1804

I'm using Git on a new project that has two parallel -- but currently experimental -- development branches:

  • master: import of existing codebase plus a few modifications that I'm generally sure of
  • exp1: experimental branch #1
  • exp2: experimental branch #2

exp1 and exp2 represent two very different architectural approaches. Until I get further along I have no way of knowing which one (if either) will work. As I make progress in one branch I sometimes have edits that would be useful in the other branch and would like to merge just those.

What is the best way to merge selective changes from one development branch to another while leaving behind everything else?

Approaches I've considered:

  1. git merge --no-commit followed by manual unstaging of a large number of edits that I don't want to make common between the branches.

  2. Manual copying of common files into a temporary directory followed by git checkout to move to the other branch and then more manual copying out of the temporary directory into the working tree.

  3. A variation on the above. Abandon the exp branches for now and use two additional local repositories for experimentation. This makes the manual copying of files much more straightforward.

All three of these approaches seem tedious and error-prone. I'm hoping there is a better approach; something akin to a filter path parameter that would make git-merge more selective.

4

30 Answers 30

1183

tl;dr

git checkout source_branch -- path/to/file
# resolve conflicts if any
git commit -am '...'

I had the exact same problem as mentioned by you above. But I found this clearer in explaining the answer.

Summary:

  • Check out the path(s) from the branch you want to merge,

     $ git checkout source_branch -- <paths>...
    
    Hint: It also works without `--` like seen in the linked post.
    
  • or to selectively merge hunks

     $ git checkout -p source_branch -- <paths>...
    

Alternatively, use reset and then add with the option -p,

    $ git reset <paths>...
    $ git add -p <paths>...
  • Finally commit

     $ git commit -m "'Merge' these changes"
    
17
  • 329
    This isn't a real merge. You're picking changes by file instead of by commit, and you'll lose any existing commit information (author, message). Granted, this is good if you want to merge all changes in some files and it's ok that you must re-do all commits. But if files contain both changes to merge and others to discard, one of the methods provided in other answers will serve you better.
    – akaihola
    Feb 13, 2010 at 12:00
  • 10
    @mykhal and others: this stages the files in the index automatically, so you if you checked out foo.c do git reset HEAD foo.c to unstage that file and you can then diff it. I found this out after trying it and coming back here to look for an answer to this Feb 15, 2011 at 4:09
  • 14
    to see the changes you could also use: git diff --cached
    – OderWat
    Jun 21, 2011 at 6:16
  • 2
    @spacemanaki has what I think is the best answer here. git checkout feature-branch foo.c followed by git reset HEAD foo.c then followed by git add -p to pull in the differences you want or exclude bad ones, then git commit foo.c to save your changes, and git checkout foo.c to reset the index. Worked like a charm.
    – radicand
    Aug 19, 2012 at 2:48
  • 11
    According to this answer git checkout -p <revision> -- <path> will be the same as issuing the first three commands you described :)
    – 7hi4g0
    Jan 22, 2015 at 22:32
573

You use the cherry-pick command to get individual commits from one branch.

If the change(s) you want are not in individual commits, then use the method shown here to split the commit into individual commits. Roughly speaking, you use git rebase -i to get the original commit to edit, then git reset HEAD^ to selectively revert changes, then git commit to commit that bit as a new commit in the history.

There is another nice method here in Red Hat Magazine, where they use git add --patch or possibly git add --interactive which allows you to add just parts of a hunk, if you want to split different changes to an individual file (search in that page for "split").

Having split the changes, you can now cherry-pick just the ones you want.

9
  • 26
    From my understanding, this is needlessly more convoluted than the higher-voted answer. Feb 3, 2012 at 2:24
  • 80
    This is technically the correct answer, the correct answer does appear "convoluted". --- The higher voted answer is just a quick and dirty "does the trick" answer, which for most people is all they are about (:
    – Jay
    Mar 9, 2012 at 7:46
  • 3
    @akaihola: HEAD^ is correct. See man git-rev-parse: A suffix ^ to a revision parameter means the first parent of that commit object. The prefix ^ notation is used to exclude commits reachable from a commit.
    – Tyler Rick
    Feb 13, 2013 at 19:49
  • 1
    @Torek - Yet another awful git solution to sync'ing a dev-branch.... I'll use either (1) manual backup; or (2) separate clone to restore things to where I want them after the complete merge.
    – jww
    Jul 29, 2016 at 6:12
  • 25
    Confused by the debate over which approach is 'correct'? Consider the difference between files & commits (see Remarks at bottom). OP wants to merge FILES & does not mention COMMITS. The higher-voted answer is specific to files; the accepted answer uses cherry-pick, which is specific to commits. Cherry-pick may be key for merging commits selectively, but it can be very painful for moving files from one branch to another. Though commits are the heart of git's strength, don't forget files still have a role!
    – Kay V
    Aug 26, 2016 at 5:16
463

To selectively merge files from one branch into another branch, run

git merge --no-ff --no-commit branchX

where branchX is the branch you want to merge from into the current branch.

The --no-commit option will stage the files that have been merged by Git without actually committing them. This will give you the opportunity to modify the merged files however you want to and then commit them yourself.

Depending on how you want to merge files, there are four cases:

1) You want a true merge.

In this case, you accept the merged files the way Git merged them automatically and then commit them.

2) There are some files you don't want to merge.

For example, you want to retain the version in the current branch and ignore the version in the branch you are merging from.

To select the version in the current branch, run:

git checkout HEAD file1

This will retrieve the version of file1 in the current branch and overwrite the file1 automerged by Git.

3) If you want the version in branchX (and not a true merge).

Run:

git checkout branchX file1

This will retrieve the version of file1 in branchX and overwrite file1 auto-merged by Git.

4) The last case is if you want to select only specific merges in file1.

In this case, you can edit the modified file1 directly, update it to whatever you'd want the version of file1 to become, and then commit.

If Git cannot merge a file automatically, it will report the file as "unmerged" and produce a copy where you will need to resolve the conflicts manually.



To explain further with an example, let's say you want to merge branchX into the current branch:

git merge --no-ff --no-commit branchX

You then run the git status command to view the status of modified files.

For example:

git status

# On branch master
# Changes to be committed:
#
#       modified:   file1
#       modified:   file2
#       modified:   file3
# Unmerged paths:
#   (use "git add/rm <file>..." as appropriate to mark resolution)
#
#       both modified:      file4
#

Where file1, file2, and file3 are the files git have successfully auto-merged.

What this means is that changes in the master and branchX for all those three files have been combined together without any conflicts.

You can inspect how the merge was done by running the git diff --cached;

git diff --cached file1
git diff --cached file2
git diff --cached file3

If you find some merge undesirable then you can

  1. edit the file directly
  2. save
  3. git commit

If you don't want to merge file1 and want to retain the version in the current branch

Run

git checkout HEAD file1

If you don't want to merge file2 and only want the version in branchX

Run

git checkout branchX file2

If you want file3 to be merged automatically, don't do anything.

Git has already merged it at this point.


file4 above is a failed merge by Git. This means there are changes in both branches that occur on the same line. This is where you will need to resolve the conflicts manually. You can discard the merged done by editing the file directly or running the checkout command for the version in the branch you want file4 to become.


Finally, don't forget to git commit.

10
  • 11
    Careful though: If the git merge --no-commit branchX is just a fast-forward, the pointer will be updated, and the --no-commit is thus silently ignored
    – cfi
    Mar 12, 2012 at 16:14
  • 17
    @cfi What about adding --no-ff to prevent that behavior? Aug 16, 2013 at 13:31
  • 5
    I definitely suggest updating this answer with Eduardo's "--no-ff" option. I read through the whole thing (which was otherwise great) only to have my merge get fast-forwarded.
    – Funktr0n
    May 2, 2014 at 15:44
  • 23
    Unlike the answer with the most votes, this solution preserved my merge history, which is important to me as I weave partial commits back and forth across branches. I didn't try all of the other suggested solutions, so perhaps some of them do this as well.
    – ws_e_c421
    Oct 19, 2014 at 12:54
  • 12
    BIG CAUTION. This merge works in one direction, but the files that you did not include in the merge are seen as DELETED if you decide to merge your upstream master back into the source branch. I use a git-flow like process using a master branch (production main-line), a staging branch (staging server main-line), and topic branches based off of the staging branch. Using this strategy has resulted in my "reverse merge" from master back into staging to competely fail thinking everything I didn't merge from staging to master is deleted. This includes whole files and hunks. YOU ARE WARNED Feb 7, 2018 at 22:06
119

I don't like the above approaches. Using cherry-pick is great for picking a single change, but it is a pain if you want to bring in all the changes except for some bad ones. Here is my approach.

There is no --interactive argument you can pass to git merge.

Here is the alternative:

You have some changes in branch 'feature' and you want to bring some but not all of them over to 'master' in a not sloppy way (i.e. you don't want to cherry pick and commit each one)

git checkout feature
git checkout -b temp
git rebase -i master

# Above will drop you in an editor and pick the changes you want ala:
pick 7266df7 First change
pick 1b3f7df Another change
pick 5bbf56f Last change

# Rebase b44c147..5bbf56f onto b44c147
#
# Commands:
# pick = use commit
# edit = use commit, but stop for amending
# squash = use commit, but meld into previous commit
#
# If you remove a line here THAT COMMIT WILL BE LOST.
# However, if you remove everything, the rebase will be aborted.
#

git checkout master
git pull . temp
git branch -d temp

So just wrap that in a shell script, change master into $to and change feature into $from and you are good to go:

#!/bin/bash
# git-interactive-merge
from=$1
to=$2
git checkout $from
git checkout -b ${from}_tmp
git rebase -i $to
# Above will drop you in an editor and pick the changes you want
git checkout $to
git pull . ${from}_tmp
git branch -d ${from}_tmp
1
  • 4
    You might want to change git rebase -i $to to git rebase -i $to || $SHELL, so that the user can call git --skip etc, as necessary if the rebase fails. Also worth chaining the lines together with && instead of newlines. Feb 24, 2011 at 18:10
116

There is another way to go:

git checkout -p

It is a mix between git checkout and git add -p and might quite be exactly what you are looking for:

   -p, --patch
       Interactively select hunks in the difference between the <tree-ish>
       (or the index, if unspecified) and the working tree. The chosen
       hunks are then applied in reverse to the working tree (and if a
       <tree-ish> was specified, the index).

       This means that you can use git checkout -p to selectively discard
       edits from your current working tree. See the “Interactive Mode”
       section of git-add(1) to learn how to operate the --patch mode.
4
  • 16
    This is by far the easiest, simplest method, as long as you only have a manageable number of changes to merge in. I hope more people will notice this answer and upvote it. Example: git checkout --patch exp1 file_to_merge
    – Tyler Rick
    Feb 13, 2013 at 19:56
  • 2
    Similar answer posted on this question: stackoverflow.com/a/11593308/47185
    – Tyler Rick
    Feb 13, 2013 at 20:00
  • Oh, I didn't know checkout had a patch! I did checkout/reset/add -p instead. Feb 26, 2013 at 14:04
  • 3
    Truly the most simplest method. git checkout -p featurebranch filename. And the best thing is when the command is run, it gives you a y/n/e/?/...etc. option to decide how to merge the file. I tried with e and I could even edit the patch before applying ... How cool is it. A true one liner for merging selective files from other branches. Mar 2, 2016 at 15:33
69

While some of these answers are pretty good, I feel like none actually answered the OP's original constraint: selecting particular files from particular branches. This solution does that, but it may be tedious if there are many files.

Let’s say you have the master, exp1, and exp2 branches. You want to merge one file from each of the experimental branches into master. I would do something like this:

git checkout master
git checkout exp1 path/to/file_a
git checkout exp2 path/to/file_b

# Save these files as a stash
git stash

# Merge stash with master
git merge stash

This will give you in-file diffs for each of the files you want. Nothing more. Nothing less. It's useful you have radically different file changes between versions --in my case, changing an application from Ruby on Rails 2 to Ruby on Rails 3.

This will merge files, but it does a smart merge. I wasn't able to figure out how to use this method to get in-file diff information (maybe it still will for extreme differences. Annoying small things like whitespace get merged back in unless you use the -s recursive -X ignore-all-space option)

8
  • 5
    Also note: you can do multiple files from a given branch all inline, eg git checkout exp1 path/to/file_a path/to/file_x
    – EMiller
    Oct 4, 2011 at 22:37
  • 2
    This is beautiful. I did git checkout feature <path>/* to get groups of files.
    – isherwood
    Jan 30, 2014 at 18:43
  • This works ok, but added two extra commit objects. Not a huge deal but a bit messy
    – MightyPork
    Sep 20, 2015 at 13:42
  • 3
    Oh that's clear, I think. This way it merges the one file, not necessarily overwriting previous changes on the target branch.
    – MightyPork
    Sep 22, 2015 at 22:23
  • 1
    @EricHu like you commented, there should be no need to bother with the stash and merge. Just do a commit after the checkout of the files from the other branches. The changes are already staged at that point. Mar 5, 2016 at 4:46
56

1800 INFORMATION's answer is completely correct. As someone new to Git, though, "use git cherry-pick" wasn't enough for me to figure this out without a bit more digging on the Internet, so I thought I'd post a more detailed guide in case anyone else is in a similar boat.

My use case was wanting to selectively pull changes from someone else's GitHub branch into my own. If you already have a local branch with the changes, you only need to do steps 2 and 5-7.

  1. Create (if not created) a local branch with the changes you want to bring in.

    $ git branch mybranch <base branch>

  2. Switch into it.

    $ git checkout mybranch

  3. Pull down the changes you want from the other person's account. If you haven't already, you'll want to add them as a remote.

    $ git remote add repos-w-changes <git url>

  4. Pull down everything from their branch.

    $ git pull repos-w-changes branch-i-want

  5. View the commit logs to see which changes you want:

    $ git log

  6. Switch back to the branch you want to pull the changes into.

    $ git checkout originalbranch

  7. Cherry pick your commits, one by one, with the hashes.

    $ git cherry-pick -x hash-of-commit

Hat tip: http://www.sourcemage.org/Git_Guide (archived copy)

5
  • 3
    Tip: first use the git cherry command (see manual first) to identify commits you haven't yet merged.
    – akaihola
    Feb 13, 2010 at 12:09
  • This works .. 1. created a new branch 2.created some files/ made some changes 3. commit 4. checkout the master branch 5. Run git cherry-pick -x hash-of-commit and resolve merge conflicts are you are good to go. May 12, 2016 at 18:50
  • 1
    Your link is not working anymore. Can you update it please?
    – alex_c137
    Apr 16, 2018 at 7:00
  • The link is (effectively) broken: "Authentication Required ... https://www.sourcemage.org is requesting your username and password. The site says: 'Restricted Zone'". (It is also redirecting to HTTPS.) Jul 28, 2020 at 12:23
  • thanks, I just removed it as I'm not sure where to find the original at this point
    – Cory
    Jul 29, 2020 at 12:09
46

Here is how you can replace Myclass.java file in master branch with Myclass.java in feature1 branch. It will work even if Myclass.java doesn't exist on master.

git checkout master
git checkout feature1 Myclass.java

Note this will overwrite - not merge - and ignore local changes in the master branch rather.

4
  • 7
    This won't merge. It'll just overwrite the changes on master with the changes from the feature1 branch. Sep 6, 2013 at 20:59
  • 4
    Perfectly, I was looking for this kind of merge where theirs overwrite ours => +1 Cheers ;)
    – oHo
    Sep 25, 2013 at 9:19
  • 1
    Some times all you want to do is replace the whole file, so this is what I wanted, but you need to make sure you want to lose all the changes you made to this file.
    – MagicLAMP
    Sep 10, 2014 at 1:30
  • 1
    Cleanest solution, given that the OP specifically wanted to replace the entire file with the equivalent on another branch: 2. Manual copying of common files into a temp directory followed by ...copying out of the temp directory into the working tree. Sep 25, 2014 at 22:21
31

The simple way, to actually merge specific files from two branches, not just replace specific files with ones from another branch.

Step one: Diff the branches

git diff branch_b > my_patch_file.patch

Creates a patch file of the difference between the current branch and branch_b

Step two: Apply the patch on files matching a pattern

git apply -p1 --include=pattern/matching/the/path/to/file/or/folder my_patch_file.patch

Useful notes on the options

You can use * as a wildcard in the include pattern.

Slashes don't need to be escaped.

Also, you could use --exclude instead and apply it to everything except the files matching the pattern, or reverse the patch with -R

The -p1 option is a holdover from the *Unix patch command and the fact that the patch file's contents prepend each file name with a/ or b/ (or more depending on how the patch file was generated) which you need to strip, so that it can figure out the real file to the path to the file the patch needs to be applied to.

Check out the man page for git-apply for more options.

Step three: there is no step three

Obviously you'd want to commit your changes, but who's to say you don't have some other related tweaks you want to do before making your commit.

4
  • 2
    This was very useful where current_branch had lots of "additional" changes which needed to be preserved. Got the diff of only changes brought in by branch_b as: git diff HEAD...branch_b (yes--three periods does the magic trick).
    – Saad Malik
    Aug 16, 2015 at 20:08
  • @masukomi, On step 2, shouldn't you add the patch-file created in step 1 as an argument?
    – Spiralis
    Jan 20, 2016 at 0:23
  • For me, all changes are rejected. Any idea why? Jan 31, 2020 at 23:49
  • initial thought @LinusGeffarth is that maybe you got the branches backwards when making the patch? will followup outside of SO to see if we can figure it out.
    – masukomi
    Feb 5, 2020 at 17:12
25

Here's how you can get history to follow just a couple of files from another branch with a minimum of fuss, even if a more "simple" merge would have brought over a lot more changes that you don't want.

First, you'll take the unusual step of declaring in advance that what you're about to commit is a merge, without Git doing anything at all to the files in your working directory:

git merge --no-ff --no-commit -s ours branchname1

... where "branchname" is whatever you claim to be merging from. If you were to commit right away, it would make no changes, but it would still show ancestry from the other branch. You can add more branches, tags, etc. to the command line if you need to, as well. At this point though, there are no changes to commit, so get the files from the other revisions, next.

git checkout branchname1 -- file1 file2 etc.

If you were merging from more than one other branch, repeat as needed.

git checkout branchname2 -- file3 file4 etc.

Now the files from the other branch are in the index, ready to be committed, with history.

git commit

And you'll have a lot of explaining to do in that commit message.

Please note though, in case it wasn't clear, that this is a messed up thing to do. It is not in the spirit of what a "branch" is for, and cherry-pick is a more honest way to do what you'd be doing, here. If you wanted to do another "merge" for other files on the same branch that you didn't bring over last time, it will stop you with an "already up to date" message. It's a symptom of not branching when we should have, in that the "from" branch should be more than one different branch.

4
  • 3
    Your first command (git merge --no-ff --no-commit -s outs branchname1) is exactly what I was looking for! Thanks!
    – RobM
    Nov 23, 2012 at 18:39
  • 1
    With multiple branches, required history, need to merge single file(s) and have to change the content of the file before pushing, this seems to be a decent alternative. For example dev => master, but you want to change the a host definition or similar before pushing to master.
    – timss
    May 11, 2014 at 12:33
  • 1
    This worked perfectly, The only change I made was to do a git merge --continue instead of the final git commit. Thanks!
    – John
    Sep 14, 2020 at 16:36
  • Looking back on this, I think I would rather do the -s ours --no-ff merge and commit it, establishing parentage, but do not push it yet; Then I'd stage some or all of the changes I'd wanted, and commit them with --amend, repeating until satisfied. I'd recommend doing all that on a temporary branch. If it works, go back to the intended branch and fast forward to the temp - deleting the temp or not, as befitting your local customs.
    – jejese
    Aug 11, 2023 at 15:10
21

The easiest way is to set your repository to the branch you want to merge with, and then run

git checkout [branch with file] [path to file you would like to merge]

If you run

git status

you will see the file already staged...

Then run

git commit -m "Merge changes on '[branch]' to [file]"

Simple.

3
  • 4
    This almost the best answer I found. please see jasonrudolph.com/blog/2009/02/25/… So clear, concise and it just works! Sep 15, 2014 at 0:02
  • 6
    that will completely replace the files content from the source branch rather than merging
    – Amare
    Sep 13, 2018 at 0:04
  • 2
    I was just about to answer like this, I thought I invent new things that haven't been answered yet! But this is the the most simple way to do it. This should be on top! Dec 11, 2019 at 10:10
20

This is my workflow for merging selective files.

# Make a new branch (this will be temporary)
git checkout -b newbranch

# Grab the changes
git merge --no-commit  featurebranch

# Unstage those changes
git reset HEAD
(You can now see the files from the merge are unstaged)

# Now you can chose which files are to be merged.
git add -p

# Remember to "git add" any new files you wish to keep
git commit
1
  • 1
    I used a slight variation on this. Instead of merging I cherry-picked. It does the job. The only downside to this approach is you lose the reference to the original commit hash. Jun 24, 2011 at 2:49
17

It's strange that git still does not have such a convenient tool "out of the box". I use it heavily when update some old version branch (which still has a lot of software users) by just some bugfixes from the current version branch. In this case it is often needed to quickly get just some lines of code from the file in trunk, ignoring a lot of other changes (that are not supposed to go into the old version)... And of course interactive three-way merge is needed in this case, git checkout --patch <branch> <file path> is not usable for this selective merge purpose.

You can do it easily:

Just add this line to [alias] section in your global .gitconfig or local .git/config file:

[alias]
    mergetool-file = "!sh -c 'git show $1:$2 > $2.theirs; git show $(git merge-base $1 $(git rev-parse HEAD)):$2 > $2.base; /C/BCompare3/BCompare.exe $2.theirs $2 $2.base $2; rm -f $2.theirs; rm -f $2.base;' -"

It implies you use Beyond Compare. Just change to software of your choice if needed. Or you can change it to three-way auto-merge if you don't need the interactive selective merging:

[alias]
    mergetool-file = "!sh -c 'git show $1:$2 > $2.theirs; git show $(git merge-base $1 $(git rev-parse HEAD)):$2 > $2.base; git merge-file $2 $2.base $2.theirs; rm -f $2.theirs; rm -f $2.base;' -"

Then use like this:

git mergetool-file <source branch> <file path>

This will give you the true selective tree-way merge opportunity of just any file in other branch.

14

I found this post to contain the simplest answer. Merely do:

git checkout <branch from which you want files> <file paths>

Example

Pulling .gitignore file from branchB into current branch:

git checkout branchB .gitignore

See the post for more information.

2
  • 7
    This doesn't really merge, it overwrites the file on current branch.
    – Igor Ralic
    Feb 12, 2014 at 17:13
  • 2
    @igrali That's a useful comment, but compared to the difficulty of the "proper" ways to do this, this is a good workaround. One just has to be very careful. Aug 15, 2014 at 23:10
10

It is not exactly what you were looking for, but it was useful to me:

git checkout -p <branch> -- <paths> ...

It is a mix of some answers.

2
  • 3
    This is indeed usefull and could be added to what is for me the best answer, the @alvinabad's answer. When doing: git checkout HEAD file1 to keep the current version and unmerge the file file1, one can use -p option to select part of the file to be merged. thanks for the trick!
    – Simon C.
    Feb 14, 2018 at 14:15
  • 1
    What does this do? The comments in your answer fail to explain how this command behaves.
    – Stunner
    Nov 8, 2021 at 17:21
10

I had the exact same problem as mentioned by you above. But I found this Git blog clearer in explaining the answer.

Command from the above link:

# You are in the branch you want to merge to
git checkout <branch_you_want_to_merge_from> <file_paths...>
1
  • 3
    did you test this? i am sure the files will be replaced from <branch_you_want_to_merge_from> rather than being merged
    – Amare
    Sep 13, 2018 at 0:02
7

For me, git reset --soft branch is the easiest way to selectively pick the changes from another branch, since, this command puts in my working tree, all the diff changes, and I can easily pick or revert which one I need.

In this way, I have full control over the committed files.

7

I would do a

git diff commit1..commit2 filepattern | git-apply --index && git commit

This way you can limit the range of commits for a filepattern from a branch.

It is stolen from Re: How to pull only a few files from one branch to another?

3
  • 1
    In some situations, this could be very handy. However, if the changes are in a different branch, you can just checkout from the tip of that branch, as in Bart J's answer above.
    – cdunn2001
    Jun 22, 2011 at 8:26
  • 10
    Who is Bart Js?
    – Black
    Dec 13, 2018 at 14:00
  • This works the same as git checkout branch ... below - the local changes not present in branch are removed(!). They are marked as "removed" in the patch file as plain diff does not check the commits history. Aug 7, 2020 at 13:21
7

You can use read-tree to read or merge a given remote tree into the current index, for example:

git remote add foo [email protected]/foo.git
git fetch foo
git read-tree --prefix=my-folder/ -u foo/master:trunk/their-folder

To perform the merge, use -m instead.

See also: How do I merge a sub directory in Git?

7

I like the previous 'git-interactive-merge' answer, but there's one easier. Let Git do this for you using a rebase combination of interactive and onto:

      A---C1---o---C2---o---o feature
     /
----o---o---o---o master

So the case is you want C1 and C2 from the 'feature' branch (branch point 'A'), but none of the rest for now.

# git branch temp feature
# git checkout master
# git rebase -i --onto HEAD A temp

Which, as in the previous answer, drops you in to the interactive editor where you select the 'pick' lines for C1 and C2 (as above). Save and quit, and then it will proceed with the rebase and give you branch 'temp' and also HEAD at master + C1 + C2:

      A---C1---o---C2---o---o feature
     /
----o---o---o---o-master--C1---C2 [HEAD, temp]

Then you can just update master to HEAD and delete the temp branch and you're good to go:

# git branch -f master HEAD
# git branch -d temp
2
  • Can you link directly to the other answer you are referring to (user names are not stable enough as they can change at any time)? (Sort by "Oldest" to restrict the number of possible answers (before yours).) Jul 28, 2020 at 12:42
  • @PeterMortensen good point, I'm pretty sure I got the right one in there now.
    – Wade
    Aug 2, 2020 at 3:10
5

I wrote my own script called 'pmerge' to partially merge directories. It's a work in progress and I'm still learning both Git and Bash scripting.

This command uses git merge --no-commit and then unapplies changes that don't match the path provided.

Usage: git pmerge branch path
Example: git merge develop src/

I haven't tested it extensively. The working directory should be free of any uncommitted changes and untracked files.

#!/bin/bash

E_BADARGS=65

if [ $# -ne 2 ]
then
    echo "Usage: `basename $0` branch path"
    exit $E_BADARGS
fi

git merge $1 --no-commit
IFS=$'\n'

# List of changes due to merge | replace nulls with newlines | strip lines to just filenames | ensure lines are unique
for f in $(git status --porcelain -z -uno | tr '\000' '\n' | sed -e 's/^[[:graph:]][[:space:]]\{1,\}//' | uniq); do
    [[ $f == $2* ]] && continue
    if git reset $f >/dev/null 2>&1; then
        # Reset failed... file was previously unversioned
        echo Deleting $f
        rm $f
    else
        echo Reverting $f
        git checkout -- $f >/dev/null 2>&1
    fi
done
unset IFS
5

A simple approach for selective merging/committing by file:

git checkout dstBranch
git merge srcBranch

// Make changes, including resolving conflicts to single files
git add singleFile1 singleFile2
git commit -m "message specific to a few files"
git reset --hard # Blow away uncommitted changes
2
  • Doesn't git reset --hard get rid of committed changes? Sep 4, 2020 at 23:19
  • @Prometheus according to documentation: "Resets the index and working tree. Any changes to tracked files in the working tree since <commit> are discarded." So the commit itself is safe.
    – pepoluan
    Dec 21, 2020 at 7:35
4

If you don't have too many files that have changed, this will leave you with no extra commits.

1. Duplicate branch temporarily
$ git checkout -b temp_branch

2. Reset to last wanted commit
$ git reset --hard HEAD~n, where n is the number of commits you need to go back

3. Checkout each file from original branch
$ git checkout origin/original_branch filename.ext

Now you can commit and force push (to overwrite remote), if needed.

3

If you only need to merge a particular directory and leave everything else intact and yet preserve history, you could possibly try this... create a new target-branch off of the master before you experiment.

The steps below assume you have two branches target-branch and source-branch, and the directory dir-to-merge that you want to merge is in the source-branch. Also assume you have other directories like dir-to-retain in the target that you don't want to change and retain history. Also, assumes there are merge conflicts in the dir-to-merge.

git checkout target-branch
git merge --no-ff --no-commit -X theirs source-branch
# the option "-X theirs", will pick theirs when there is a conflict. 
# the options "--no--ff --no-commit" prevent a commit after a merge, and give you an opportunity to fix other directories you want to retain, before you commit this merge.

# the above, would have messed up the other directories that you want to retain.
# so you need to reset them for every directory that you want to retain.
git reset HEAD dir-to-retain
# verify everything and commit.
3

When only a few files have changed between the current commits of the two branches, I manually merge the changes by going through the different files.

git difftool <branch-1>..<branch-2>

see also https://sites.google.com/site/icusite/setup/git-difftool

3

I found a solution to this question which is really beautiful & simplistic. So I'm just keeping it here for myself & others who want to use this solution.

ANSWER
Say I am in branch1 which contains a single file, file1.txt
Now, I want to the file1.txt with another file file2.txt which is in branch2.
So the command should be,

git checkout --patch branch2 <path_of_file2.txt_in_context_of_branch2>

which prompts a console saying you need to input specific character to reflect the changes in your current branch which is branch1. Sometimes I use a to accept all the hunks.

I hope this answer is helpful.
Thanks

1

I'm going to concentrate on the subset of this problem that was of interest to me: I have two branches and I want to pseudo-merge one file from one into the other.

(I say "pseudo-merge" because I don't need or want a merge commit; I just want to combine the contributions of both versions of the file, in the way that I see fit.)

My approach is based on the approach taken in https://stackoverflow.com/a/39916536/341994. Unfortunately that question is closed as a duplicate (wrongly, in my opinion: it's not a duplicate of this question, and it is wrong to answer-and-close-as-duplicate which is what the answerer did there). But there are some things wrong with that answer, so I've modernized and cleaned up the approach. Instead of checkout and reset, I use restore, and I don't bother to commit anything I don't have to.

Okay, so imagine I have three files:

$ ls
a   b   f

But I only want to pseudo-merge one of them, a, from otherbranch. Let's peek at them to see what the situation will look like. Here's my version:

$ cat a
line one
line two
line three
line four
line five

Here's otherbranch's version:

$ git show otherbranch:a
line one
line two edited
line three
line four
line five
line six

Now the trick here is that we're going to use the index as a scratch pad (which is, after all, what it is for). So we start (STEP 1) by making sure that our version is copied into the index:

$ git add a

Now (STEP 2) we can use restore to fetch the version from otherbranch (nowadays, restore is better than checkout as it lets us talk more clearly):

$ git restore --source otherbranch a

At first blush, this looks bad. We have now completely overwritten our a with the version from otherbranch, as you can see:

$ cat a
line one
line two edited
line three
line four
line five
line six

But not to worry! The previous version of a is still in the index, as you can see:

$ git diff a
diff --git a/a b/a
index abf51fa..333614b 100644
--- a/a
+++ b/a
@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
 line one
-line two
+line two edited
 line three
 line four
 line five
+line six

Very well, now we're ready for the key move (STEP 3). We do an interactive patch add of our file from the working tree to the index.

We could say git add -p a to start the interactive patch process, in which case we are fed hunks one at a time. But in this case there is just one hunk, and I want to edit it anyway, so I say:

$ git add --e a

The result is that we open a patch file of diffs in our editor! It looks like this:

 line one
-line two
+line two edited
 line three
 line four
 line five
+line six

By careful editing we can now decide what parts we want to accept and what parts we don't. Let's accept "line six" but not "line two edited". So we edit to look like this:

 line one
 line two
 line three
 line four
 line five
+line six

We close the editor and the patch is applied to the index version of a. But we are not quite finished! The otherbranch version of a is still sitting in the working tree:

$ cat a
line one
line two edited
line three
line four
line five
line six

The version we like is in the index, remember? To get it, (STEP 4) we just call git restore plain and simple (again, this the modern way; restore is nicer than reset and can apply to a single file):

$ git restore a

Now our a is correct, and we're all finished:

$ cat a
line one
line two
line three
line four
line five
line six

We could at this point commit, but we don't have to; we've accomplished what we set out to accomplish.

1

What I want: Interactively pick hunks from a branch (which had several messy commits) into a clean commit in a new branch.

git diff + git apply won't work if you had any binary files in that diff.

My approach:

# New branch from a clean starting point, e.g. master
git checkout new-clean-branch origin/master

# Get all changes from the messy branch
# (quote the star so your shell doesn't expand it)
git checkout messy-branch -- '*'

# Unstage ("un-add") everything
git restore --staged .

# Interactively add hunks to be staged for commit
git add -p
0

If you are a Gitkraken User here you have a small guide

In summary:

  1. move to the branch which you want to bring the changes. (e.g. develop)
  2. right click on the branch that has the new changes and choose the "cherrypick commit" option (e.g. feature-ABC).
  3. Finally Accept and check for conflicts if any.
0

This adapts @masukomi's diff/apply answer into a one-liner:

git diff HEAD...other_branch -- path/to/file | git apply

You are on a branch my_cool_branch.
You want something from other_branch.

You both modified path/to/file.
You want those changes, but you don't want to obliterate your own changes.

This compares how path/to/file has changed (via diff), and then stages those changes (via apply), without committing.

====

A simpler scenario exists.

You want path/to/file file from other_branch.
Your branch did not modify path/to/file.

In this situation, you can just grab that branch's snapshot of the file:

git checkout other_branch -- path/to/file

This stages a change that modifies path/to/file to match what's in other_branch.
No commit is created. Any other staged changes that you have, remain staged.
You do not switch branch (even though checkout was used).

Ordinarily this would obliterate your own changes to the file, so we should only do this if we know we have no changes to lose.

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