I would like to amend a merge commit which failed a unit test on our continuous integration server, but I don't want to leave a commit which fails tests in the history.
Since this commit was only used by the CI server (and would not have been pulled down by anyone else) I would like to fix up the merge and then --force
push it to replace the existing failed merge commit.
My problem is, I can't work out how to easily get back to the state immediately before the original commit was made, so that I can fix the failing test, recommit the merge and then force push that change up.
I don't really want to have to redo the whole merge, since there are quite a few files with conflicts which had to be resolved and all but one was resolved successfully.
What I have tried so far
Attempt 1: git reset
My first attempt was to do a mixed reset back to the commit before the merge commit, fix the bug introduced by the merge and then recommit.
git reset HEAD^
# Fix the failing test
git commit
Unfortunately this results in a non-merge commit which silently incorporates all of the branch changes - not really what I want. *8')
Attempt 2: reset
, stash
, merge
& apply
I then attempted to use stash to save the changes I made during my first attempt to merge:
git reset HEAD^
git add . # Since there were untracked files
git stash
git merge branch
git stash apply # Fails
git add .
git stash apply # Merged but with conflicts
Unfortunately when git stash apply
attempts to merge my stashed changes with the existing conflicted merge files it fails with the error
Cannot apply to a dirty working tree, please stage your changes
If I dutifully make my working directory clean by using git add .
then the git stash apply
runs but now not only do I have conflicts, I have conflicts with conflicts in them and any files which should have been removed have been added back in.
Attempt 3: amend
and/or rebase
.
I tried the nice simple suggestion by qqx to just fix the problem and git commit --amend
the original commit, but without actually going back to the mid-merge state you lose access to the merge tools.
Once I've committed, I lose the ability to run git mergetool {file}
as it just returns with the error:
{file}: file does not need merging
When trying to fix up a merge conflict, I really like being able to see my base, left, right and current revisions all together using tools like kdiff3
.
using rebase
suffers the same issue.
Any hints on a workflow which could allow me to achieve my desired result would be appreciated.