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I'd stupidly only tested the non-branch-name version.
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We codify the following different heads (in addition to the main "HEAD",
which points to the current branch, of course):
- FETCH_HEAD
Populated by "git fetch"
- ORIG_HEAD
The old HEAD before a "git pull/resolve" (successful or not)
- LAST_MERGE
The HEAD we're currently merging in "git pull/resolve"
- MERGE_HEAD
The previous head of a unresolved "git pull", which gets committed by
a "git commit" after manually resolving the result
We used to have "MERGE_HEAD" be populated directly by the fetch, and we
removed ORIG_HEAD and LAST_MERGE too aggressively.
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In particular, make them readable on one line since that's what all the
tools like git-shortlog and gitk end up showing.
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Don't continue with a merge if the fetch failed.
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This also drops the common ".git" part from the end of the repo
name, and if a non-default head reference is given, makes a nicer
commit message about it.
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This allows you to just fetch stuff first, inspect it, and then
resolve the merge separately if everything looks good.
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During the mailing list discussion on renaming GIT_ environment
variables, people felt that having one environment that lets the
user (or Porcelain) specify both SHA1_FILE_DIRECTORY (now
GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY) and GIT_INDEX_FILE for the default layout
would be handy. This change introduces GIT_DIR environment
variable, from which the defaults for GIT_INDEX_FILE and
GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY are derived. When GIT_DIR is not defined,
it defaults to ".git". GIT_INDEX_FILE defaults to
"$GIT_DIR/index" and GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY defaults to
"$GIT_DIR/objects".
Special thanks for ideas and discussions go to Petr Baudis and
Daniel Barkalow. Bugs are mine ;-)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
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Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
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Separate out the merge resolve from the actual getting of the
data. Also, update the resolve phase to take advantage of the
fact that we don't need to do the commit->tree object lookup
by hand, since all the actors involved happily just act on a
commit object these days.
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This way you always see what the state change was.
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People are already starting to use a multi-head model.
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This is useful to verify that you got the right thing.
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Let's see what else I forgot..
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If you set SHA1_FILE_DIRECTORY to something else than .git/objects
git-pull-script will store the fetched files in a location the rest of
the tools does not expect.
git-prune-script also ignores this setting, but I think this is good,
because pruning a shared tree to fit a single project means throwing
away a lot of useful data. :-)
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
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When the trivial "read-tree" merge fails, fall back on the (equally
trivial) automatic merge script instead of forcing the user to do
it by hand.
When _that_ fails, you get to do a manual merge.
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reading a single tree too. That should speed up a
trivial merge noticeably.
Also, don't bother reading back the tree we just wrote
when we committed a real merge. It had better be the
same one we still have..
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Also exit gracefully if the HEAD pull failed, rather than use
a possibly stale MERGE_HEAD.
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Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
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out index is all ready to go after a pull.
Noted by Russell King
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They sure as hell aren't perfect, but they allow you to do:
./git-pull-script {other-git-directory}
to do the initial merge, and if that had content clashes, you do
merge-cache ./git-merge-one-file-script -a
which tries to auto-merge. When/if the auto-merge fails, it will
leave the last file in your working directory, and you can edit
it and then when you're happy you can do "update-cache filename"
on it. Re-do the merge-cache thing until there are no files left
to be merged, and now you can write the tree and commit:
write-tree
commit-tree .... -p $(cat .git/HEAD) -p $(cat .git/MERGE_HEAD)
and you're done.
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