dools 3 hours ago

I never get conflicts during a merge because I only ever merge in one direction. I get all my conflicts on branches because I rebase before merging. I started doing this years and years ago because I kept coming across these mysterious silent regressions with my team. I searched something like "git merge silent regressions" and came across this stackoverflow answer:

https://stackoverflow.com/a/28510260

That completely fixed the problem. Now I only ever get conflicts on my feature branches. The rule is always: rebase away from main, and merge towards main. All conflicts are then on your branches, never on main, and always from rebase, never from merge. Then I set the pull behaviour to rebase, too.

I've never had a silent regression since, and never had a problematic conflict scenario.

I did recently learn about ORIG_HEAD though which was very cool, because I had accidentally rebased to main instead of to a dev branch from which I had created a bunch of worktrees, then when I merged back to the dev branch all hell broke loose, and I learned that I could revert a merge by checking out ORIG_HEAD:

https://icinga.com/blog/undo-git-reset-hard/

  • acallaghan 41 minutes ago

    I'm also like this, rebasing feature branches onto main - I however have one suggestion when it comes to the push back up to origin

    Instead of

    `git push --force`

    always use

    `git push --force-with-lease`

    https://git-scm.com/docs/git-push

    This probably should be the default in git (as in there should be a `git push --force-without-lease` instead) and asks git to make sure the commits locally on your branch are up-to-date with those on remote/origin. It then fails if you try to overwrite commits that you haven't seen, and has saved me a few times when working between computers on the same project when i could have lost history on the remote that i failed to fetch.

  • lelandfe 37 minutes ago

    If you squash merge PRs, this is equivalent to merging master back into your feature branch before merging to master.

    I do that a lot to avoid commits mutating mid-review, so you avoid having to force push over reviewed commits (which is a sin)

  • techwizrd 44 minutes ago

    This is what I've been doing for years. It's remarkably stress-free!

  • barbazoo 2 hours ago

    rerere is still useful here to handle merge conflicts after repeated rebases.

    • mqus 42 minutes ago

      As someone who tried rerere and didn't see the point:

      How? Usually I rebase the same branch multiple times onto different, but successive commits of the master branch. But after I solved a bunch of conflicts of the first rebase, I shouldn't have the same conflicts again in a second one, since the rebased branch contains the merged conflict. Rebasing again could only turn up new conflicts (with newer, other commits on the master branch).

      How can I have the same conflict again for repeated rebases?

      • barbazoo 26 minutes ago

        I know what you mean but doesn't that require squashing as well? If I have a branch with 5 commits, I think rerere helps me by only having to fix the conflict once, not potentially multiple times. I might be wrong here though.

  • ubercore 3 hours ago

    I've never even seen someone suggest a rebase master onto feature workflow! TIL.

    • dools 3 hours ago

      I think the terminology would be the other way around, like you're rebasing the feature onto the main:

      git checkout feature

      git rebase main

      git checkout main

      git merge feature

      that way you get all your conflicts on the feature branch during rebase and your merge is always clean.

    • barbazoo 2 hours ago

      > I get all my conflicts on branches because I rebase before merging

      Pretty sure it's the other way around. You're on the branch and rebase it atop current master. If you merge after that, you won't have merge conflicts.

0123456789ABCDE 4 hours ago

  #~/.config/git/config
  [rerere]
      enabled = true
      autoUpdate = true
while you're editing git config, consider these:

    [pull]
      rebase = true

  [rebase]
      autoSquash = true
      autoStash = true

  [merge]
      # zdiff3 adds original text markers and removes matching lines from conflict regions
      # https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config#Documentation/git-config.txt-mergeconflictStyle
      conflictStyle = zdiff3
      autoStash = true

  [push]
      autoSetupRemote = true
      default = simple

  [init]
      defaultBranch = main
  • beart 9 minutes ago

    I believe push default simple is the default in git now and does not need to be explicitly set.

  • 0123456789ABCDE an hour ago

    addendum

    these are changes tacked to my git config over time. they're the result of working in a constant crunch state, where smooth forward move was more import than the state of the git history you left behind. these options remove small annoying road bumps. you should avoid some of them if you're working under different constraints, or the commit process differs such that these options don't apply.

    it all starts with `pull.rebase=true` it makes `git pull --rebase` the default behavior. then comes `rebase.autoStash`, which just wraps the rebase with a stash push/pop envelop. if rebase is not your thing, and you prefer merge, `merge.autoStash=true` works the same. finally `push.autoSetupRemote=true` will skip asking you to set a remote tracking branch, it makes `git push` default to `git push --set-upstream`.

  • Izkata an hour ago

        [pull]
          rebase = true
    
    Don't use this one unless you really know what you're doing. Multiple co-workers have gotten into really bizarre rebases because of it (like rebasing 70+ commits from master on top of their branch instead of the other way around), it seems to cause more problems than it solves.

    The man page for "git pull" even has a warning about using this flag.

adithyassekhar 2 hours ago

Do people really merge left and right between branches? Tell me if I got this wrong, this is how I work.

You got 4 devs. Each branched off from master. And we never merge from each other. Suppose 3 other people merged to master I pull it from master and fix only those conflicts. I’m not bringing your code into my branch unless it’s already finished and on master. If I need something you’re working on and it’s not on master when I need it, it’s a much larger planning issue.

If you have multiple environments before a stable master, do it only in one direction: feature > dev > staging > master. Don’t merge branches straight into staging or master.

I thought this was how everyone worked.

  • legorobot 42 minutes ago

    I thought this was how everyone worked.

    I wish it were :)

    This is the right way to do it. Whether using trunk-based development, git-flow, etc -- you're controlling the flow of merges in a particular direction.

    However, I think the "larger planning issue" is harder to easily avoid when you have more devs, more changes, or the AI-boosted output we have today. If feature B requires feature A, and feature A isn't up-to-date with main, I could rebase feature A to main, then feature B to feature A. When feature A is merged and we're ready to PR feature B, I can rebase to main again then make my PR.

    • sheept 15 minutes ago

      That sounds like a lot of work. If you rebase A on main then B on main, you end up having to resolve A's conflicts on main twice. But if you stick with merge commits, A's conflicts are handled once in the merge from main.

  • powersjcb an hour ago

    Yeah, I absolutely never run into this problem.

    Sometimes we will have a huge stack of changes one of us is "finished but not clear to merge".

    either:

    - We just swap ownership of the branches and eng 2 now commits directly in branch 1. We review the final content together and typically pull in a 3rd person to review our combined work. Eng 1 either pairs with eng 2 until its finished or starts on a task that is decoupled from those changes.

    - We use an integration branch that gets threated like the temporary master branch until the feature is ready to merge.

  • convolvatron an hour ago

    when you're not just doing small patches (like Greenfield work), and you have multiple developers, it can be unreasonable and wasteful to do what you describe. say we're redoing the way memory management it being done, or changing a foundational api. A and B could go through master, but they'd have to redo a whole bunch of work. Or we could make an integration branch where A and B hash things out together and only push to master when their work is done. you can also see how this allows a lot more back and forth about the places where the designs interact rather than 'I got in master before you, so you get to eat a multi-day merge and I'm outta here'

    this kind of interaction shows up more in a 'release' based model than CI environment, and one where the cost of testing is non-zero (because we're actually doing testing). I know that's not a very popular model, but not all software development is CI websites.

    • skydhash an hour ago

      Those big refactoring should be discussed with the whole teams so everyone understands how they’re going to be affected. And rework like this should probably be hidden behind an abstraction (to do it gradually).

      • convolvatron 44 minutes ago

        yes of course they should, that doesn't mean that integration branches aren't a good way to manage the tactical process. and often this kind of situation comes up when you're trying to do exactly that, introduce that abstraction that solves a whole bunch of issues, but requires cross-cutting changes.

        the problem comes up the other way too. the person making the refactor can get stuck in a perpetual hell of constantly reapplying the changes to smaller deltas that are being committed daily to master.

        • skydhash 25 minutes ago

          I don’t remember which books exactly, but it was about legacy code. The author was talking about seams. If you’re trying to complete a refactor in one go, it will usually be arduous and maybe fail. What you want is to find seams in the codebase and maybe create some, where you can gradually decouple the architecture. After that you’ll have contracts and independent modules that can be reworked.

          It’s not easy though and you need to have a very good understanding of the codebase. But the nice thing is that you can do it without having to maintain a long lived branch (which is an antipattern).

mamcx an hour ago

I use rerere when "forced" by team to use rebase. It not even work that much at the end (you can't control workflows outside yourself, that is why git ux is wrong: it desperately need total discipline).

THEN, I move to jujutsu. Only has a few problems at start trying to use it as git, but after get the idea, all fine.

BTW, this was with the same team and they never know, so JJ is in fact better: It survive OTHERS workflows.

cautiouscat 3 hours ago

Every time I think I am adept in git, something like this is shown to me. I really should read into it more lol.