Documentation / git-merge.txton commit checkout -m: recreate merge when checking out of unmerged index (0cf8581)
   1git-merge(1)
   2============
   3
   4NAME
   5----
   6git-merge - Join two or more development histories together
   7
   8
   9SYNOPSIS
  10--------
  11[verse]
  12'git merge' [-n] [--stat] [--no-commit] [--squash] [-s <strategy>]...
  13        [-m <msg>] <remote> <remote>...
  14'git merge' <msg> HEAD <remote>...
  15
  16DESCRIPTION
  17-----------
  18This is the top-level interface to the merge machinery
  19which drives multiple merge strategy scripts.
  20
  21The second syntax (<msg> `HEAD` <remote>) is supported for
  22historical reasons.  Do not use it from the command line or in
  23new scripts.  It is the same as `git merge -m <msg> <remote>`.
  24
  25
  26OPTIONS
  27-------
  28include::merge-options.txt[]
  29
  30-m <msg>::
  31        The commit message to be used for the merge commit (in case
  32        it is created). The 'git-fmt-merge-msg' script can be used
  33        to give a good default for automated 'git-merge' invocations.
  34
  35<remote>...::
  36        Other branch heads to merge into our branch.  You need at
  37        least one <remote>.  Specifying more than one <remote>
  38        obviously means you are trying an Octopus.
  39
  40include::merge-strategies.txt[]
  41
  42
  43If you tried a merge which resulted in a complex conflicts and
  44would want to start over, you can recover with 'git-reset'.
  45
  46CONFIGURATION
  47-------------
  48include::merge-config.txt[]
  49
  50branch.<name>.mergeoptions::
  51        Sets default options for merging into branch <name>. The syntax and
  52        supported options are equal to that of 'git-merge', but option values
  53        containing whitespace characters are currently not supported.
  54
  55HOW MERGE WORKS
  56---------------
  57
  58A merge is always between the current `HEAD` and one or more
  59commits (usually, branch head or tag), and the index file must
  60match the tree of `HEAD` commit (i.e. the contents of the last commit)
  61when it starts out.  In other words, `git diff --cached HEAD` must
  62report no changes.  (One exception is when the changed index
  63entries are already in the same state that would result from
  64the merge anyway.)
  65
  66Three kinds of merge can happen:
  67
  68* The merged commit is already contained in `HEAD`. This is the
  69  simplest case, called "Already up-to-date."
  70
  71* `HEAD` is already contained in the merged commit. This is the
  72  most common case especially when involved through 'git pull':
  73  you are tracking an upstream repository, committed no local
  74  changes and now you want to update to a newer upstream revision.
  75  Your `HEAD` (and the index) is updated to at point the merged
  76  commit, without creating an extra merge commit.  This is
  77  called "Fast-forward".
  78
  79* Both the merged commit and `HEAD` are independent and must be
  80  tied together by a merge commit that has them both as its parents.
  81  The rest of this section describes this "True merge" case.
  82
  83The chosen merge strategy merges the two commits into a single
  84new source tree.
  85When things cleanly merge, these things happen:
  86
  871. The results are updated both in the index file and in your
  88   working tree;
  892. Index file is written out as a tree;
  903. The tree gets committed; and
  914. The `HEAD` pointer gets advanced.
  92
  93Because of 2., we require that the original state of the index
  94file to match exactly the current `HEAD` commit; otherwise we
  95will write out your local changes already registered in your
  96index file along with the merge result, which is not good.
  97Because 1. involves only the paths different between your
  98branch and the remote branch you are pulling from during the
  99merge (which is typically a fraction of the whole tree), you can
 100have local modifications in your working tree as long as they do
 101not overlap with what the merge updates.
 102
 103When there are conflicts, these things happen:
 104
 1051. `HEAD` stays the same.
 106
 1072. Cleanly merged paths are updated both in the index file and
 108   in your working tree.
 109
 1103. For conflicting paths, the index file records up to three
 111   versions; stage1 stores the version from the common ancestor,
 112   stage2 from `HEAD`, and stage3 from the remote branch (you
 113   can inspect the stages with `git ls-files -u`).  The working
 114   tree files have the result of "merge" program; i.e. 3-way
 115   merge result with familiar conflict markers `<<< === >>>`.
 116
 1174. No other changes are done.  In particular, the local
 118   modifications you had before you started merge will stay the
 119   same and the index entries for them stay as they were,
 120   i.e. matching `HEAD`.
 121
 122After seeing a conflict, you can do two things:
 123
 124 * Decide not to merge.  The only clean-up you need are to reset
 125   the index file to the `HEAD` commit to reverse 2. and to clean
 126   up working tree changes made by 2. and 3.; 'git-reset --hard' can
 127   be used for this.
 128
 129 * Resolve the conflicts.  `git diff` would report only the
 130   conflicting paths because of the above 2. and 3.
 131   Edit the working tree files into a desirable shape
 132   ('git mergetool' can ease this task), 'git-add' or 'git-rm'
 133   them, to make the index file contain what the merge result
 134   should be, and run 'git-commit' to commit the result.
 135
 136
 137SEE ALSO
 138--------
 139linkgit:git-fmt-merge-msg[1], linkgit:git-pull[1],
 140linkgit:gitattributes[5],
 141linkgit:git-reset[1],
 142linkgit:git-diff[1], linkgit:git-ls-files[1],
 143linkgit:git-add[1], linkgit:git-rm[1],
 144linkgit:git-mergetool[1]
 145
 146Author
 147------
 148Written by Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
 149
 150
 151Documentation
 152--------------
 153Documentation by Junio C Hamano and the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
 154
 155GIT
 156---
 157Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite