_sketch_1/src/Boxes.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/CCLab_2/cclab_sketch_1/src/Boxes.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ball_bouncing/Ball.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ball_bouncing/Ball.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/bouncing_ball_classes/src/ball.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/bouncing_ball_classes/src/ball.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround2.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/ms_final/src/backGround2.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround.h
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround2.cpp
      # deleted: Documents/of_v0072_osx_release/apps/myApps/mySketch/src/backGround2.h
      # deleted: README.md
      #
      # Untracked files:
      # (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
      #
      # .Trash/
      # .bash_history
      # .dropbox/
      # .openmdao/
      # .ssh/
      # Documents/2nd_semester/
      # Documents/Arduino/
      # Documents/OpenMDAO/
      # Documents/Personal/
      # Documents/T.A/
      # Documents/gitHub/
      # Documents/mySite/
      # Documents/openFrameworks/
      # Documents/resources/
      # Documents/webcam-pulse-detector-master/
      # Dropbox/
      # Library/
      # Music/
      no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")


      Needless to say I'm never able to pull anything. It says that everything is up to date. At certain point I had a repo that uploaded those folders without the files to gitHub but I deleted that.



      Any suggestions?







      git github






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked May 23 '13 at 21:46







      Mauricio Sanchez











      migrated from stackoverflow.com May 24 '13 at 0:23


      This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.









      migrated from stackoverflow.com May 24 '13 at 0:23


      This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.
























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          19














          First things first:





          1. Delete the Github remote repository where you uploaded your user folder (you don't want this to be public)


          2. Delete the local repository in your user folder.



            # Be careful, dangerous command, it will erase your repository 
            # Make sure that you run this from the right folder
            rm -rf .git



          Now, if your local repositories bellow Documents start working again you are done.
          Else, delete and clone each one of them, one by one (of course that this will discard both uncommitted changes and commits that you have not previously pushed).



           cd ~/Documents/gitHub/
          # example, and again, be careful, it will erase your entire folder
          rm -rf repositoryA
          git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryA.git
          rm -rf repositoryB
          git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryB.git
          # And so on





          share|improve this answer


























          • You sir just saved the day!! So I'm guessing that whenever I want to delete something manual and get rid of it completely I have to re -rf .git

            – Mauricio Sanchez
            May 23 '13 at 22:30






          • 1





            Removing the .git folder will remove the repository :). If you want to get rid of a local repository, this is the way to go.

            – Anthony Accioly
            May 23 '13 at 22:35



















          0














          T delete the .git folder in mac os recursively, go to the root folder of your project which contains .git folder and use:



          find . | grep .git | xargs rm -rf


          to remove its contents and itself.






          share|improve this answer
























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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            19














            First things first:





            1. Delete the Github remote repository where you uploaded your user folder (you don't want this to be public)


            2. Delete the local repository in your user folder.



              # Be careful, dangerous command, it will erase your repository 
              # Make sure that you run this from the right folder
              rm -rf .git



            Now, if your local repositories bellow Documents start working again you are done.
            Else, delete and clone each one of them, one by one (of course that this will discard both uncommitted changes and commits that you have not previously pushed).



             cd ~/Documents/gitHub/
            # example, and again, be careful, it will erase your entire folder
            rm -rf repositoryA
            git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryA.git
            rm -rf repositoryB
            git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryB.git
            # And so on





            share|improve this answer


























            • You sir just saved the day!! So I'm guessing that whenever I want to delete something manual and get rid of it completely I have to re -rf .git

              – Mauricio Sanchez
              May 23 '13 at 22:30






            • 1





              Removing the .git folder will remove the repository :). If you want to get rid of a local repository, this is the way to go.

              – Anthony Accioly
              May 23 '13 at 22:35
















            19














            First things first:





            1. Delete the Github remote repository where you uploaded your user folder (you don't want this to be public)


            2. Delete the local repository in your user folder.



              # Be careful, dangerous command, it will erase your repository 
              # Make sure that you run this from the right folder
              rm -rf .git



            Now, if your local repositories bellow Documents start working again you are done.
            Else, delete and clone each one of them, one by one (of course that this will discard both uncommitted changes and commits that you have not previously pushed).



             cd ~/Documents/gitHub/
            # example, and again, be careful, it will erase your entire folder
            rm -rf repositoryA
            git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryA.git
            rm -rf repositoryB
            git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryB.git
            # And so on





            share|improve this answer


























            • You sir just saved the day!! So I'm guessing that whenever I want to delete something manual and get rid of it completely I have to re -rf .git

              – Mauricio Sanchez
              May 23 '13 at 22:30






            • 1





              Removing the .git folder will remove the repository :). If you want to get rid of a local repository, this is the way to go.

              – Anthony Accioly
              May 23 '13 at 22:35














            19












            19








            19







            First things first:





            1. Delete the Github remote repository where you uploaded your user folder (you don't want this to be public)


            2. Delete the local repository in your user folder.



              # Be careful, dangerous command, it will erase your repository 
              # Make sure that you run this from the right folder
              rm -rf .git



            Now, if your local repositories bellow Documents start working again you are done.
            Else, delete and clone each one of them, one by one (of course that this will discard both uncommitted changes and commits that you have not previously pushed).



             cd ~/Documents/gitHub/
            # example, and again, be careful, it will erase your entire folder
            rm -rf repositoryA
            git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryA.git
            rm -rf repositoryB
            git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryB.git
            # And so on





            share|improve this answer















            First things first:





            1. Delete the Github remote repository where you uploaded your user folder (you don't want this to be public)


            2. Delete the local repository in your user folder.



              # Be careful, dangerous command, it will erase your repository 
              # Make sure that you run this from the right folder
              rm -rf .git



            Now, if your local repositories bellow Documents start working again you are done.
            Else, delete and clone each one of them, one by one (of course that this will discard both uncommitted changes and commits that you have not previously pushed).



             cd ~/Documents/gitHub/
            # example, and again, be careful, it will erase your entire folder
            rm -rf repositoryA
            git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryA.git
            rm -rf repositoryB
            git clone git://github.com/myUser/repositoryB.git
            # And so on






            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited May 23 '17 at 12:41









            Community

            1




            1










            answered May 23 '13 at 22:09









            Anthony AcciolyAnthony Accioly

            30625




            30625













            • You sir just saved the day!! So I'm guessing that whenever I want to delete something manual and get rid of it completely I have to re -rf .git

              – Mauricio Sanchez
              May 23 '13 at 22:30






            • 1





              Removing the .git folder will remove the repository :). If you want to get rid of a local repository, this is the way to go.

              – Anthony Accioly
              May 23 '13 at 22:35



















            • You sir just saved the day!! So I'm guessing that whenever I want to delete something manual and get rid of it completely I have to re -rf .git

              – Mauricio Sanchez
              May 23 '13 at 22:30






            • 1





              Removing the .git folder will remove the repository :). If you want to get rid of a local repository, this is the way to go.

              – Anthony Accioly
              May 23 '13 at 22:35

















            You sir just saved the day!! So I'm guessing that whenever I want to delete something manual and get rid of it completely I have to re -rf .git

            – Mauricio Sanchez
            May 23 '13 at 22:30





            You sir just saved the day!! So I'm guessing that whenever I want to delete something manual and get rid of it completely I have to re -rf .git

            – Mauricio Sanchez
            May 23 '13 at 22:30




            1




            1





            Removing the .git folder will remove the repository :). If you want to get rid of a local repository, this is the way to go.

            – Anthony Accioly
            May 23 '13 at 22:35





            Removing the .git folder will remove the repository :). If you want to get rid of a local repository, this is the way to go.

            – Anthony Accioly
            May 23 '13 at 22:35













            0














            T delete the .git folder in mac os recursively, go to the root folder of your project which contains .git folder and use:



            find . | grep .git | xargs rm -rf


            to remove its contents and itself.






            share|improve this answer




























              0














              T delete the .git folder in mac os recursively, go to the root folder of your project which contains .git folder and use:



              find . | grep .git | xargs rm -rf


              to remove its contents and itself.






              share|improve this answer


























                0












                0








                0







                T delete the .git folder in mac os recursively, go to the root folder of your project which contains .git folder and use:



                find . | grep .git | xargs rm -rf


                to remove its contents and itself.






                share|improve this answer













                T delete the .git folder in mac os recursively, go to the root folder of your project which contains .git folder and use:



                find . | grep .git | xargs rm -rf


                to remove its contents and itself.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Mar 31 at 16:41









                FarshidFarshid

                12519




                12519






























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