Note: while the use-case described is about using submodules within a project, the same applies to a normal git clone
of a repository over HTTP.
I have a project under Git control. I'd like to add a submodule:
git submodule add http://github.com/jscruggs/metric_fu.git vendor/plugins/metric_fu
But I get
...
got 1b0313f016d98e556396c91d08127c59722762d0
got 4c42d44a9221209293e5f3eb7e662a1571b09421
got b0d6414e3ca5c2fb4b95b7712c7edbf7d2becac7
error: Unable to find abc07fcf79aebed56497e3894c6c3c06046f913a under http://github.com/jscruggs/metri...
Cannot obtain needed commit abc07fcf79aebed56497e3894c6c3c06046f913a
while processing commit ee576543b3a0820cc966cc10cc41e6ffb3415658.
fatal: Fetch failed.
Clone of 'http://github.com/jscruggs/metric_fu.git' into submodule path 'vendor/plugins/metric_fu'
I have my HTTP_PROXY set up:
c:\project> echo %HTTP_PROXY%
http://proxy.mycompany:80
I even have a global Git setting for the http proxy:
c:\project> git config --get http.proxy
http://proxy.mycompany:80
Has anybody gotten HTTP fetches to consistently work through a proxy? What's really strange is that a few project on GitHub work fine (awesome_nested_set
for example), but others consistently fail (rails for example).
You can also set the HTTP proxy that Git uses in global configuration property http.proxy
:
git config --global http.proxy http://proxy.mycompany:80
To authenticate with the proxy:
git config --global http.proxy http://mydomain\\myusername:mypassword@myproxyserver:8080/
(Credit goes to @EugeneKulabuhov and @JaimeReynoso for the authentication format.)