I'm trying to merge 2 branches that have a lot of changes in them, several with merge conflicts. I merged the files using git mergetool
, but I've subsequently realized that I merged a couple of them incorrectly. I basically want to go back to the conflicted state for those couple files, so I can re-run the mergetool and correct my errors. I don't want to throw away my entire merge, since most of it is correct.
I've tried resetting to my head and then doing git checkout -m other_branch -- my_file
to no avail. I ended up resetting to HEAD, getting the file out of the other branch, and just doing git开发者_开发问答 add --patch
on the file, only staging what I wanted. But there must be a better way...
First, check out if you have conflicted state in the index (before resetting to HEAD), via
$ git ls-files --stage --abbrev my_file
You should get something like the following:
100644 257cc56 1 my_file
100644 b7d6715 2 my_file
100644 5716ca5 3 my_file
If you don't get that, you would have to use git update-index
, like Charles Bailey said, or use temporary files. If you have that, then
$ git checkout -m my_file
should work (I have checked this).
You can do this with git update-index
using either the --cacheinfo
or --index-info
options to remove the 0
entry in the index for a given file and populating the 1
, 2
and 3
entries with the base, local and remote versions respectively but it is going to be fiddly.
It's probably going to be easier to extract the various versions to temporary files, and manually run your merge tool, writing the answer to the correct file and adding the result of the successful merge.
e.g.
git show $(git merge-base HEAD MERGE_HEAD):file >base-file
git show HEAD:file >local-file
git show MERGE_HEAD:file >remote-file
Run mergetool manually, writing to file
.
git add file
You can use:
git checkout [--ours|--theirs|--merge] <paths>
to checkout the path(s) as found on the branch being merged into or from or to recreate the conflicting merge.
The git-checkout manpage has a bit more on this issue.
As Charles Bailey pointed out this does not work when the merged file has already been added to the index. I played around a bit and here is a script that should do the job:
#!/bin/bash
#
# Distributed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.0.
#
# git-goat:
#
# Restore a merge conflict, after it has already been resolved.
# Lifted from contrib/completion/git-completion.bash
__gitdir ()
{
if [ -z "${1-}" ]; then
if [ -n "${__git_dir-}" ]; then
echo "$__git_dir"
elif [ -d .git ]; then
echo .git
else
git rev-parse --git-dir 2>/dev/null
fi
elif [ -d "$1/.git" ]; then
echo "$1/.git"
else
echo "$1"
fi
}
into=$(git describe --all HEAD)
from=$(cat $(__gitdir)/MERGE_HEAD)
base=$(git merge-base $into $from)
case "$1" in --ours|--theirs|--merge) whose=$1; shift; esac
[ -z "$1" ] && echo "fatal: at least one file has to be specified" && exit
for file in "$@"
do
(
echo -e "0 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000\t$file"
git ls-tree $base $file | sed -e "s/\t/ 1\t/"
git ls-tree $into $file | sed -e "s/\t/ 2\t/"
git ls-tree $from $file | sed -e "s/\t/ 3\t/"
) | git update-index --index-info
git checkout ${whose:-"--merge"} $file
done
Note that I haven't tested this much. If you find any problems or have other improvements here is a forkable "gist".
If you accidentally accept say yes to the conflict resolved prompt without saving the changes from mergetool, I think you can just stash the staged changes and redo the merge.
git stash
git merge <other branch>
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