28

I have two branches 'master' and 'develop', I create a new branch from master that 'hotfix-1' and then I merge 'hotfix-1' back to master with ;

git checkout master
git merge --no-ff hotfix-1

Created a tag for this point;

git tag -a hotfix-1 -m ""

and then I switched back to develop branch from master and merge 'hotfix-1' with ;

git checkout develop
git merge --no-ff hotfix-1

after merging 'hotfix-1' to develop I'm getting "warning: refname 'hotfix-1' is ambiguous" message and it's successfully merging my changes to develop too.. should I worry about anything ?

Edit

git show-ref --heads --tags

d97bfc563749918799d4659c43f7bffd29cf4d60 refs/heads/develop
594ea85c94f8321d372779ed3dbd5df07bdb059b refs/heads/master
ffc897f8ab19510d5ff4c67969d0f0cb97d1c4f3 refs/tags/beta-1.0
490a8c80ecec70fd2268aa0c2ad7a9beb6bf491c refs/tags/beta-1.1
644adadb43744ad1d2e0f13fc37abb6906520f8f refs/tags/hotfix-1.0.1
4c49e8d9ddc8d601ed794f307e1c29acfc84b31b refs/tags/release-1.0
0

3 Answers 3

34

From your original question it looks like you have a tag and a branch named hotfix-1. Of course, their actual names are refs/tags/hotfix-1 and refs/heads/hotfix-1 respectively, but Git allows you to use the shorthand, which in this case is ambiguous since Git allows you to use any committish in the git merge statement. In fact, when I tested this scenario, Git merged the tag, and not the branch.

When looking at your git show-ref --heads --tags output it is unclear, though, since there only a tag named hotfix-1.0.1, and no branch with the same name. It looks like you may have changed things subsequently.

14

Here's an example where what Joseph's assumption about what happened actually happened to us.

git merge BranchyBranch_r2.1 warning: refname 'BranchyBranch_r2.1' is ambiguous.

There actually is both a tag and a branch of the same name (BranchyBranch_r2.1), and on top of that, someone tried to alleviate the problem by aliasing the tag that duplicated the branch.

git show-ref --heads --tags ac729d902578378557f9f20dbd415c5748a23230 refs/heads/BranchyBranch_r2.1 9f3d242e03837fd33f8355005e9edbee89367bef refs/heads/develop 5995987876e6a2315544bd774b546ed561f78a53 refs/heads/master df26c94be018268e2897807c0750b5c66150750b refs/tags/BranchyBranch_r2.1 df26c94be018268e2897807c0750b5c66150750b refs/tags/BranchyBranch_r2.1Tag

If you refer to the branch by its fully qualified name, then you can proceed.

git merge refs/heads/BranchyBranch_r2.1

1
  • Thank you! That's exactly what I was looking for. I had a tag with the same name of the branch, and that couldn’t allow me to pull the branch and it always says that I have the latest changes already. But in fact, it was fetching the tag, not the branch. So I deleted the tag and all went fine.
    – Hassen Ch.
    Mar 30, 2020 at 11:37
0

Incase if you have the branch and a tag with same name of a repository better to create a new branch / tag from the revision number.

git checkout -b {new_branch_name} {revision}

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