I have a set of documentation for my company\'s API, based on the excellent Slate framework from TripIt. Per instructions, I forked their repo and proceeded to customize it.
GitHub keeps track of forks made through their interface and assumes pull requests will be for that original repository. You need to tell GitHub that your copy is not a fork but rather a regular repository that just happens to have identical history. Sadly, GitHub doesn't offer a good way to just uncheck the fork link. I typically solve it this way:
Clone the repository, git pull
, and ensure your local copy is completely up to date.
Delete the repository on GitHub.
Create the repository on GitHub using the exact same name. Ensure it's an empty repository (don't create a README
or LICENSE
file.)
git push
all the content back into the repository. (You may need to switch to each branch and push it, and you also may need to git push --tags
.)
FRAGILE: This approach will lose existing GitHub issues and pull request comments. If you're using these heavily, this approach is probably a bad idea, and you should contact GitHub customer support to help you instead.