From: Piotr Krukowiecki <piotr.krukowiecki@gmail.com>
To: Johannes Sixt <j.sixt@viscovery.net>
Cc: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>,
Git Mailing List <git@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: cherry-pick applies some other changes than the specified one?
Date: Mon, 21 Mar 2011 19:12:38 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4D879516.3060204@gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4D877FAD.9000807@viscovery.net>
W dniu 21.03.2011 17:41, Johannes Sixt pisze:
> Am 3/21/2011 17:09, schrieb Junio C Hamano:
>> Piotr Krukowiecki <piotr.krukowiecki@gmail.com> writes:
>>> But when I take a different approach, and in addition to this:
>>>
>>>> If I edit the file and remove the "<<<< HEAD" marked and code
>>>> between "===" and ">>>" then
>>>
>>> I also manually add the "+line" which is the change done in the cherry-picked
>>> commit, git diff shows a lot of other changes in unrelated lines
>>> (which lie close
>>> but still were not modified by the patch, nor were shown previously by
>>> git diff).
>>>
>>> This is very weird.
>>
>> Sorry, I have no idea what you are talking about.
I hoped someone might have some clues :)
> Assuming you did not 'git add' the file yet, you are looking at the
> "condensed combined diff" after manually resolving the conflict by doing
> the "+line" manually that the cherry-pick should have brought in. Of
> course, a lot of context is visible here if both sides have diverged
> considerably in this area.
>
> I.e. the diff will look something like
>
> +line from HEAD
> +line from HEAD
> + line from cherry-picked
> +line from HEAD
> ...
>
> Notice the double columns before the content lines. This sort of diff
> extens above and below the conflicting section until there is a "gap" of 3
> lines that changed neither on the HEAD side nor on the cherry-picked side
> since the merge base.
Hm that might be possible! I'll check it tomorrow @work.
If that's the case here is what got me lost:
As I wrote earlier, after removing the "<<<< HEAD" and code between "==="
and ">>>", the git-diff showed nothing. So the natural impression was
"my files does not have any changes in working tree".
But then when I have added one line and did the diff again, it suddenly
started showing some other changes, unrelated to the added line or to
the cherry-picked commit.
I might have misses the double columns in the diff output so I though
it's just normal diff.
Thanks to your and Junio explanation I now understand why it works like
that.
I think I even suspected this might have something to do with the merge
conflict and tried to make git-diff show me exact change between working
tree and index/HEAD (ignoring the merge), so I can verify the file indeed
only have the change I did, but I could not find such option.
Does it exists?
--
Piotr Krukowiecki
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2011-03-21 18:15 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 13+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2011-03-21 9:27 cherry-pick applies some other changes than the specified one? Piotr Krukowiecki
2011-03-21 16:09 ` Junio C Hamano
2011-03-21 16:41 ` Johannes Sixt
2011-03-21 18:12 ` Piotr Krukowiecki [this message]
2011-03-21 19:47 ` Junio C Hamano
2011-03-21 20:06 ` Piotr Krukowiecki
2011-03-21 19:58 ` Jonathan Nieder
2011-03-21 20:07 ` Piotr Krukowiecki
2011-03-21 20:21 ` Junio C Hamano
2011-03-21 20:54 ` Junio C Hamano
2011-03-22 5:27 ` Jonathan Nieder
2011-03-22 6:37 ` Junio C Hamano
2011-03-22 8:04 ` Piotr Krukowiecki
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