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I'm facing a peculiar problem with SVN merge. I want to merge from a dev branch to trunk. We have multiple dev branches cut off the trunk at the same time.

I'm merging one of those branches to trunk with this command:

svn merge trunk branch_1

I see changes that are not part of this branch, getting merged into trunk. What am I doing wrong ?

SVN Version :

Subversion command-line client, version 1.6.16-SlikSvn-tag-1.6.16@1076804-WIN32.

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  • 7
    I know this is not an answer, but if you have several active branches simultaneously, then probably you'd better moved to mercurial or git. Ps: I'm not a fanatic, I've been working with svn for ~7 years ;-)
    – zerkms
    Sep 27, 2011 at 2:57
  • 2
    What advantage does it provide? Why moving to git or mercurial is a better choice? Sep 27, 2011 at 3:00
  • 3
    because git and mercurial have much better support of branches. Advantages: you'll not ask such questions and will have less headaches on creating and maintaining branches (currently I'm working in a project with > 1000 branches, in svn it was a hell to work with them)
    – zerkms
    Sep 27, 2011 at 3:29
  • I recommend looking into Svnmerge.py and reviewing this article.
    – chown
    Oct 3, 2011 at 16:40

4 Answers 4

229
+50

Your svn merge syntax is wrong.

You want to checkout a working copy of trunk and then use the svn merge --reintegrate option:

$ pwd
/home/user/project-trunk

$ svn update  # (make sure the working copy is up to date)
At revision <N>.

$ svn merge --reintegrate ^/project/branches/branch_1
--- Merging differences between repository URLs into '.':
U    foo.c
U    bar.c
 U   .

$ # build, test, verify, ...

$ svn commit -m "Merge branch_1 back into trunk!"
Sending        .
Sending        foo.c
Sending        bar.c
Transmitting file data ..
Committed revision <N+1>.

See the SVN book chapter on merging for more details.


Note that at the time it was written, this was the right answer (and was accepted), but things have moved on. See the answer of topek, and http://subversion.apache.org/docs/release-notes/1.8.html#auto-reintegrate

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    --reintegrate option isn't mandatory, branch (in 1.6) can be merged with any-destination any number of times Oct 7, 2011 at 10:14
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    Really? Without risking remerging the same changesets? Can you provide a link to corroborating evidence of this please.
    – Neutrino
    Apr 3, 2012 at 16:56
  • --reintegrate is indeed not mandatory but really recommended in this case. I have tried to do it without --reintegrate and ended up with hundred of conflicts. With --reintegrate, no conflicts and everything was good!
    – tibo
    Sep 12, 2012 at 7:53
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    The --reintegrate option is simple and effective, BUT it must be noted that "Once a --reintegrate merge is done from branch to trunk, the branch is no longer usable for further work. It's not able to correctly absorb new trunk changes, nor can it be properly reintegrated to trunk again." as explained by the book you have linked.
    – Pino
    Aug 14, 2013 at 10:58
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    @daveL, forward merges from trunk to branch make sense to me. However I have found an advanced feature to "keep a reitegrated branch alive" (see stackoverflow.com/a/10163059/685806), furthermore it is applied automatically by newer client versions.
    – Pino
    May 13, 2014 at 9:39
81

If your working directory points to the trunk, then you should be able to merge your branch with:

svn merge https://HOST/repository/branches/branch_1

be sure to be to issue this command in the root directory of your trunk

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    As of SVN 1.8. this is the right answer. See subversion.apache.org/docs/release-notes/… Aug 5, 2014 at 11:46
  • @blahdiblah the code snippet has a lot of extraneous info. There's a reason why the abstract of studies get read orders of magnitude more than any other part of a study. The same goes for UX testing, minimizing bounce rates, etc. It's all the same principle.
    – ahnbizcad
    Oct 17, 2015 at 4:21
  • with 1.7 you could merge without the --reintegrate option, and keep developing on the branch and keep merging. Sadly, 1.8 will force this to be a reintegration, and there doesnt seem to be a way to prevent it. This means as soon as you merge, you cannot then use the branch without going through the dreaded "keep-alive dance" Nov 12, 2015 at 13:47
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    Don't forget to then commit the working copy of the trunk back to the repository after the merge!
    – John
    Feb 9, 2016 at 13:56
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Do an svn update in the trunk, note the revision number.

From the trunk:

svn merge -r<revision where branch was cut>:<revision of trunk> svn://path/to/branch/branchName

You can check where the branch was cut from the trunk by doing an svn log

svn log --stop-on-copy
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  • Since there are multiple dev branches that are alive at the same time, this was also not working for me, this command was pulling in changes from other branches as well. May be this is a problem with SLik SVN client? Sep 27, 2011 at 3:04
  • While this isn't inaccurate, there are easier ways to merge with more recent versions of svn (such as the one OP is using).
    – blahdiblah
    Oct 3, 2011 at 19:12
  • @VanchinathanChandrasekaran, in the command you specify branch name as svn://path/to/branch/branchName that should pull only the changes from that branch not from other branches. If so we are in the danger! Jul 18, 2018 at 10:06
1

The syntax is wrong, it should instead be

svn merge <what(the range)> <from(your dev branch)> <to(trunk/trunk local copy)>
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