Is there any way to specify to git to automatically resolve the conflicts for a pack of files by taking the remote version for each of them? For instance, to take the remote version of each files in a certain directory?
2 Answers
git-merge seems to support only the "ours" strategy, where the result of a merge is the local version. And that only for the whole tree.
If you enter a conflicted state while doing a merge, you can use git-checkout's --theirs with a path to retrieve files from the index.
Finally you can git-reset to force parts of the tree to a specific commit.
There's now also http://www.seanius.net/blog/2011/02/git-merge-s-theirs/ who basically recommends making a merge -s ours and then reverse-apply the changes.
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10x David for the tip. It seems that git-checkout does the trick. Unfortunately, the --ours|--theirs options are not supported by my version of git :( seems like I have to do some updating...– FlorinFeb 9, 2009 at 17:57
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2If there is no --ours|--theirs option to git-checkout, you can use 'git show :2:full_path > file' for --ours (stage #2), and 'git show :3:full_path > file' for --theirs (stage #3). Or use 'git checkout-index --stage=2|3 -- file...' plumbing Feb 10, 2009 at 21:52
You can use recursive strategy (-s) with theirs option (-X). That is:
git merge -s recursive -X theirs source_branch
git merge -s their.