To avoid confusion,
recent versions of git
deprecate this somewhat ambiguous --set-upstream
option
in favor of a more verbose --set-upstream-to
option
with identical syntax and behavior.
[ Reference ]
git branch --set-upstream-to <remote-branch>
sets the default remote branch for the current local branch.
Any future git pull
command (with the current local branch checked-out),
will attempt to bring in commits from the <remote-branch>
into the current local branch.
One way to avoid having to explicitly type --set-upstream
/ --set-upstream-to
is to use its shorthand flag -u
as follows:
git push -u origin local-branch
This sets the upstream association for any future push/pull attempts automatically.
For more details, checkout this detailed explanation about upstream branches and tracking.
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