Some background:
I currently have two local git repos which point to the same origin/master project. The reason I have two git repos is so that I have a clean master copy that I can use whenever I need and the one copy which my sandbox where I can apply changes, commit, etc. It is probably overkill, but there are some advantages for me personally by having a duplicate local git copy.
A co-worker originally created a lightweight tag for 1.0.2, but we deleted it and re-tagged it as an annotated version with the same number. They committed the change via git push to the remote repo. I pulled down the latest changes on both my local git instances.
Our tags are as follows:
release-1.0.0
release-1.0.1
release-1.0.2
The Problem:
Here is the issue I can't figure out. My sandbox repo shows the latest tag version (release-1.0.2) when I run "git describe
". This is what I expected. However, the clean repo copy, which I only do pulls from, shows the older tag (release-1.0.1) when I execute "git describe
". I verified that both are pointing to the origin master. I did some more research and found an overstack solution that pointed me to running "git cat-file -t". Here is the difference I noticed:
git cat-file -t release-1.0.1 --> tag
git cat-file -t release-1.0.2 --> commit
Why is my clean copy repo showing an older tag version when I run "git describe
" unlike my sandbox repo? I can confirm that I can see release-1.0.2 listed if I run "git describe --tags
" on the clean repo copy.