git-annex/doc/devblog/day_378__finishing_adjusted_branches_merge.mdwn

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2016-04-06 23:26:25 +00:00
Well, I had to rethink how merges into adjusted branches should be handled.
The old method often led to unnecessary merge conflicts. My new approach
should always avoid unnecessary merge conflicts, but it's quite a trick.
2016-04-06 23:26:25 +00:00
To merge origin/master into adjusted/master, it first merges origin/master
into master. But, since adjusted/master is checked out, it has to do the
merge in a temporary work tree. Luckily this can be done fairly
inexpensively. To handle merge conflicts at this stage, git-annex's
automatic merge conflict resolver is used. This approach wouldn't be
feasible without a way to automatically resolve merge conflicts, because
the user can't help with conflict resolution when the merge is not
happening in their working tree.
Once that out-of-tree merge is done, the result is adjusted, and merged
into the adjusted branch. Since we know the adjusted branch is a child of
the old master branch, this merge can be forced to always be a
fast-forward. This second merge will only ever have conflicts if the work
tree has something uncommitted in it that causes a merge conflict.
Wow! That's super tricky, but it seems to work well. While I ended up
throwing away everything I did [[last Thursday|day_376__in_the_weeds]]
due to this new approach, the code is in some ways simpler than that
old, busted approach.