Charlie,
Pull requests are nothing more than a note that says "hey, pull my stuff
into your repo".  You need to use git-pull to grab the changes you're after.
 You may want to read this guide:
http://github.com/guides/fork-a-project-and-submit-your-modifications

--tek

On Sat, Sep 20, 2008 at 5:47 PM, Charlie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> I'm trying to get up to speed on github, and I've forked a few
> codebases I'm interested in. I did that a few weeks ago, and now I've
> come back and I see that a repo I forked has had a number of commits
> since I forked from it.
>
> I want to bring my repo back up to date with the one I forked from. If
> that developer had sent me a pull request, I could do this by simply
> accepting the request, right? But how do I do this otherwise? I've
> been hunting for a "pull" button and I can't find that anywhere. This
> seems like it should be a simple, frequently used feature. Am I
> missing something right under my nose? How do I pull from an upstream
> repo from within Github?
>
> >
>

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