On Monday, 8 July 2013 at 18:09:44 UTC, monarch_dodra wrote:
On Monday, 8 July 2013 at 16:49:05 UTC, John Colvin wrote:
On Monday, 8 July 2013 at 16:24:53 UTC, JohnnyK wrote:
On Monday, 8 July 2013 at 03:35:03 UTC, Jesse Phillips wrote:
On Monday, 8 July 2013 at 02:42:50 UTC, JohnnyK wrote:
Hi all,
I have searched everywhere over the Internet and I have yet
to find a way to clone a project using git when my
workstation is behind a company proxy. Can you guys clone
your projects to a single zip file that I can download?
This would be easier instead of working with some strange
command-line tool that does not recognize modern networks.
Honestly I just need the DWT binary with the help files so
I can use the api. I have spent weeks searching for a way
to download DWT to my windows workstation at work and have
yet figured out how to make GIT work.
Git provides a download by zip; Right side, bottom.
This is what I found on getting Git to work with a proxy:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/128035/how-do-i-pull-from-a-git-repository-through-an-http-proxy
I appreciate your response. I have tried these. I think the
real issue is that I am not sure on the IP and port needed
for the proxy here at work. The company uses WPAD in the
browser and I cannot figure out what the IP and port the
browser is using to connect through the proxy. If I knew
that I probably could make it work. It would be nice if
GitHUB would change their Downlaod Zip button such that it
does a recursive zip to include all the subfolders.
I would just ssh to somewhere outside the firewall, git clone
there, tar the folder, then scp it back. Assuming that is
possible through your firewall.
If you're on windows then there are the always useful putty
and winscp to do your ssh and scp work respectively.
Well, the thing to remember is that he did say "company", so
such approaches to bypass a firewall could very well be a
violation of his IT policies. I know doing this would be
*major* violation of my companie's policies, and could be cause
for termination.
I don't see how it is problematic? The firewall doesn't allow a
particular type of connection, so you cache the result somewhere
else and then access it via something that is allowed.
It's the same as downloading the zip file from github, only
you're doing the "zipping" yourself, then using scp to do the
download instead of http.
Is it common to have ssh connections banned in the IT policy but
*not* blocked by the firewall?