3

In my current project I'm using an open source forum ( https://github.com/vanillaforums/Garden ). I was planning on doing something like this :

git remote add vanilla_remote https://github.com/vanillaforums/Garden.git
git checkout -b vanilla vanilla_remote/master
git checkout master
git read-tree --prefix=vanilla -u vanilla

This way I can make change into the vanilla folder (like changing config) and commit it to my master branch and I can also switch into my vanilla branch to fetch updates. My problem is when I try to merge the branch together

git checkout vanilla
git pull
git checkout master
git merge --squash -s subtree --no-commit vanilla
git commit -a -m "update commit"

The problem is that the "update commit" goes on top of my commits and "overwrite" my change. I would rather like to have my commits replay on top of the update. Is there a simple way to do that? I'm not very good in git so maybe this is the wrong approach. Also, I really don't want to mix my history with the vanilla history.

3
  • 1
    I have the same problem, I just want to do this (from git-scm.com/book/en/Git-Tools-Subtree-Merging): "All the changes from your Rack project are merged in and ready to be committed locally. You can also do the opposite — make changes in the rack subdirectory of your master branch and then merge them into your rack_branch branch later to submit them to the maintainers or push them upstream." And THEN do the merge command. They mention it but there is no sample command.
    – E. Rivera
    Sep 14, 2012 at 1:33
  • @ernipiggy Did you find a way to push from a subtree?
    – abel
    Dec 30, 2012 at 16:30
  • 1
    @abel I tried to explain it below
    – E. Rivera
    Jan 15, 2013 at 2:43

4 Answers 4

3

I finished up with this scheme:

  1. Work on my development branch touching files from the subtree.

  2. Update the subtree branch with squashed development commits:

    git merge -s subtree --squash --no-commit development

  3. Update the subtree branch with its remote repository.

  4. Update development with squashed subtree commits:

    git merge --squash -s subtree --no-commit subtree

3

If you're looking to work with subtrees, you probably want to use git subtree. It provides a somewhat more user-friendly interface to this sort of thing, including merge/pull commands to merge in a subtree (squashing is optional) and split/push commands to split back apart changes to a subtree and send them back to its own repo.

1

Using

git merge --squash -s subtree --no-commit vanilla

will not "overwrite" your change. I am hoping by "update commit" you mean the commit you did after the subtree merge since it has --no-commit and will not commit by itself.

1
  • Yes exactly. Still, from that point the only way I can get the correct behavior is to rebase -i and to push back that commit under my changes and I don't really like that..
    – Cedric
    Jun 25, 2011 at 14:59
0

I too am not a git master (see what I did there ;-) ) ... however, I think you may want to look at the rebase command:

http://book.git-scm.com/4_rebasing.html

1
  • 2
    Thanks but I don't see how the rebase command could be of any help because the two branch don't share any common "base".
    – Cedric
    Jun 25, 2011 at 1:18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.