Hi Gina, to get a copy of the repository on your machine you would use git 
clone instead of creating another fork. The green Code button on your repo page 
will have the syntax you need depending on how you use git. To be allowed to 
push changes back to GitHub you'll want to use SSH or the GitHub CLI (or if 
you're using a GitHub UI it will want something out of there) and your GitHub 
fork will be copied down to your computer.

Jason

-- 
Jason Boyer
Senior System Administrator
Equinox Open Library Initiative
jbo...@equinoxoli.org
+1 (877) Open-ILS (673-6457)
https://equinoxOLI.org/

> On Apr 28, 2023, at 11:34 AM, Gina Monti via Evergreen-documentation 
> <evergreen-documentation@list.evergreen-ils.org> wrote:
> 
> Hi Everyone,
> 
> I got a new computer and need to fork the Evergreen repo to my new GitHub 
> software but it claims I already own the repo and can't fork again.  Does 
> anyone have any tips?
> 
> -- 
> Gina Monti
> Evergreen Systems Specialist
> Bibliomation, Inc.
> (203) 577-4070 ext. 109
> _______________________________________________
> Evergreen-documentation mailing list
> Evergreen-documentation@list.evergreen-ils.org
> http://list.evergreen-ils.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/evergreen-documentation

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