Reputation: 12108
When I git clone
from a repo, I get,
fatal: Could not get current working directory: No such file or directory
What do I do? I have checked the server and found that .git
file exists. The server is running a Gitlab instance. I have configured ssh
properly with the keys, and I've been committing & cloning for a while now without any error, and this happens all of a sudden.
FWIW, I'm doing the git clone
in a bash script.
Update
This is my bash script,
for repo in $repos
do
git clone $repo /tmp/tmpdir/
# do stuff with /tmp/tmpdir/
rm -rf /tmp/tmpdir/
done
for the first repo
it's fine, but when the for
gets into the second repo
it fails and gives the above fatal
error.
Upvotes: 6
Views: 13951
Reputation: 2779
In my case, this was caused by issuing a "git clone" from a subdirectory of an already existing git repo. I had to cd outside of the existing repo before I could clone the new repo.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 4411
My guess is that somewhere in your do stuff
section you change directory into /tmp/tmpdir/
so that in the next loop, the current working directory no longer exists. The fix is to change directory to /tmp/
(or anywhere really) before removing the /tmp/tmdir/
directory.
Upvotes: 4