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I've been using SVN for all my projects. Sometimes project B is originating as a copy from project A. When project A has a generic change, I can use svn merge A within directory B and it will merge those changes.

Now, if I wanted to use git. I don't like having all my projects in the same repository since I then have to clone everything and can't pick just one project like in SVN. But having one repository for each project, how do I go about doing the same like I did earlier with SVN?

The question is: What's the best way to structure it if I want several subprojects that really all relates to one original project and to keep them in sync? And that I also want to be able to check them out separately

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  • 1
    You'd probably better have a look at git-submodule (kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-submodule.html).
    – Cascabel
    Jun 1, 2010 at 12:53
  • @Jefromi but the source files are basically from the same history, this would mean I have two copies of the files? I think submodule is more for keeping track of external libraries that you include as separate files (not merge)?
    – baloo
    Jun 1, 2010 at 13:56
  • Never mind, I didn't see that you said B was a copy of A. Reading your "the question is", where you said "subprojects...relating to one original project...in sync" I assumed you meant taking out chunks of that original project, but keeping them in sync in the metaproject.
    – Cascabel
    Jun 1, 2010 at 21:51

1 Answer 1

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If you have two projects, proj1 and proj2 and want to merge changes of proj1 into proj2, you would do it like this:

# in proj2:
git remote add proj1 path/to/proj1
git fetch proj1
git merge proj1/master # or whichever branch you want to merge

I believe this does the same thing as what you were doing with SVN.

7
  • But will merge change #2 track that we already merged change #1 doing it this way? I had to re-merge all changes (and correct conflicts) for all changes every time a new change was added if I remember correct. This didn't happen the SVN-way
    – baloo
    Jun 1, 2010 at 13:50
  • 2
    @LeoHolanda Local files count as remote as far as git is concerned.
    – PyRulez
    Jan 9, 2016 at 17:53
  • 4
    @LeoHolanda You have point here. I had to denote local repo in URL format, such as file:///Users/abc/path/to/my/repo/.git
    – mcku
    Jan 23, 2016 at 22:55
  • 3
    I'd suggest to use --allow-unrelated-histories flag in merge to allow merge histories that do not share a common ancestor (git-scm.com/docs/git-merge). Aug 9, 2019 at 7:48
  • 3
    Remotes can be just paths: git remote add r1 ../r1. --allow-unrelated-histories is not recommended, it's required since git >= 2.9 to merge branches from different repositories.
    – x-yuri
    May 30, 2020 at 1:19

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