Hi Brian, sounds odd, since git doesn't care about filesystem metadata of the files it tracks - it just cares about their content. So if you did a 1:1 copy of the repository directory onto another drive, unless something mangled the data during that copy, not a thing should have changed from git's perspective...
If you are 100% certain you don't have any local modifications to files tracked by git that warrant preserving (you can check that with `git diff`, which shows you the changes made from the presently commited state), the easiest way out probably is to `git reset --hard`, which will make git restore all files it tracks to exactly the content as of the commit you are pointed at. Of course, If that doesn't work or give you any other kind of trouble, you can always just clone the source repository into another brand new location, and resume your activities from there. Hth! :) -- with best regards: - Johannes Truschnigg ( [email protected] ) www: https://johannes.truschnigg.info/
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