git pull *after* git rebase?

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你的背包 2021-01-29 20:39

I have a feature branch, and a master branch.

Master branch has evolved and I mean to have those updates to diverging as little as possible from master branch.

S

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  • 2021-01-29 20:47

    The have 27 and 2 different commits each is telling you that you now have 27 new commits from master and 2 new commits in your branch that are not present in origin/<yourbranch>.

    Because origin/<yourbranch> has been massively changed by the rebase, it no longer has a common base with origin/<yourbranch>. Therefore, you don't want to then pull the changes from origin/<yourbranch> after the rebase, because, as you see, all H*** breaks loose.

    If you know there are changes in origin/<yourbranch> that you need in your local branch, then pull those before you rebase.

    If you are sure no one has changed origin/<yourbranch> since your last push (a safe bet if this is your own feature branch), you can use push --force to put them into sync again. Then origin/<yourbranch> will again have the same base as your local branch and that base will contain all the latest master changes.

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  • 2021-01-29 20:50

    tl;dr You should update both master and feature with git pull and git pull --rebase before rebasing feature on top of master. There is no need to do a git pull after you have rebased your feature branch on top of master.

    With your current workflow, the reason why git status is telling you this:

    Your branch and 'origin/feature' have diverged, and have 27 and 2 different commits each, respectively.

    is because your rebased feature branch now has 25 new commits that aren't reachable from origin/feature (since they came from the rebase on master) plus 2 commits that are reachable from origin/feature but have different commit IDs. Those commits contain the same changes (i.e. they're patch equivalent) but they have different SHA-1 hashes because they are based off of a different commit in origin/feature than the one you rebased them on in your local repository.

    Here's an example. Let's assume that this is your history before doing git pull on master:

    A - B - C (master)
             \
              D - E (feature)
    

    After git pull, master got commit F:

    A - B - C - F (master, origin/master)
             \
              D - E (feature)
    

    At that point, you rebase feature on top of master, which applies D and E:

    A - B - C - F (master, origin/master)
                 \
                  D - E (feature)
    

    In the meantime, the remote branch origin/feature is still based off commit C:

    A - B - C - F (master, origin/master)
             \   \
              \   D' - E' (feature)
               \
                 D - E (origin/feature)
    

    If you do a git status on feature, Git will tell you that your feature branch has diverged from origin/feature with 3 (F, D', E') and 2 (D, E) commits, respectively.

    Note that D' and E' contain the same changes as D and E but have different commit IDs because they have been rebased on top of F.

    The solution is to do git pull on both master and feature before rebasing feature on master. However, since you may have commits on feature that you haven't yet pushed to origin, you would want to do:

    git checkout feature && git pull --rebase
    

    to avoid creating a merge commit between origin/feature and your local feature.

    Update on the consequences of rebasing:

    In light of this comment, I expanded on the diverging branches. The reason why git status reports that feature and origin/feature diverge after the rebase is due to the fact that rebasing brings in new commits to feature, plus it rewrites the commits that were previously pushed to origin/feature.

    Consider the situation after the pull but before the rebase:

    A - B - C - F (master)
             \
              D - E (feature, origin/feature)
    

    At this point, feature and origin/feature point to the same commit E—in other words, they're in "sync". After rebasing feature on top of master, history will look like this:

    A - B - C - F (master)
             \   \
              \   D' - E' (feature)
               \
                 D - E (origin/feature)
    

    As you can see, feature and origin/feature have diverged, their common ancestor being commit C. This is because feature now contains the new commit F from master plus D' and E' (read as "D prime" and "E prime") which are commits D and E applied on top of F. Even though they contain the same changes, Git considers them to be different because they have different commit IDs. Meanwhile, origin/feature still references D and E.

    At this point, you've rewritten history: you've modified existing commits by virtue of rebasing them, effectively creating "new" ones.

    Now, if you were to run git pull on feature this is what would happen:

    A - B - C - F (master)
             \   \
              \   D' - E'- M (feature)
               \         /
                 D - E - (origin/feature)
    

    Since git pull does git fetch + git merge, this would result in the creation of the merge commit M, whose parents are E' and E.

    If, instead, you ran git pull --rebase (that is, git fetch + git rebase) then Git would:

    1. Move feature to commit C (the common ancestor of feature and origin/feature)
    2. Apply D and E from origin/feature
    3. Apply F, D' and E'

    However, noticing that D' and E' contain the same changes as D and E, Git would just discard them, resulting in a history looking like this:

    A - B - C - F (master)
             \   
              D - E - F' (feature)
                  ^
                 (origin/feature)
    

    Notice how commit F, previously reachable from feature, got applied on top of origin/feature resulting in F'. At this point, git status would tell you this:

    Your branch is ahead of 'origin/feature' by 1 commit.

    That commit being, of course, F'.

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  • 2021-01-29 20:55

    When you rebased your feature branch on top of master, you created a bunch of new commits. However, your origin/feature branch is still pointing to the old ones. This is the situation after the rebase:

    C' (feature)
    B'
    A'
    * (master, origin/master)
    *
    *
    | C (origin/feature)
    | B
    | A
    |/
    * some base commit
    

    While the commit A' contains a similar change set as commit A, it is by no means the same commit. It contains a different tree, and has a different parent.

    Now, when you try to pull feature again, you try to create this history:

    * (feature)
    |\
    C'|
    B'|
    A'|
    * | (master, origin/master)
    * |
    * |
    | C (origin/feature)
    | B
    | A
    |/
    * some base commit
    

    You are merging two branches that have introduced very similar, jet different changes. This is bound to create a ton of conflicts, apart from being entirely pointless.

    What you need to do is inform your upstream repo about the rebase by using git push -f. This will loose the old history, and replace it with the rewritten one.

    The alternative is to avoid using git rebase on branches that you have already pushed to any other repository, or avoid git rebase altogether. This is the cleaner approach: It results in the history as it has happened, instead of telling lies about history as git rebase does. That's at least what I prefer.

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  • 2021-01-29 20:59

    If the remote versions of master and feature/branch are up-to-date individually, then simply reset your local feature branch

    git checkout feature/branch
    git fetch origin feature/branch
    git reset --hard origin/feature/branch
    

    then if you want to bring in changes in the master branch,

    git rebase origin/master
    
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