Reputation: 37108
Edit: Summary: Every command entered in Git produces a hanging cursor which then says "bad input" if anything is typed before enter is pressed. No commands produce any results. I tried a fresh install with no results.
I am completely new to Git. No idea what I'm doing whatsoever. (I'm on a Mac)
I was following the basic instructions on the site:
touch README.md
git init
git add README.md
git commit -m "first commit"
git remote add origin [email protected]:aerovistae/MetPetDB-Mobile.git
git push -u origin master
But as soon as I type in "git init", the terminal hangs. I press enter, nothing happens, the prompt doesn't start a new line...it just starts a blank line with no blinking cursor. I press enter a second time, the prompt returns, having skipped a line in the terminal, and now waiting for my next command.
I don't really understand what's going on here, and I'm not sure if something's wrong or not.
EDIT:
Git was installed from the main downloads page.
After I hit enter on git init
I get the blinking cursor on a blank new line, and after a moment I hesitantly typed in Testing
and hit enter again. It then spat out, on the next line, bad input: Testing
and showed me a new prompt.
I tried reinstalling, but to no avail. I try other git commands, like git config --global user.name "Meeeee"
But it doesn't matter. They all produce the same hanging.
Upvotes: 16
Views: 37099
Reputation: 1328982
Considering you are on OS X, and after Keith Thompson's comment, it is possible
credential-osxkeychain
.you've aliased git to something else (probably
alias git="git credential-osxkeychain"
), and you should look in~.profile
to see if you can remove the alias.
It looks like you installed the
git-credential-osxkeychain
wrapper in the wrong place (did youcp
to/usr/bin/git
instead of/usr/local/git/bin
?)
To fix, you'll want to just delete/usr/bin/git
; assuming git is still installed in/usr/local/bin
it should take over.It's actually installed to
/usr/local/git/bin
so I just added that to myPATH
.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 27325
Hmm perhaps you are in a directory which is not writable?
Normally you can create a directory.
mkdir test
cd test
git init
then you init an empty GIT repo in the test folder and you should see a folder named ".git" which is hidden. Perhaps you can try to build a bare repository.
git --bare init
But your problem sounds a bit strange. Du you run your command with all rights?
Upvotes: 2