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From: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
To: Jim Garrison <jim.garrison@nwea.org>
Cc: "git\@vger.kernel.org" <git@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Beginner question on "Pull is mostly evil"
Date: Wed, 07 May 2014 18:20:01 +0200	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <87iophr26m.fsf@fencepost.gnu.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <0C723FEB5B4E5642B25B451BA57E2730751C2642@S1P5DAG3C.EXCHPROD.USA.NET> (Jim Garrison's message of "Wed, 7 May 2014 15:40:28 +0000")

Jim Garrison <jim.garrison@nwea.org> writes:

> During my initial self-education I came across the maxim "don't pull,
> fetch+merge instead" and have been doing that.  I think I followed
> most of the "pull is (mostly) evil" discussion but one facet still
> puzzles me: the idea that pull will do a merge "in the wrong
> direction" sometimes.
>
> Do I understand correctly that this occurs only in the presence of
> multiple remotes?
> Can someone provide a simple example of a situation where pull would
> do the "wrong" thing?

That's basically unavoidable.  Two opposing directions are actually part
of the same workflow usually handled by "git pull":

"Codeveloper X sends a pull request to Y who maintains the mainline.
Y executes git pull to merge X' sidebranch into the mainline."

"Codeveloper X executes git pull in order to merge the mainline from Y
back into his private sidebranch."

-- 
David Kastrup

  reply	other threads:[~2014-05-07 16:20 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2014-05-07 15:40 Beginner question on "Pull is mostly evil" Jim Garrison
2014-05-07 16:20 ` David Kastrup [this message]
2014-05-07 17:04 ` Jeff King
2014-05-07 20:15 ` Junio C Hamano
2014-05-07 20:30   ` Jim Garrison
2014-05-07 20:51     ` Junio C Hamano
2014-05-08  0:45     ` Stephen & Linda Smith
2014-05-09  6:08   ` [PATCH] How to keep a project's canonical history correct Stephen P. Smith
2014-05-09 13:41     ` Stephen Smith
2014-05-09 21:05     ` Junio C Hamano
2014-05-10  4:01     ` Stephen & Linda Smith

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