~ruther/qmk_firmware

f667821ed3fbcaafd84208b0c8a82bbdb5a019b5 — Luis Moreno 2 years ago 1504e9c
[Docs] Resynchronizing Your Branch including submodules (#19268)

1 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)

M docs/newbs_git_resynchronize_a_branch.md
M docs/newbs_git_resynchronize_a_branch.md => docs/newbs_git_resynchronize_a_branch.md +4 -4
@@ 51,21 51,21 @@ git remote set-url origin https://github.com/<your_username>/qmk_firmware.git
Now that you have both remotes configured, you need to update the references for the upstream repository, which is QMK's, by running:

```
git fetch upstream
git fetch --recurse-submodules upstream
```

At this point, resynchronize your branch to QMK's by running:

```
git reset --hard upstream/master
git reset --recurse-submodules --hard upstream/master
```

These steps will update the repository on your computer, but your GitHub fork will still be out of sync. To resynchronize your fork on GitHub, you need to push to your fork, instructing Git to override any remote changes that are not reflected in your local repository. To do this, run:

```
git push --force-with-lease
git push --recurse-submodules=on-demand --force-with-lease
```

!> **DO NOT** run `git push --force-with-lease` on a fork to which other users post commits. This will erase their commits.
!> **DO NOT** run `git push --recurse-submodules=on-demand --force-with-lease` on a fork to which other users post commits. This will erase their commits.

Now your GitHub fork, your local files, and QMK's repository are all the same. From here you can make further needed changes ([use a branch!](newbs_git_using_your_master_branch.md#making-changes)) and post them as normal.