Reputation: 328770
What is the fastest path to restore a git repository after a file system error on the main server?
Imagine the central server of your OSS project fails and all commits for two days are lost after restore. How do you get those back? Is it enough just to call "git push" on all clients? Or is there something else I must take into account?
Upvotes: 3
Views: 2141
Reputation: 14925
I think it might be better to create a new repo on the server:
% ssh user@server
% mv /path/to/repo /path/to/repo.old
% mkdir /path/to/repo
% cd /path/to/repo
% git init --bare
Then push from all the different clones that you have. My thinking is that this would avoid any corrupt files that may be in the old repo, and there should be no loss at all, provided you all work on your own clones, and noone is messing around in the server repo.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 83943
Every repository is also a backup of the “main repository” (which is “main” by convention only) so a git push
from the repository that did the most recent git fetch
or git pull
should be all it takes—up to its state, of course. You only need to take care of the hooks and such but if you say that only the last two days’ worth of commits were lost those were probably not harmed anyway.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 11395
A git pull
and then a git push
should be enough.
Alternately a git push -f
will forcibly update the server with your local copy, but this can cause problems for others (if there are multiple committers).
Let us know if you run into any further problems or errors.
Upvotes: 2