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Not the PC - it's fine, and in symc with my fork on Github. It's my
fork on Github that says that it's 2 commits ahead. One of those is
an empty remote-tracking commit from the last fetch; the other is
the c_str() change to the v2 server... Did you actually sync my
fork to Master, or just make the same changes locally?<br>
<br>
Same changes, I guess, but if my fork isn't formally sync'd, I seem
to keep accumulating those remote tracking commits, which becomes
rather annoying. Should I be pushing directly to Master instead?
(It's admittedly safer to not change this...).<br>
<br>
Greg<br>
<br>
<br>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">Mark Webb-Johnson wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:32A9D95D-7B4D-401E-8CCA-F94F555D825A@webb-johnson.net">git
diff, or git diff —staged, should tell you.<br class="">
<div><br class="">
<blockquote type="cite" class="">
<div class="">On 30 Jan 2018, at 8:34 AM, Greg D. <<a
href="mailto:gregd2350@gmail.com" class=""
moz-do-not-send="true">gregd2350@gmail.com</a>> wrote:</div>
<br class="Apple-interchange-newline">
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charset=UTF-8" class="">
<div text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" class=""> Hi Mark,<br
class="">
<br class="">
Looks like that did it. No more disconnects. Yea! The
verbose logging is good now, too.<br class="">
<br class="">
Greg<br class="">
<br class="">
p.s. Just curious, why does Git think I'm still one
commit ahead of Master?<br class="">
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