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I have a similar problem to what does 'skipping ancestor revision' mean when using 'graft'?

But this SO topic don't give solutions, only explanations.

In more details : Yesterday a co-worker commited an error and push it. Others co-workers and me added commits after this. In order to fix this error quickly I used hg backout to cancel this commit number 11511. But I don't want to loose this commit, so I created a new branch (from the backout commit) and I tried to graft the 11511 commit but Mercurial says :

skipping ancestor revision

I want getting the branch with the 11511 commit changes to fix the error. What are the solutions to do it ?

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    Stop, dude! Backout'ed commit does not disappear from history May 28, 2015 at 8:08
  • As @LazyBadger notes, backing out a changeset creates a new changeset that reverses the original one. The original changeset is left in the history, as is the backout changeset, you haven't lost anything. Unless you need the bad changeset in the future you don't need to do anything, and either way you only have to do something then, when you need it, there's no need to prepare for that possibility now. May 28, 2015 at 8:16
  • @LazyBadger : I know it. Why say you this ? May 28, 2015 at 10:27

2 Answers 2

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Mercurial gets confused because you are trying to graft a commit that already exists in the history (and doesn't realize that the backout reverted it).

There are a couple of possible solutions. One, use the -f option to force hg graft to proceed anyway:

hg graft -f -r 11511

Or, you can backout the backed out commit again on the branch that you created.

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  • Thank you for this solution. My Mercurial version don't let me to do that. I will choice other solutions but this option is exactly that I searched. Thanks May 28, 2015 at 10:50
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OK, I misunderstood your question slightly.

The part below the line below is how to re-apply the bad changeset if you need to.

The important part here is that you're not losing anything. Backing out a changeset does not remove the original changeset from the history, instead it creates another changeset that is the opposite of the one you're backing out, in effect removing the changes the original changeset introduced.

So until you at some point decide to bring back those bad changes you don't have to do anything. At that point, when you want the bad changes back, you can do what I noted below. you do is update to the changeset immediately preceding the original bad changeset, then graft the bad changeset onto it, this will create a new head parallel to the original bad changeset that you have backed out.

This new head can later be merged back onto the head.

Another way to fix this would be to simply backout the backout changeset.

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  • I'm not comfortable with having 2 heads in my branche. If if have two heads can I push them ? Others developers can having disturbance ? May 28, 2015 at 8:06
  • As noted you don't need to do this until you actually need to bring back the bad changeset, as such you will only have two heads locally and then you merge. May 28, 2015 at 8:10
  • Ok, I understand that Mercurial don't accept a commit twice times on the repository. But can I say to Mercurial "I want take changes of the revision and import them in the working directory". I will not commit the changes as is, I will modify somes files, then I will commit. May 28, 2015 at 10:39
  • I think you can use revert to do that, but this is worthy of a separate question though I think this has already been answered on SO. May 28, 2015 at 11:29

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