There's the ours
merge strategy (not to be confused with the ours
argument to the recursive
merge strategy):
$ git checkout dev
$ git merge -s ours rel7
This will make a merge commit in branch dev
, so that dev
appears to have rel7
merged in, but will use all (and only) the files from branch dev
. Whether that really gains you anything depends on how you use these: the point of doing such a merge is that if there's a later fix on rel7
that can be incorporated into dev
with no changes,1 you can commit it to rel7
first, then later, git merge rel7
into dev
to pick up the same fix in dev
.
1In other words, the fix that went in as separate "fix1b" and then "fix1a" commits does not qualify. You were unable to simply merge in the fix1b change as it went into a different file/function/whatever. There was no advantage to fixing the problem in rel7
first, then merging rel7
into dev
. (It's often hard to tell in advance whether this will be true, so you could try it as described below, and discover the no-advantage case afterward ... after which, well, you get to pick your poison as far as "how to do it" goes, there are no single best answers for such cases.)
The idea here is that you make the fix on the release branch first, then git merge
that same fix into the development line. Making this "dummy" merge with the ours
strategy simply sets things up so that the next merge does not attempt to bring in "fix1b".
Using the methods described on your linked page, you would have coded up "fix1b" first, on the release branch (or on a branch coming off the release branch), and tested and released it. Then you would have done a git merge
to bring it into dev
, and if that merge required changes, you might have made the changes as part of the merge (some people really dislike this method) or as a separate fix-up commit afterward (I dislike this one myself, it often leaves the merge commit itself broken or failing tests).
cherry-pick