How do I reset my local branch to be just like the branch on the remote repository?
I did:
git reset --hard HEAD
But when I run a git status,
On branch master
Changes to be committed:
(use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
modified: java/com/mycompany/TestContacts.java
m...
@Shane FWIW, I've seen similar things before, but only with rebase/cherry-pick heavy workflows. I don't think I have enough repos to tell if it's specific to one or the other.
A clean history (even full of successful rebases) will make that rare, though. I've seen it blow up but then found crazy history that should never have been in the repo int he first place
It's those dev that just try things in git, not knowing what they are doing, until the files look OK and move on, leaving a disgusting knot of bad history in their wake. These people are the cause.
usually when this happens it's one of our less technical teams and I just nuke and rebuild their repo
only exception I know of is our hiera repo, which has a branch for each environment, so we're constantly picking and rebasing between them but they've diverged by dozens or hundreds of commits
which means most changesets will eventually, as they move toward prod, apply to multiple branches but have to be grabbed in chunks and moved up one branch at a time
moral of the example is that you have branches A, B, and C, and you'll regularly commit to A, commit to A again, take the first commit from A and put it on B, then move it from B to C, then bring the current state of C back down into A
that loop confuses the shit out of the history rewriting algo
@Shane when you rebase, the branch goes away, git fiddles with the commits by copying them and changing the parents, then creates a new branch with the same name
@ssube i'm following a branch commit merge workflow, it's been working great for me and i don't need to change, but what would be the benefits of rebase?
@ssube explain it to other men like lawn care. "a freshly trimmed lawn looks amazing, overgrown or grass free is unappealing. but a nice even length makes your home look like a castle"
@towc i liked.. a lot about it. great complimentary score, i like it's take on subjectivity, nice story, and it pulled off a look that it pretty hard to pull off
just nothing bad about it and a few things incredible about it
@ssube okay 3-31 is really interesting, although in my workflow i always branch of master when working on a feature so i don't think i'd come across that
i also like how in the merge workflow each commit on master is a release by definition
continuous delivery (not the absurd and usually impossible deployment) means any commit to your master branch (be it master or another name) is a release
it gets built, tested, and packaged to be released