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20:06
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Q: git gracefull rebase/complete merge to branch

n247sGoodday, I am currently trying to figure out how I can 'overwrite' a branch without using something drastic like 'rebase'. For example: branch::master |- dir_a | |- file_a | |- file_b |- file_c branch::dev |- dir_a | |- file_b |- file_c [edited compared to branch::master] branch::...

Before merging dev into master. Have you tried merging master into dev? So you'd do merge right before merge left (left is master).
@Praveen Premaratne interesting, I see what you are trying to achieve. problem is that both branches might have removed files. Would that approuch still work?
That would work, but you'll obviously gonna get a merge conflict at some point tho. Even with that, it will preserve commit history and won't cause other users headache of hard resetting heads like rebase do.
I just tried it with a local test. And unfortunatly that doesn't work in all cases. In my case master added file_a after dev modified file_c. So in the history of dev there is no 'delete file_a' entry. Therefore it just gets merged without conflicts.
ok, so at what point was file_a deleted and which branch was it?
20:06
file_a was deleted on branch master after branch dev was cloned which modified file_c. in the end I want branch master to contain the exact content of branch dev but without breaking external dependencies (caused by resetting / rebase)
when you did the merge dev into master, was there a conflict?
yes there was a conflict for file_c
which could either be solved with a force push
or with strategy ours
I think because you chose to do ours strategy; it re-added the file_a.
Have you pushed these changes yet?
I have a test setup where I try things for now (local setup)
force pushing, bidirectional push (with ours merge) both yield the same result
when the conflict happened, were you not given the option to resolve it?
when you do the bidirectional merge, have you reset the HEAD of both master and dev to how they were before you did the first merge?
Also can you not delete the file_a again from dev and merge to master?
20:22
I was given the option to resolve the conflicts with file_c, not for file_a
and yes, in small enviroments I could 'redo' such changes. But this is a pseudo case for a huge project
(multiple actually)
That looks right, it won't change anything on file_a because it wasn't touched. Are you able to run this scenario again without pushing; but try to resolve the conflict rather than picking ours option.
again I can resolve the conflict on file_c correctly. But file_a would still be there
20:41
Is this what the commit structure looked like before the initial merge?

* 90477c6 (master) Remove file_a
| * e2f2a01 (HEAD -> dev) Update file_c
|/
* c973695 Add file_c
* a8946de Add file_b
* 1e1dfe6 Add file_a
almost, 90477c6 (master) Remove file_a & update file_c
and than switch master with dev
and its complete
(so file_a should be removed in the end)
hmm, so the file_c was updated on both master and dev before the merge?
yup
so thats where the conflict comes from
Is this a more accurate representation?

* f381a41 (HEAD -> master) Remove file_a & file_c updated
| D dir_a/file_a
| M file_c
| * e2f2a01 (dev) Update file_c
|/
| M file_c
* c973695 Add file_c
| A file_c
* a8946de Add file_b
| A dir_a/file_b
* 1e1dfe6 Add file_a
| A dir_a/file_a
wait, let me setup something real quick. otherwise this gets confusing
20:54
Ok so when I did the mere, it came up with the conflict as expected. once I fixed the conflict and commited the change, it didn't add the `file_a` as I expected.

* feb4654 (HEAD -> master) Merge branch 'dev'
|\
| * e2f2a01 (dev) Update file_c
| | M file_c
* | f381a41 Remove file_a & file_c updated
|/
| D dir_a/file_a
| M file_c
* c973695 Add file_c
| A file_c
* a8946de Add file_b
| A dir_a/file_b
* 1e1dfe6 Add file_a
| A dir_a/file_a
* (master) add dir_a/file_a & modify file_c
|
| * (dev) modify file_c
| /
|/
* (master) add file_c & dir_a/file_b
|
could you run the git command with --name-status? It's gonna show the action performed against the file
but that looks like an addition.... where's the delete?
erhm.. well. that is confusing. I am sorry
it was meant to be an addition (so no deletion history)
sorry for setting you on the wrong track
ok, np...
Are you still expecting the file_a not to be there? or has that changed?
yes, that is the whole point. it will be retained upon merge unfortunatly
21:02
from the commit message... looks like its adding the file_a so this is the expected result
in your commit history are you able to see something like | D dir_a/file_a?
D in deleting?
nope
yeah, so in that case looks like the file_a wasn't deleted in the first place.
you can try this to verify what each commit has done to the file. git log --all --decorate --oneline --graph --name-status
* d9cffb8 (HEAD -> master) modified file_c & added file_a
| A dir_a/file_a.txt
| M file_c.txt
* 39b2604 add files
A dir_a/file_b.txt
A file_c.txt
* bb38966 (HEAD -> master) modified file_c
| M file_c.txt
* 39b2604 (origin/master, origin/HEAD) add files
A dir_a/file_b.txt
A file_c.txt
sorry for the names :D I have rebuild this test quit a few times. forgat to move to the 'dev' branh
So if that what the actual repo also did, then all files are either added or modified. So I would expect the file_a to be there after the merge.
I don't think there's any problem with the merge.
yes, it is expected behavior of merge
thing is, I dont really seek the merge behavior
21:15
What were you expecting to happen?
I seek some operation to replace all of branch master content with the branch dev content, such that master is identical todev. But than without breaking dependencies
Ok, so there's no way you can do that without a force push. Mainly because what you're trying to do is re-arrange the codebase. That is same as if you're to rebase, a merge is safe but it will always keep all commits in the history.
hmm. that is unfortunate
it is 'technically' possible by having an 'up-to-date' local clone of master, and than delete every file, and add the files I have of the dev branch.
you can always rebuild a new master branch from dev, but that means everyone on the project needs to clone the repo fresh.
it requires manual labour though, was hoping git had something read-to-go for it
21:21
yeah, that's the same as if you're to delete all the unwanted files from dev and merge it again. for that, you said there are too many files.
yes, lot of it
hmm, I think I have to script something to run over the weekend I am afraid
and you need to have impeccable attention to not delete files that are needed.
Yeah, that is possible... but how will you determine what files to be deleted? List them all?
yea, I am quit sure the 'dev' branch is 'working'. but still. Thats why I prefered to retain the history, just in case
in any case, thanks for thinking with
(and the fast replies)
no worries, good luck
thanks

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