You can run Git terminal by Git Bash which install with most Git GUI (in Windows it commonly at "C:\Program Files\Git) Now, I recommend to clone repo by terminal commands: It is related to the current repository size of this project (include different branches). Now if you try to clone by any GUI you can see some freezing without any results in your local directory.
Near two month early, when you cloned project by any git GUI it finished till 1-3 minutes. Once ready, you open a PR on Github, knowing that the changes you are sending are up to date with the latest on our master, which means it's going to be easier for me to merge themįor newbie - who begin now work with OpenProject (make fetch & first clone of repo). Now you can pull from the original UnityTechnologies:master, and merge the new stuff into your fran_m:master or fran_m:bugfix, depending on which one you are using (8). To do that, you need to add the original repo (not your forked one) as a remote in your desktop application (3). If for any reason, the origin master updates (for instance, we merge another PR into it) it would be great if you take those changes before opening a PR. At this point you could also branch locally, say create a fran_m:bugfix branch. Then you open whatever application you use (Github Desktop, SourceTree, Fork, Gitkraken, or just the command line) and you pull your fork's master, say fran_m:master and you start working there.
Let's say that our repo and branch are UnityTechnologies:master. I will add numbers in my explanation referring to the paragraphs in that guide. Click to expand.No, you don't need to delete the fork.īut I can also explain briefly.