Let's say contributor has submitted a pull request to your (author) project (repo). They have made changes on their
branch feature and have proposed to merge this into origin/master, where
origin -> https://github.com/author/repo.gitNow say you would like to make commits to their PR and push those changes. First, add their fork as a remote called
contributor,
> git remote add contributor https://github.com/contributor/repo.git such that,
> git remote -v
origin https://github.com/author/repo.git (fetch)
origin https://github.com/author/repo.git (push)
contributor https://github.com/contributor/repo.git (fetch)
contributor https://github.com/contributor/repo.git (push)Next, pull down their list of branches,
> git fetch contributorand create a new branch (contributor-feature) from the branch that they have created the PR from,
> git checkout -b contributor-feature contributor/featureNow make any changes you need to make on this branch. If you'd like to rebase this PR on top of the master branch of the primary repository,
> git rebase origin/masterFinally, push the changes back up to the PR by pushing to their branch,
git push contributor contributor-feature:featureNote that if you did a rebase, you'll need to add the --force (or -f) flag after push. The author of the PR
also may need to explicitly allow you to push to their branch.