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I currently have two Git repos that were created from the same SVN repo at different moments in time. One of the Git repos is local to my box (in folder temp), the other one is a remote repo that I have cloned to a different folder on my box (SS). The local repo is the most current repo. How can I use Git to update the remote repo with just the deltas from when the remote repo was created until today's latest change?

Below is what I have tried

cd SS
git add remote temp ../temp
git fetch temp

Results:

warning: no common commits
remote: Counting objects: 77563, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (25852/25852), done.
remote: Total 77563 (delta 42638), reused 75783 (delta 40858)
Receiving objects: 100% (77563/77563), 45.68 MiB | 1.23 MiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (42638/42638), done.

I thought that I would need to do a rebase, so I typed

git rebase master

Results:

Current branch master is up to date.

Then I was confused, so I did a

git status

Results:

On branch master
Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/master'
nothing to commit, working tree clean

If this had worked the way I thought it would, it should have had the deltas added to temp from the time SS was created until today.

Where did I go wrong?

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  • If SS repo has no changes and local one is the one most up to date, just do the git push --force.
    – Eimantas
    Nov 8, 2016 at 17:38

1 Answer 1

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The rebase command gives Current branch master is up to date. because you are still On branch master; you have fetched temp, but you haven't changed branches, so the rebase has no effect.

What you probably meant to do was:

git checkout -b temp temp/master
git rebase master

And after that:

git checkout master
git merge --ff-only temp
git svn dcommit
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  • 1
    That was it. Thanks for your help.
    – Crackerman
    Nov 8, 2016 at 18:08

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