Documentation / git-read-tree.txton commit Update draft release notes for v1.5.2 (7392b03)
   1git-read-tree(1)
   2================
   3
   4NAME
   5----
   6git-read-tree - Reads tree information into the index
   7
   8
   9SYNOPSIS
  10--------
  11'git-read-tree' (<tree-ish> | [[-m [--aggressive] | --reset | --prefix=<prefix>] [-u | -i]] [--exclude-per-directory=<gitignore>] [--index-output=<file>] <tree-ish1> [<tree-ish2> [<tree-ish3>]])
  12
  13
  14DESCRIPTION
  15-----------
  16Reads the tree information given by <tree-ish> into the index,
  17but does not actually *update* any of the files it "caches". (see:
  18gitlink:git-checkout-index[1])
  19
  20Optionally, it can merge a tree into the index, perform a
  21fast-forward (i.e. 2-way) merge, or a 3-way merge, with the `-m`
  22flag.  When used with `-m`, the `-u` flag causes it to also update
  23the files in the work tree with the result of the merge.
  24
  25Trivial merges are done by `git-read-tree` itself.  Only conflicting paths
  26will be in unmerged state when `git-read-tree` returns.
  27
  28OPTIONS
  29-------
  30-m::
  31        Perform a merge, not just a read.  The command will
  32        refuse to run if your index file has unmerged entries,
  33        indicating that you have not finished previous merge you
  34        started.
  35
  36--reset::
  37        Same as -m, except that unmerged entries are discarded
  38        instead of failing.
  39
  40-u::
  41        After a successful merge, update the files in the work
  42        tree with the result of the merge.
  43
  44-i::
  45        Usually a merge requires the index file as well as the
  46        files in the working tree are up to date with the
  47        current head commit, in order not to lose local
  48        changes.  This flag disables the check with the working
  49        tree and is meant to be used when creating a merge of
  50        trees that are not directly related to the current
  51        working tree status into a temporary index file.
  52
  53--aggressive::
  54        Usually a three-way merge by `git-read-tree` resolves
  55        the merge for really trivial cases and leaves other
  56        cases unresolved in the index, so that Porcelains can
  57        implement different merge policies.  This flag makes the
  58        command to resolve a few more cases internally:
  59+
  60* when one side removes a path and the other side leaves the path
  61  unmodified.  The resolution is to remove that path.
  62* when both sides remove a path.  The resolution is to remove that path.
  63* when both sides adds a path identically.  The resolution
  64  is to add that path.
  65
  66--prefix=<prefix>/::
  67        Keep the current index contents, and read the contents
  68        of named tree-ish under directory at `<prefix>`.  The
  69        original index file cannot have anything at the path
  70        `<prefix>` itself, and have nothing in `<prefix>/`
  71        directory.  Note that the `<prefix>/` value must end
  72        with a slash.
  73
  74--exclude-per-directory=<gitignore>::
  75        When running the command with `-u` and `-m` options, the
  76        merge result may need to overwrite paths that are not
  77        tracked in the current branch.  The command usually
  78        refuses to proceed with the merge to avoid losing such a
  79        path.  However this safety valve sometimes gets in the
  80        way.  For example, it often happens that the other
  81        branch added a file that used to be a generated file in
  82        your branch, and the safety valve triggers when you try
  83        to switch to that branch after you ran `make` but before
  84        running `make clean` to remove the generated file.  This
  85        option tells the command to read per-directory exclude
  86        file (usually '.gitignore') and allows such an untracked
  87        but explicitly ignored file to be overwritten.
  88
  89--index-output=<file>::
  90        Instead of writing the results out to `$GIT_INDEX_FILE`,
  91        write the resulting index in the named file.  While the
  92        command is operating, the original index file is locked
  93        with the same mechanism as usual.  The file must allow
  94        to be rename(2)ed into from a temporary file that is
  95        created next to the usual index file; typically this
  96        means it needs to be on the same filesystem as the index
  97        file itself, and you need write permission to the
  98        directories the index file and index output file are
  99        located in.
 100
 101<tree-ish#>::
 102        The id of the tree object(s) to be read/merged.
 103
 104
 105Merging
 106-------
 107If `-m` is specified, `git-read-tree` can perform 3 kinds of
 108merge, a single tree merge if only 1 tree is given, a
 109fast-forward merge with 2 trees, or a 3-way merge if 3 trees are
 110provided.
 111
 112
 113Single Tree Merge
 114~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 115If only 1 tree is specified, git-read-tree operates as if the user did not
 116specify `-m`, except that if the original index has an entry for a
 117given pathname, and the contents of the path matches with the tree
 118being read, the stat info from the index is used. (In other words, the
 119index's stat()s take precedence over the merged tree's).
 120
 121That means that if you do a `git-read-tree -m <newtree>` followed by a
 122`git-checkout-index -f -u -a`, the `git-checkout-index` only checks out
 123the stuff that really changed.
 124
 125This is used to avoid unnecessary false hits when `git-diff-files` is
 126run after `git-read-tree`.
 127
 128
 129Two Tree Merge
 130~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 131
 132Typically, this is invoked as `git-read-tree -m $H $M`, where $H
 133is the head commit of the current repository, and $M is the head
 134of a foreign tree, which is simply ahead of $H (i.e. we are in a
 135fast forward situation).
 136
 137When two trees are specified, the user is telling git-read-tree
 138the following:
 139
 140     1. The current index and work tree is derived from $H, but
 141        the user may have local changes in them since $H;
 142
 143     2. The user wants to fast-forward to $M.
 144
 145In this case, the `git-read-tree -m $H $M` command makes sure
 146that no local change is lost as the result of this "merge".
 147Here are the "carry forward" rules:
 148
 149        I (index)           H        M        Result
 150       -------------------------------------------------------
 151      0 nothing             nothing  nothing  (does not happen)
 152      1 nothing             nothing  exists   use M
 153      2 nothing             exists   nothing  remove path from index
 154      3 nothing             exists   exists   use M
 155
 156        clean I==H  I==M
 157       ------------------
 158      4 yes   N/A   N/A     nothing  nothing  keep index
 159      5 no    N/A   N/A     nothing  nothing  keep index
 160
 161      6 yes   N/A   yes     nothing  exists   keep index
 162      7 no    N/A   yes     nothing  exists   keep index
 163      8 yes   N/A   no      nothing  exists   fail
 164      9 no    N/A   no      nothing  exists   fail
 165
 166     10 yes   yes   N/A     exists   nothing  remove path from index
 167     11 no    yes   N/A     exists   nothing  fail
 168     12 yes   no    N/A     exists   nothing  fail
 169     13 no    no    N/A     exists   nothing  fail
 170
 171        clean (H=M)
 172       ------
 173     14 yes                 exists   exists   keep index
 174     15 no                  exists   exists   keep index
 175
 176        clean I==H  I==M (H!=M)
 177       ------------------
 178     16 yes   no    no      exists   exists   fail
 179     17 no    no    no      exists   exists   fail
 180     18 yes   no    yes     exists   exists   keep index
 181     19 no    no    yes     exists   exists   keep index
 182     20 yes   yes   no      exists   exists   use M
 183     21 no    yes   no      exists   exists   fail
 184
 185In all "keep index" cases, the index entry stays as in the
 186original index file.  If the entry were not up to date,
 187git-read-tree keeps the copy in the work tree intact when
 188operating under the -u flag.
 189
 190When this form of git-read-tree returns successfully, you can
 191see what "local changes" you made are carried forward by running
 192`git-diff-index --cached $M`.  Note that this does not
 193necessarily match `git-diff-index --cached $H` would have
 194produced before such a two tree merge.  This is because of cases
 19518 and 19 --- if you already had the changes in $M (e.g. maybe
 196you picked it up via e-mail in a patch form), `git-diff-index
 197--cached $H` would have told you about the change before this
 198merge, but it would not show in `git-diff-index --cached $M`
 199output after two-tree merge.
 200
 201
 2023-Way Merge
 203~~~~~~~~~~~
 204Each "index" entry has two bits worth of "stage" state. stage 0 is the
 205normal one, and is the only one you'd see in any kind of normal use.
 206
 207However, when you do `git-read-tree` with three trees, the "stage"
 208starts out at 1.
 209
 210This means that you can do
 211
 212----------------
 213$ git-read-tree -m <tree1> <tree2> <tree3>
 214----------------
 215
 216and you will end up with an index with all of the <tree1> entries in
 217"stage1", all of the <tree2> entries in "stage2" and all of the
 218<tree3> entries in "stage3".  When performing a merge of another
 219branch into the current branch, we use the common ancestor tree
 220as <tree1>, the current branch head as <tree2>, and the other
 221branch head as <tree3>.
 222
 223Furthermore, `git-read-tree` has special-case logic that says: if you see
 224a file that matches in all respects in the following states, it
 225"collapses" back to "stage0":
 226
 227   - stage 2 and 3 are the same; take one or the other (it makes no
 228     difference - the same work has been done on our branch in
 229     stage 2 and their branch in stage 3)
 230
 231   - stage 1 and stage 2 are the same and stage 3 is different; take
 232     stage 3 (our branch in stage 2 did not do anything since the
 233     ancestor in stage 1 while their branch in stage 3 worked on
 234     it)
 235
 236   - stage 1 and stage 3 are the same and stage 2 is different take
 237     stage 2 (we did something while they did nothing)
 238
 239The `git-write-tree` command refuses to write a nonsensical tree, and it
 240will complain about unmerged entries if it sees a single entry that is not
 241stage 0.
 242
 243OK, this all sounds like a collection of totally nonsensical rules,
 244but it's actually exactly what you want in order to do a fast
 245merge. The different stages represent the "result tree" (stage 0, aka
 246"merged"), the original tree (stage 1, aka "orig"), and the two trees
 247you are trying to merge (stage 2 and 3 respectively).
 248
 249The order of stages 1, 2 and 3 (hence the order of three
 250<tree-ish> command line arguments) are significant when you
 251start a 3-way merge with an index file that is already
 252populated.  Here is an outline of how the algorithm works:
 253
 254- if a file exists in identical format in all three trees, it will
 255  automatically collapse to "merged" state by git-read-tree.
 256
 257- a file that has _any_ difference what-so-ever in the three trees
 258  will stay as separate entries in the index. It's up to "porcelain
 259  policy" to determine how to remove the non-0 stages, and insert a
 260  merged version.
 261
 262- the index file saves and restores with all this information, so you
 263  can merge things incrementally, but as long as it has entries in
 264  stages 1/2/3 (i.e., "unmerged entries") you can't write the result. So
 265  now the merge algorithm ends up being really simple:
 266
 267  * you walk the index in order, and ignore all entries of stage 0,
 268    since they've already been done.
 269
 270  * if you find a "stage1", but no matching "stage2" or "stage3", you
 271    know it's been removed from both trees (it only existed in the
 272    original tree), and you remove that entry.
 273
 274  * if you find a matching "stage2" and "stage3" tree, you remove one
 275    of them, and turn the other into a "stage0" entry. Remove any
 276    matching "stage1" entry if it exists too.  .. all the normal
 277    trivial rules ..
 278
 279You would normally use `git-merge-index` with supplied
 280`git-merge-one-file` to do this last step.  The script updates
 281the files in the working tree as it merges each path and at the
 282end of a successful merge.
 283
 284When you start a 3-way merge with an index file that is already
 285populated, it is assumed that it represents the state of the
 286files in your work tree, and you can even have files with
 287changes unrecorded in the index file.  It is further assumed
 288that this state is "derived" from the stage 2 tree.  The 3-way
 289merge refuses to run if it finds an entry in the original index
 290file that does not match stage 2.
 291
 292This is done to prevent you from losing your work-in-progress
 293changes, and mixing your random changes in an unrelated merge
 294commit.  To illustrate, suppose you start from what has been
 295committed last to your repository:
 296
 297----------------
 298$ JC=`git-rev-parse --verify "HEAD^0"`
 299$ git-checkout-index -f -u -a $JC
 300----------------
 301
 302You do random edits, without running git-update-index.  And then
 303you notice that the tip of your "upstream" tree has advanced
 304since you pulled from him:
 305
 306----------------
 307$ git-fetch git://.... linus
 308$ LT=`cat .git/FETCH_HEAD`
 309----------------
 310
 311Your work tree is still based on your HEAD ($JC), but you have
 312some edits since.  Three-way merge makes sure that you have not
 313added or modified index entries since $JC, and if you haven't,
 314then does the right thing.  So with the following sequence:
 315
 316----------------
 317$ git-read-tree -m -u `git-merge-base $JC $LT` $JC $LT
 318$ git-merge-index git-merge-one-file -a
 319$ echo "Merge with Linus" | \
 320  git-commit-tree `git-write-tree` -p $JC -p $LT
 321----------------
 322
 323what you would commit is a pure merge between $JC and $LT without
 324your work-in-progress changes, and your work tree would be
 325updated to the result of the merge.
 326
 327However, if you have local changes in the working tree that
 328would be overwritten by this merge,`git-read-tree` will refuse
 329to run to prevent your changes from being lost.
 330
 331In other words, there is no need to worry about what exists only
 332in the working tree.  When you have local changes in a part of
 333the project that is not involved in the merge, your changes do
 334not interfere with the merge, and are kept intact.  When they
 335*do* interfere, the merge does not even start (`git-read-tree`
 336complains loudly and fails without modifying anything).  In such
 337a case, you can simply continue doing what you were in the
 338middle of doing, and when your working tree is ready (i.e. you
 339have finished your work-in-progress), attempt the merge again.
 340
 341
 342See Also
 343--------
 344gitlink:git-write-tree[1]; gitlink:git-ls-files[1]
 345
 346
 347Author
 348------
 349Written by Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
 350
 351Documentation
 352--------------
 353Documentation by David Greaves, Junio C Hamano and the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
 354
 355GIT
 356---
 357Part of the gitlink:git[7] suite
 358