To add a new remote, use the git remote add
command on the terminal, in the
directory your repository is stored at.
The git remote add
command takes two arguments:
- A remote name, for example,
origin
- A remote URL, for example,
https://[hostname]/user/repo.git
For example:
git remote add origin https://hostname/user/repo.git # Set a new remote git remote -v # Verify new remote # origin https://hostname/user/repo.git (fetch) # origin https://hostname/user/repo.git (push)
Not sure which URL to use? Check out "Which remote URL should I use?."
Troubleshooting
You may encounter these errors when trying to add a remote.
name
already exists
Remote This error means you've tried to add a remote with a name that already exists in your local repository:
git remote add origin https://hostname/octocat/Spoon-Knife # fatal: remote origin already exists.
To fix this, you can
- Use a different name for the new remote
- Rename the existing remote
- Delete the existing remote
Further reading
- "Working with Remotes" from the Pro Git book