I have an account of a Gitlab installation where I created the repository \"ffki-startseite\"
Now I want to clone the repository git://freifunk.in-kiel.de/ffki
This is a basic move one repo to new location. I use this sequence all te time. With --bare no source files will be seen.
Open Git Bash.
Create a bare clone of the repository.
git clone --bare https://github.com/exampleuser/old-repository.git
Mirror-push to the new repository.
cd old-repository.git
git push --mirror https://github.com/exampleuser/new-repository.git
Remove the temporary local repository you created in step 1.
cd ../
rm -rf old-repository.git
Why mirror? See documentation of git: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-push
--all Push all branches (i.e. refs under refs/heads/); cannot be used with other .
--mirror Instead of naming each ref to push, specifies that all refs under refs/ (which includes but is not limited to refs/heads/, refs/remotes/, and refs/tags/) be mirrored to the remote repository. Newly created local refs will be pushed to the remote end, locally updated refs will be force updated on the remote end, and deleted refs will be removed from the remote end. This is the default if the configuration option remote..mirror is set.