I've got a project checked locally from GitHub, and that remote repository has since had changes made to it. What's the correct command to update my local copy with the latest changes?
8 Answers
This question is very general and there are a couple of assumptions I'll make to simplify it a bit. We'll assume that you want to update your master
branch.
If you haven't made any changes locally, you can use git pull
to bring down any new commits and add them to your master
.
git pull origin master
If you have made changes, and you want to avoid adding a new merge commit, use git pull --rebase
.
git pull --rebase origin master
git pull --rebase
will work even if you haven't made changes and is probably your best call.
To pull from the default branch, new repositories should use the command:
git pull origin main
Github changed naming convention of default branch from master to main in 2020. https://github.com/github/renaming
Complete Workflow for check out a branch and pull changes from master
Pull all remote branches
git pull --all
List all branches now
git branch -a
Download your branch
git checkout -b
<feature branch name copied from list of branches above>
Shows current branch. Must show <feature branch>
with * In front of it
git branch
Checkout changes from master to current branch
git pull origin master
OR checkout any other <feature branch>
into current branch
git pull origin
<feature-branch>