About adding existing source code to GitHub Enterprise Server
If you have existing source code or repositories stored locally on your computer or private network you can add them to GitHub Enterprise Server by typing commands in a terminal. You can do this by typing Git commands directly, or by using GitHub CLI.
GitHub CLI is an open source tool for using GitHub from your computer's command line. GitHub CLI can simplify the process of adding an existing project to GitHub Enterprise Server using the command line. To learn more about GitHub CLI, see "About GitHub CLI."
Tip: If you're most comfortable with a point-and-click user interface, try adding your project with GitHub Desktop. For more information, see "Adding a repository from your local computer to GitHub Desktop" in the GitHub Desktop Help.
Warning: Never git add
, commit
, or push
sensitive information to a remote repository. Sensitive information can include, but is not limited to:
- Passwords
- SSH keys
- AWS access keys
- API keys
- Credit card numbers
- PIN numbers
For more information, see "Removing sensitive data from a repository."
Adding a local repository to GitHub Enterprise Server with GitHub CLI
-
In the command line, navigate to the root directory of your project.
-
Initialize the local directory as a Git repository.
git init -b main
-
Stage and commit all the files in your project
git add . && git commit -m "initial commit"
-
To create a repository for your project on GitHub, use the
gh repo create
subcommand. When prompted, select Push an existing local repository to GitHub and enter the desired name for your repository. If you want your project to belong to an organization instead of your user account, specify the organization name and project name withorganization-name/project-name
. -
Follow the interactive prompts. To add the remote and push the repository, confirm yes when asked to add the remote and push the commits to the current branch.
-
Alternatively, to skip all the prompts, supply the path to the repository with the
--source
flag and pass a visibility flag (--public
,--private
, or--internal
). For example,gh repo create --source=. --public
. Specify a remote with the--remote
flag. To push your commits, pass the--push
flag. For more information about possible arguments, see the GitHub CLI manual.
Adding a local repository to GitHub Enterprise Server using Git
- Create a new repository on your GitHub Enterprise Server instance. To avoid errors, do not initialize the new repository with README, license, or
gitignore
files. You can add these files after your project has been pushed to GitHub Enterprise Server. - Open TerminalTerminalGit Bash.
- Change the current working directory to your local project.
- Initialize the local directory as a Git repository.
$ git init -b main
- Add the files in your new local repository. This stages them for the first commit.
$ git add . # Adds the files in the local repository and stages them for commit. To unstage a file, use 'git reset HEAD YOUR-FILE'.
- Commit the files that you've staged in your local repository.
$ git commit -m "First commit" # Commits the tracked changes and prepares them to be pushed to a remote repository. To remove this commit and modify the file, use 'git reset --soft HEAD~1' and commit and add the file again.
- At the top of your repository on your GitHub Enterprise Server instance's Quick Setup page, click to copy the remote repository URL.
- In Terminal, add the URL for the remote repository where your local repository will be pushed.
$ git remote add origin <REMOTE_URL> # Sets the new remote $ git remote -v # Verifies the new remote URL
- Push the changes in your local repository to your GitHub Enterprise Server instance.
$ git push -u origin main # Pushes the changes in your local repository up to the remote repository you specified as the origin
- Create a new repository on your GitHub Enterprise Server instance. To avoid errors, do not initialize the new repository with README, license, or
gitignore
files. You can add these files after your project has been pushed to GitHub Enterprise Server. - Open TerminalTerminalGit Bash.
- Change the current working directory to your local project.
- Initialize the local directory as a Git repository.
$ git init -b main
- Add the files in your new local repository. This stages them for the first commit.
$ git add . # Adds the files in the local repository and stages them for commit. To unstage a file, use 'git reset HEAD YOUR-FILE'.
- Commit the files that you've staged in your local repository.
$ git commit -m "First commit" # Commits the tracked changes and prepares them to be pushed to a remote repository. To remove this commit and modify the file, use 'git reset --soft HEAD~1' and commit and add the file again.
- At the top of your repository on your GitHub Enterprise Server instance's Quick Setup page, click to copy the remote repository URL.
- In the Command prompt, add the URL for the remote repository where your local repository will be pushed.
$ git remote add origin <REMOTE_URL> # Sets the new remote $ git remote -v # Verifies the new remote URL
- Push the changes in your local repository to your GitHub Enterprise Server instance.
$ git push origin main # Pushes the changes in your local repository up to the remote repository you specified as the origin
- Create a new repository on your GitHub Enterprise Server instance. To avoid errors, do not initialize the new repository with README, license, or
gitignore
files. You can add these files after your project has been pushed to GitHub Enterprise Server. - Open TerminalTerminalGit Bash.
- Change the current working directory to your local project.
- Initialize the local directory as a Git repository.
$ git init -b main
- Add the files in your new local repository. This stages them for the first commit.
$ git add . # Adds the files in the local repository and stages them for commit. To unstage a file, use 'git reset HEAD YOUR-FILE'.
- Commit the files that you've staged in your local repository.
$ git commit -m "First commit" # Commits the tracked changes and prepares them to be pushed to a remote repository. To remove this commit and modify the file, use 'git reset --soft HEAD~1' and commit and add the file again.
- At the top of your repository on your GitHub Enterprise Server instance's Quick Setup page, click to copy the remote repository URL.
- In Terminal, add the URL for the remote repository where your local repository will be pushed.
$ git remote add origin <REMOTE_URL> # Sets the new remote $ git remote -v # Verifies the new remote URL
- Push the changes in your local repository to your GitHub Enterprise Server instance.
$ git push origin main # Pushes the changes in your local repository up to the remote repository you specified as the origin