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author | Wolfgang Müller | 2021-06-13 20:30:21 +0200 |
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committer | Wolfgang Müller | 2021-06-13 20:30:21 +0200 |
commit | 3b306ae249f605da4ab5b5e7afa55d5974e92176 (patch) | |
tree | 7baaa3d2a90e0e83dbf9d58cc3bffd788a06cc76 /content | |
parent | f99133842b48dc7d99e577df37e34ea143f1eeaf (diff) | |
download | zunzuncito-3b306ae249f605da4ab5b5e7afa55d5974e92176.tar.gz |
content: Add new post: "Patch workflows and git branch -d"
Diffstat (limited to 'content')
-rw-r--r-- | content/3/index.md | 31 |
1 files changed, 31 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/content/3/index.md b/content/3/index.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8682fe2 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/3/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,31 @@ ++++ +date = 2021-06-13T20:22:51+02:00 +title = "Patch workflows and git branch -d" + +[taxonomies] +tags = ["git", "TIL"] ++++ + +The notion of a "merged" branch is highly dependent on the +[workflow](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitworkflows) used for a project. I was +wanting to clean up some topic branches in my copy of git.git today, but `git +branch -d` refused to delete them, pointing out that they were not yet merged. + +I knew for a fact that they were, which made me look up how `git branch -d` +actually determines that. The manual is not entirely clear, but a +[comment](https://github.com/git/git/blob/211eca0895794362184da2be2a2d812d070719d3/builtin/branch.c#L116-L121) +in the code pointed out that git constructs the merge base of the branch and its +upstream (or `HEAD` if there is none) and checks whether the branch is reachable +from that merge base. + +In a patch workflow, this will generally not be true. A lot of things may +happen to your patches before inclusion, and with git.git they will get at least +one other sign-off. They'll be recorded in a merge commit, but it will not have +your original branch as one of its parents. + +Therefore, neither `git branch -d` nor `git branch --merged` will report your +branch as merged. Both of these tools are built for the merge workflow instead. + +To see if your work was merged in patch-based workflows, use +[`git-cherry(1)`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-cherry). Then you can safely +force deletion of the branch with `git branch -D`. |