| git-rerere(1) |
| ============= |
| |
| NAME |
| ---- |
| git-rerere - Reuse recorded resolution of conflicted merges |
| |
| SYNOPSIS |
| -------- |
| 'git rerere' ['clear'|'forget' [<pathspec>]|'diff'|'status'|'gc'] |
| |
| DESCRIPTION |
| ----------- |
| |
| In a workflow employing relatively long lived topic branches, |
| the developer sometimes needs to resolve the same conflicts over |
| and over again until the topic branches are done (either merged |
| to the "release" branch, or sent out and accepted upstream). |
| |
| This command assists the developer in this process by recording |
| conflicted automerge results and corresponding hand resolve results |
| on the initial manual merge, and applying previously recorded |
| hand resolutions to their corresponding automerge results. |
| |
| [NOTE] |
| You need to set the configuration variable rerere.enabled in order to |
| enable this command. |
| |
| |
| COMMANDS |
| -------- |
| |
| Normally, 'git rerere' is run without arguments or user-intervention. |
| However, it has several commands that allow it to interact with |
| its working state. |
| |
| 'clear':: |
| |
| This resets the metadata used by rerere if a merge resolution is to be |
| aborted. Calling 'git am [--skip|--abort]' or 'git rebase [--skip|--abort]' |
| will automatically invoke this command. |
| |
| 'forget' <pathspec>:: |
| |
| This resets the conflict resolutions which rerere has recorded for the current |
| conflict in <pathspec>. The <pathspec> is optional. |
| |
| 'diff':: |
| |
| This displays diffs for the current state of the resolution. It is |
| useful for tracking what has changed while the user is resolving |
| conflicts. Additional arguments are passed directly to the system |
| 'diff' command installed in PATH. |
| |
| 'status':: |
| |
| Like 'diff', but this only prints the filenames that will be tracked |
| for resolutions. |
| |
| 'gc':: |
| |
| This prunes records of conflicted merges that |
| occurred a long time ago. By default, unresolved conflicts older |
| than 15 days and resolved conflicts older than 60 |
| days are pruned. These defaults are controlled via the |
| `gc.rerereunresolved` and `gc.rerereresolved` configuration |
| variables respectively. |
| |
| |
| DISCUSSION |
| ---------- |
| |
| When your topic branch modifies an overlapping area that your |
| master branch (or upstream) touched since your topic branch |
| forked from it, you may want to test it with the latest master, |
| even before your topic branch is ready to be pushed upstream: |
| |
| ------------ |
| o---*---o topic |
| / |
| o---o---o---*---o---o master |
| ------------ |
| |
| For such a test, you need to merge master and topic somehow. |
| One way to do it is to pull master into the topic branch: |
| |
| ------------ |
| $ git checkout topic |
| $ git merge master |
| |
| o---*---o---+ topic |
| / / |
| o---o---o---*---o---o master |
| ------------ |
| |
| The commits marked with `*` touch the same area in the same |
| file; you need to resolve the conflicts when creating the commit |
| marked with `{plus}`. Then you can test the result to make sure your |
| work-in-progress still works with what is in the latest master. |
| |
| After this test merge, there are two ways to continue your work |
| on the topic. The easiest is to build on top of the test merge |
| commit `{plus}`, and when your work in the topic branch is finally |
| ready, pull the topic branch into master, and/or ask the |
| upstream to pull from you. By that time, however, the master or |
| the upstream might have been advanced since the test merge `{plus}`, |
| in which case the final commit graph would look like this: |
| |
| ------------ |
| $ git checkout topic |
| $ git merge master |
| $ ... work on both topic and master branches |
| $ git checkout master |
| $ git merge topic |
| |
| o---*---o---+---o---o topic |
| / / \ |
| o---o---o---*---o---o---o---o---+ master |
| ------------ |
| |
| When your topic branch is long-lived, however, your topic branch |
| would end up having many such "Merge from master" commits on it, |
| which would unnecessarily clutter the development history. |
| Readers of the Linux kernel mailing list may remember that Linus |
| complained about such too frequent test merges when a subsystem |
| maintainer asked to pull from a branch full of "useless merges". |
| |
| As an alternative, to keep the topic branch clean of test |
| merges, you could blow away the test merge, and keep building on |
| top of the tip before the test merge: |
| |
| ------------ |
| $ git checkout topic |
| $ git merge master |
| $ git reset --hard HEAD^ ;# rewind the test merge |
| $ ... work on both topic and master branches |
| $ git checkout master |
| $ git merge topic |
| |
| o---*---o-------o---o topic |
| / \ |
| o---o---o---*---o---o---o---o---+ master |
| ------------ |
| |
| This would leave only one merge commit when your topic branch is |
| finally ready and merged into the master branch. This merge |
| would require you to resolve the conflict, introduced by the |
| commits marked with `*`. However, this conflict is often the |
| same conflict you resolved when you created the test merge you |
| blew away. 'git rerere' helps you resolve this final |
| conflicted merge using the information from your earlier hand |
| resolve. |
| |
| Running the 'git rerere' command immediately after a conflicted |
| automerge records the conflicted working tree files, with the |
| usual conflict markers `<<<<<<<`, `=======`, and `>>>>>>>` in |
| them. Later, after you are done resolving the conflicts, |
| running 'git rerere' again will record the resolved state of these |
| files. Suppose you did this when you created the test merge of |
| master into the topic branch. |
| |
| Next time, after seeing the same conflicted automerge, |
| running 'git rerere' will perform a three-way merge between the |
| earlier conflicted automerge, the earlier manual resolution, and |
| the current conflicted automerge. |
| If this three-way merge resolves cleanly, the result is written |
| out to your working tree file, so you do not have to manually |
| resolve it. Note that 'git rerere' leaves the index file alone, |
| so you still need to do the final sanity checks with `git diff` |
| (or `git diff -c`) and 'git add' when you are satisfied. |
| |
| As a convenience measure, 'git merge' automatically invokes |
| 'git rerere' upon exiting with a failed automerge and 'git rerere' |
| records the hand resolve when it is a new conflict, or reuses the earlier hand |
| resolve when it is not. 'git commit' also invokes 'git rerere' |
| when committing a merge result. What this means is that you do |
| not have to do anything special yourself (besides enabling |
| the rerere.enabled config variable). |
| |
| In our example, when you do the test merge, the manual |
| resolution is recorded, and it will be reused when you do the |
| actual merge later with the updated master and topic branch, as long |
| as the recorded resolution is still applicable. |
| |
| The information 'git rerere' records is also used when running |
| 'git rebase'. After blowing away the test merge and continuing |
| development on the topic branch: |
| |
| ------------ |
| o---*---o-------o---o topic |
| / |
| o---o---o---*---o---o---o---o master |
| |
| $ git rebase master topic |
| |
| o---*---o-------o---o topic |
| / |
| o---o---o---*---o---o---o---o master |
| ------------ |
| |
| you could run `git rebase master topic`, to bring yourself |
| up-to-date before your topic is ready to be sent upstream. |
| This would result in falling back to a three-way merge, and it |
| would conflict the same way as the test merge you resolved earlier. |
| 'git rerere' will be run by 'git rebase' to help you resolve this |
| conflict. |
| |
| |
| Author |
| ------ |
| Written by Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> |
| |
| GIT |
| --- |
| Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite |