![]() So this is a SOURCETREE PROBLEM not a problem with GitHub or with repos at the other end. Note that GitHub Desktop app works 100%, and using Xcode's built-in Version Control integration to talk directly to GitHub works 100%. But SourceTree fails no matter what I try. I'm a 20-year software developer, I know what I'm doing. Try deleting account, re-adding in various ways - errors, not a valid url, etc etc etc. Try basic authentication - more, slightly different errors about permissions failure trying to clone. Manually copy SSH key and set in GitHub settings - SourceTree errors about failed permissions trying to connect Sourcetree 3.2 (224) and the GitHub integration is still crap. Please make sure you have the correct access rights Git -c diff.mnemonicprefix=false -c core.quotepath=false -c credential.helper=sourcetree fetch -prune originįatal: Could not read from remote repository. I finally restored SourceTree 2.3.2 from the Trash Can and am able to work again. I then switched to using SSH, generated a local SSH key (not modifying my current setup.?), published that key to GitHub, and still saw the following error. I then reconfigured multiple times using OAuth, saw no errors during that process, but only at the end I saw the following error. I assumed it was all good, retried my Fetch, and got the same error. The Sourcetree GUI had "HTTPS" as the method, and after the OAuth did not show "connected" anywhere. I then configured my Github Account from Sourcetree Prefs, and completed the OAuth wizard in Sourcetree, inputting my 2FA number. If you’re in the market for a new Git GUI client, I can safely say that GitKraken is by far the best experience I’ve had with one on Windows so far.I upgraded from 2.3.2 and saw the following error upon Fetching my repo. But their updates so far have been adding nice content and polish, so I’m optimistic that the few minor gripes I have will be remedied soon. It wasn’t able to detect my global Git merge tool ( Beyond Compare) for some reason, so for now I still have to run ‘git mergetool’ on the command line during merge conflicts. Overall it’s been a really positive experience so far, with just a few bumps in the road. The ability to drag and drop a branch or tag onto another in the source graph to initiate a merge, or the brand-spanking-new-in-v1.1 Fuzzy Search which allows you to search for files, repositories, and branches by text and click a search result to change repos, git checkout the branch, or open a file’s git history. There are lots of little nice features such as the convenient, and most importantly – short, first-time demo that takes you around the settings menu to set up Github integration etc. ![]() When your product is being favorably compared to Slack, that’s usually a good sign. The last application I can remember that made me feel like this was Slack. I haven’t used software which pleasantly surprised me by having completely unexpected features that “just worked” in quite a while. But most of it is about how excellent their UX is, and after a few weeks of using it, I actually have to agree. It almost turned me off to the product at first. Their advertising is really quite ridiculous. I’ve been actually quite pleased so far and wanted to share my thoughts on it! As a result, when I heard about GitKraken I was eager to give it a try. I’ve been in the market for a Git client that was as useful and intuitive as HG Workbench for quite a while now. I’ve also found Github Desktop to be very nice, but a bit limited when it comes to repositories with lots of local branches (not a common use-case on Github repositories, but I encounter it a lot at work.) I hear that SourceTree on mac is excellent, but I’ve not had the same experience with their Windows client. Since I’ve recently been having lots of issues with Atlassian’s SourceTree for Windows, and have never particularly cared for the UI. ![]() So I recently saw the 1.0 release announcement of Axosoft’s GitKraken. ![]()
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