Apparently it can, see here - at least this is the way I see it.
Before merge. The remote branch master
at origin
is on the left. Both branches are the same.
Now suppose both me and my friend have done some work, and my friend pushed his work first to the remote branch, and I have commited my work locally.
In this case I can't simply git push
, because that would cause commited by other
to be removed from the remote repo (I think I could do `git push -f for that, but again - that would overwrite my friend's commit).
The article suggests that git pull origin master
(which fetch
es the changes from the origin
repo's master
branch and merge
s it into my local master
branch) rewrites the history of commits in my local master
branch! How can it be? I thought a merge can only create a new merge commit, without altering the existing commits. But in this case, the commits order has changed - now the commited by other
comes first, then my local commit
.
So, knowing that pull is the same as fetch (which updates the remote-tracking branch origin/master
that is stored locally on my PC) followed by merging the updated origin/master
into the local branch master
, would it produce the same result in this case - would that merge alter the order of past commits in the local master
branch?