this post was submitted on 05 Aug 2023
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The name "pull request" is actually more accurate, because you ask the upstream repository to
git pull
the changes from the downstream repo.Either one works imo, as the maintainer is asked to merge your changes into his repo.
It's only more accurate because they actually put the fork in a "different" repo (which really is the same repo).
If you only have one repo like in Gitlab, merge request is more accurate.
https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/project/repository/forking_workflow.html
How is this different from GitHub?
Just to make sure there's no misunderstanding: When I want to contribute to a project I'm not involved in, like inkscape, I'm not allowed to create a branch in their repo, so I have to fork it, which creates a copy of the repo, and sets the original repo as a remote.
Note that git is a distributed VCS that doesn't distinguish between servers and clients. Forking and cloning are the same operation from a technical perspective, except when you
git clone
, the copy ends up on your local machine, and when you press the "fork" button, the copy is on a GitHub/GitLab server.