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Pushing a local branch up to GitHub

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How do I push code from local to remote branch?

In order to push your branch to another remote branch, use the “git push” command and specify the remote name, the name of your local branch as the name of the remote branch.


I believe you're looking for git push origin my_new_branch, assuming your origin remote is configured to hit your github repository.


Depending on your local git settings, if you have a branch checked out that isn't the one you cloned or one that exists where you are trying to push, git will not push your local branch.

Here is the message it provides:

warning: push.default is unset; its implicit value has changed in Git 2.0 from 'matching' to 'simple'. To squelch this message and maintain the traditional behavior, use:

git config --global push.default matching

To squelch this message and adopt the new behavior now, use:

git config --global push.default simple

When push.default is set to 'matching', git will push local branches to the remote branches that already exist with the same name.

Since Git 2.0, Git defaults to the more conservative 'simple' behavior, which only pushes the current branch to the corresponding remote branch that 'git pull' uses to update the current branch.

See 'git help config' and search for 'push.default' for further information. (the 'simple' mode was introduced in Git 1.7.11. Use the similar mode 'current' instead of 'simple' if you sometimes use older versions of Git)

fatal: The current branch MyLocalBranch has no upstream branch. To push the current branch and set the remote as upstream, use

git push --set-upstream origin MyLocalBranch