I have a fuzzy idea of what the git
index contains as one does git-add
s and git-commit
s, but I don't have a clue of what happens to these contents when one does a git-merge
. I'm particularly interested in learning what the index holds when a merge fails (e.g. due to some conflict).
How do contents of git index evolve during a merge (and what's in the index after a failed merge)?
1.3k Views Asked by kjo At
1
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For any given path, there are up to four "version numbers" in the index, numbered 0 (zero) through 3. I'll call them "slots" as if they were actually there for every entry, and then easily indexed (this makes them easier to think about), although actually extra versions are introduced dynamically only when needed. These "virtual slots" can be "empty", meaning the file does not exist.
(Actually, once an entry is created in the index, it's marked with a flag bit,
CE_REMOVED
, if needed. This gets hairy because a whole directory full of files can be marked "removed" and then a file can be created with the name of the previous directory and marked "added". Let's just pretend we have fixed slots, there-but-empty, instead. :-) )Slot #0 is the "normal", un-conflicted, all-is-well entry. It contains a bunch of cache data, the path name, and the blob-ID (the SHA-1) for the file stored in the repository.
When a merge succeeds, it's all "business as usual", so the only special case is a conflicted merge. A merge is "conflicted" when slots 1, 2, and/or 3 are non-empty. Skipping over most of the mechanics, what happens is this. The merge uses the "newest" name for all the slots, and:
HEAD
, unless you're manually invoking some of the underlying merge machinery) version. If the file was removed inHEAD
/ target-of-merge, this slot is empty instead.Once you resolve the conflict and "git add", the #0 slot gets filled in with whatever you "add", wiping out the entries in #1 through #3—or, if you "git rm" the conflicted file, the other stage entries are still removed, but now the #0 slot remains empty, which also resolves the conflict.
More concretely, then, suppose you have a common ancestor that has (among others) these two files:
You're on branch
cleanup
and you've renamedgronk
tobreem
, and edited both that andflibby
. You decide togit merge work
, where they modifiedgronk
but did not rename it, and removedflibby
. Some other file(s) merged cleanly.The index will contain three versions of
bleem
and two versions offlibby
:You can see the original (base) version of
bleem
withgit show :1:bleem
. That was calledgronk
in the base version (and inwork
as well, in this case), but now it's calledbleem
because git believes you renamedgronk
tobleem
incleanup
. (Git finds the renames between the merge-base andHEAD
and then applies the same renaming towork
if necessary, as in this case.)Likewise, you can see the
work
version withgit show :3:bleem
orgit show work:gronk
, and theHEAD
version with any of:git show HEAD:bleem
,git show cleanup:bleem
, orgit show :2:bleem
(slot 2 contains theHEAD
akacleanup
version, and is named according to the name inHEAD
).For
flibby
, though, since it was removed inwork
, there is no "theirs" (slot 3) version.To resolve the conflicts, you need only tell
git add
orgit rm
to update the slot-zero entry and remove the 1-through-3 entries. Of course, withgit add
, what goes into slot 0 is whatever is in the work directory now, so you generally have to edit the files first.Incidentally, I labeled slots 2 and 3 "ours" and "theirs" above. This is how
git checkout
treats them as well (git checkout --ours
andgit checkout --theirs
let you write version 2 or 3 into slot 0; such a checkout, like most checkouts, "erases" the other slots too, thus resolving the conflict). However, in a rebase, theHEAD
branch is actually the branch being rebased-on-to, and the "theirs" version is your branch-being-rebased. So the ours/theirs terminology is not really that great, in my opinion: it's too easy to get it backwards during a rebase.I should also note that
git checkout -m
will "re-create" a merge conflict, if you're in the middle of a conflicted merge, by erasing slot 0 and "resurrecting" the versions in slots 1-3 as needed (and writing the conflicted merge file to the working directory, obeying any change in yourmerge.conflictstyle
setting as well).