If userA
and I both fork a project from userB
. Then userA
creates a commit in their master fork and has not decided to make a pull request to userB
master. How do I add their commit (userA
) to my dev branch (not my master) in my fork?
1 Answer
You can actually do this with one command. For example:
git pull https://github.com/userA/repo.git master
This will merge userA's master
branch into your current branch (use git checkout dev
on your own repository first).
If you find yourself doing this frequently, you can add a remote to your local repository that allows you to refer to userA's repository with a single name. For example:
git remote add userA https://github.com/userA/repo.git
git pull userA master
-
Does this leave any info or meta about
userA
in my dev branch? withgit log
I don't mind but basically I just want the few code changes from the single commit the user did instead of being ugly with copy pasting or copy files (which doesn't seem very git like) so that I can continue and pick up the work on fixing the issue the user was working on from the master– phwdApr 30, 2012 at 20:35 -
Yeah, you may get merge conflicts whenever you do a merge. Fortunately, Git makes them reasonably easy to resolve. I recommend Pro Git as good background reading. Apr 30, 2012 at 21:29