问题
I'm in a team of three; two are working locally, and I am working on the server.
My coworker set up the account, but gave me full privileges to the repository.
I set my username and email in git:
git config --global user.name "bozdoz"
git config --global user.email email@email.com
and they are identical to my username and email on bitbucket.org.
But when I pull or push to the repository it indicates their username in the prompt:
Password for 'https://theirusername@bitbucket.org':
I was able to get a prompt for my password after trying to pull by indicating the URL with my username:
git pull https://bozdoz@bitbucket.org/path/repo.git
and it said up-to-date; and then when I pushed, it said no-fast-forward.
I read that I need to specify the branch, but I don't know how to do that in a push statement while I'm also specifying the repo URL:
git push https://bozdoz@bitbucket.org/path/repo.git
I am able to pull and push if my co-worker is around and can put his password in. But this is also listing him as the author of the push, and not me.
How can I pull and push to a repo branch as my own username?
回答1:
Run
git remote -v
and check whether your origin's URL has your co-worker's username hardcoded in there. If so, substitute it with your own:
git remote set-url origin <url-with-your-username>
回答2:
I figured I should share my solution, since I wasn't able to find it anywhere, and only figured it out through trial and error.
I indeed was able to transfer ownership of the repository to a team on BitBucket.
Don't add the remote URL that BitBuckets suggests:
git remote add origin https://username@bitbucket.org/teamName/repo.git
Instead, add the remote URL without your username:
git remote add origin https://bitbucket.org/teamName/repo.git
This way, when you go to pull from or push to a repo, it prompts you for your username, then for your password: everyone on the team has access to it under their own credentials. This approach only works with teams on BitBucket, even though you can manage user permissions on single-owner repos.
回答3:
The prompt:
Password for 'https://theirusername@bitbucket.org':
suggests, that you are using https not ssh. SSH urls start with git@, for example:
git@bitbucket.org:beginninggit/alias.git
Even if you work alone, with a single repo that you own, the operation:
git push
will cause:
Password for 'https://theirusername@bitbucket.org':
if the remote origin starts with https.
Check your remote with:
git remote -v
The remote depends on git clone. If you want to use ssh clone the repo using its ssh url, for example:
git clone git@bitbucket.org:user/repo.git
I suggest you to start with git push and git pull for your private repo.
If that works, you have two joices suggested by Lazy Badger:
- Pull requests
- Team work
回答4:
Well, it's part of BitBucket philosophy and workflow:
- Repository may have only one user: owner
- For ordinary accounts (end-user's) collaboration expect "fork-pull request" workflow
i.e you can't (in usual case) commit into foreign repo under own credentials.
You have two possible solutions:
- "Classic" BB-way: fork repo (get owned by you repository), make changes, send pull request to origin repo
- Create "Team", add user-accounts as members of team, make Team owner of repository - it this case for this "Shared central" repository every team memeber can push under own credentials - inspect thg repository and TortoiseHg Team, owner of this repository, as samples
回答5:
Are you sure you aren't pushing over SSH? Maybe check the email associated with your SSH key in bitbucket if you have one.
回答6:
For myself private repo, i use
git@bitbucket.org:username/blog.git
replace
https://username@bitbucket.org/username/blog.git
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15166722/use-own-username-password-with-git-and-bitbucket