On github, I forked an old version of another project. I made some changes and am trying to push them onto my fork on github. I commited the changes locally, then tried git
git branch -v indicates that my commit was on (no branch). As for the add, I initially commited the changes through Eclipse (with the git plugin)...when I do git add from the command line, it doesn't seem to do anything
That means you are in a DETACHED HEAD mode.
You can add and commit, but from the upstream repo point of view (ie from the GitHub repo), no new commits are ready to be pushed.
You have various ways to include your local (detached HEAD) commit back into a branch, which you will be able to push then.
See:
The OP mentions this article in order to fix the situation:
"git: what to do if you commit to no branch"
all we need to do is checkout the branch we should have been on and merge in that commit SHA:
Note that instead of merging the SHA1 that you would have somehow copied, you can memorize it with a script, using head=$(git rev-parse HEAD):
See "git: reliably switching to a detached HEAD and then restore HEAD later, all from a script".
Then you can merge that detached HEAD back to the right branch.