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I've been using Git on Windows (msysgit) to track changes for some design work I've been doing.

Today I've been working on a different PC (with remote repo brian) and I'm now trying to merge the edits done today back into my regular local version on my laptop.

On my laptop, I've used git pull brian master to pull the changes into my local version. Everything was fine apart from the main InDesign document - this shows as a conflict.

The version on the PC (brian) is the latest one that I want to keep but I don't know what commands tells the repo to use this one.

I tried directly copying the file across onto my laptop but this seems to break the whole merge process.

Can anyone point me in the right direction?

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6 Answers

up vote 68 down vote accepted

You have to resolve the conflict manually (copying the file over) and then commit the file (no matter if you copied it over or used the local version) like this

git commit -a -m "Fix merge conflict in test.foo"

Git normally autocommits after merging, but when it detects conflicts it cannot solve by itself, it applies all patches it figured out and leaves the rest for you to resolve and commit manually. The Git Merge Man Page, the Git-SVN Crash Course or this blog entry might shed some light on how it's supposed to work.

Edit: See the post below, you don't actually have to copy the files yourself, but can use

git checkout --ours -- path/to/file.txt
git checkout --theirs -- path/to/file.txt

to select the version of the file you want. Copying / editing the file will only be necessary if you want a mix of both versions.

Please mark mipadis answer as the correct one.

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1  
Thanks for that. I wasn't sure if there was some sort of build-in way to mark a file as the 'correct' one. Explains why I couldn't find the non-existent command though! – Kevin Wilson Nov 10 '08 at 18:35
Yep, thats a bit unintuitive - something like git resolve would be nice, but would also be an extra step ... – VolkA Nov 10 '08 at 20:22

git checkout accepts a --ours or --theirs option for cases like this. So if you have a merge conflict, and you know you just want the file from the branch you are merging in, you can do:

$ git checkout --theirs -- path/to/conflicted-file.txt

to use that version of the file. Likewise, if you know you want your version (not the one being merged in) you can use

$ git checkout --ours -- path/to/conflicted-file.txt
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33  
Please mark this answer as the correct answer for your question! – Milan Gardian Jul 2 '10 at 3:46
8  
I had to run 'git reset HEAD path/to/conflicted-file.txt' on the file before using --ours, otherwise it seemed to have no effect. – Zitrax Oct 13 '11 at 13:48
1  
@Zitrax Did you diff the file after running git checkout --ours? The man page suggests (IMHO) that checkout --ours/--theirs will remove the change from the "both modified, need merge" list and add it to the index, and I think that's not correct. I believe you will need to run git add after the checkout. – Tim Keating May 13 at 21:06

You can also overcame this problem with

git mergetool

which causes git to create local copies of the conflicted binary and spawn your default editor on them:

  • {conflicted}.HEAD
  • {conflicted}
  • {conflicted}.REMOTE

Obviously you can't usefully edit binaries files in a text editor. Instead you copy the new {conflicted}.REMOTE file over {conflicted} without closing the editor. Then when you do close the editor git will see that the undecorated working-copy has been changed and your merge conflict is resolved in the usual way.

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4  
This answer totally deserves more upvotes. – Chetan Oct 1 '12 at 23:09

To resolve by keeping the version in your current branch (ignore the version from the branch you are merging in), just add and commit the file:

git commit -a

To resolve by overwriting the version in your current branch with the version from the branch you are merging in, you need to retrieve that version into your working directory first, and then add/commit it:

git checkout otherbranch theconflictedfile
git commit -a

Explained in more detail

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I came across a similar problem (wanting to pull a commit that included some binary files which caused conflicts when merged), but came across a different solution that can be done entirely using git (i.e. not having to manually copy files over). I figured I'd include it here so at the very least I can remember it the next time I need it. :) The steps look like this:

% git fetch

This fetches the latest commit(s) from the remote repository (you may need to specify a remote branch name, depending on your setup), but doesn't try to merge them. It records the the commit in FETCH_HEAD

% git checkout FETCH_HEAD stuff/to/update

This takes the copy of the binary files I want and overwrites what's in the working tree with the version fetched from the remote branch. git doesn't try to do any merging, so you just end up with an exact copy of the binary file from the remote branch. Once that's done, you can add/commit the new copy just like normal.

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From the git checkout docs

git checkout [-f|--ours|--theirs|-m|--conflict=<style>] [<tree-ish>] [--] <paths>...

--ours
--theirs
When checking out paths from the index, check out stage #2 (ours) or #3 (theirs) for unmerged paths.

The index may contain unmerged entries because of a previous failed merge. By default, if you try to check out such an entry from the index, the checkout operation will fail and nothing will be checked out. Using -f will ignore these unmerged entries. The contents from a specific side of the merge can be checked out of the index by using --ours or --theirs. With -m, changes made to the working tree file can be discarded to re-create the original conflicted merge result.

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