3

For example: there is a local and remote repo with two files:

1.txt
2.txt

Developer #1 edits 1.txt locally and commits the changes without pushing them to remote repo.

Later, developer #2 sends pull request with edited 2.txt, and it gets merged in main remote repo.

My question is: how can developer #1 pull 2.txt from remote repo, and keep changes to 1.txt?

When I try to do this, extra commit is added after 1.txt edit, so it looks like this:

  • 14:00 2.txt commit from developer #2
  • 15:00 1.txt commit from developer #1
  • 16:00 Merge branch "master" of https://github... (2.txt commit again)

Thank you.

1
  • what's the problem? you have the changes to both files already. the extra commit is merging together developer 1 and developer 2's work.
    – Eevee
    Dec 18, 2014 at 22:20

1 Answer 1

7

You should use

git pull --rebase

Your commit would be replayed after the other one this way, so its sha hash will change, but otherwise it will be the same. And this way you can avoid the extra "merge commit".

3
  • Furthermore, you can make --rebase rather than --merge the default behavior for a branch in the .git/config file. And, also, you can make that setting the default for newly created/pulled branches via a global setting.
    – Kaz
    Dec 18, 2014 at 22:17
  • i'm wary of suggesting --rebase to anyone who doesn't intimately understand how it works — it's very easy to get confused by conflicts and screw up your history (or, worse, your branch).
    – Eevee
    Dec 18, 2014 at 22:19
  • I guess in this situation the same could happen with merge as well. But you are right it isn't a 100% safe operation. Dec 18, 2014 at 22:20

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