Changing a remote's URL
The
git remote set-url
command changes an existing remote repository URL.
The
git remote set-url
command takes two arguments:- An existing remote name. For example,
origin
orupstream
are two common choices. - A new URL for the remote. For example:
- If you're updating to use HTTPS, your URL might look like:
https://github.com/USERNAME/OTHERREPOSITORY.git
- If you're updating to use SSH, your URL might look like:
git@github.com:USERNAME/OTHERREPOSITORY.git
Switching remote URLs from SSH to HTTPS
- Open Terminal (for Mac users) or the command prompt (for Windows and Linux users) .
- Change the current working directory to your local project.
- List your existing remotes in order to get the name of the remote you want to change.
git remote -v # origin git@github.com:USERNAME/REPOSITORY.git (fetch) # origin git@github.com:USERNAME/REPOSITORY.git (push)
- Change your remote's URL from SSH to HTTPS with the
remote set-url
command.git remote set-url origin https://github.com/USERNAME/OTHERREPOSITORY.git
- Verify that the remote URL has changed.
git remote -v # Verify new remote URL # origin https://github.com/USERNAME/OTHERREPOSITORY.git (fetch) # origin https://github.com/USERNAME/OTHERREPOSITORY.git (push)
The next time you
git fetch
, git pull
, or git push
to the remote repository, you'll be asked for your GitHub username and password.- If you have two-factor authentication enabled, you must create a personal access token to use instead of your GitHub password.
- You can use a credential helper so Git will remember your GitHub username and password every time it talks to GitHub.
Troubleshooting
You may encounter these errors when trying to changing a remote.
No such remote '[name]'
This error means that the remote you tried to change doesn't exist:
git remote set-url sofake https://github.com/octocat/Spoon-Knife
# fatal: No such remote 'sofake'
Check that you've correctly typed the remote name.
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