test new = "$(git show HEAD:file2)"
'
+test_expect_success '--rebase fast forward' '
+ git reset --hard before-rebase &&
+ git checkout -b ff &&
+ echo another modification >file &&
+ git commit -m third file &&
+
+ git checkout to-rebase &&
+ git pull --rebase . ff &&
+ test "$(git rev-parse HEAD)" = "$(git rev-parse ff)" &&
+
+ # The above only validates the result. Did we actually bypass rebase?
+ git reflog -1 >reflog.actual &&
+ sed "s/^[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]*/OBJID/" reflog.actual >reflog.fuzzy &&
+ echo "OBJID HEAD@{0}: pull --rebase . ff: Fast-forward" >reflog.expected &&
+ test_cmp reflog.expected reflog.fuzzy
+'
+
test_expect_success '--rebase with conflicts shows advice' '
test_when_finished "git rebase --abort; git checkout -f to-rebase" &&
git checkout -b seq &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m "Create conflict" seq.txt &&
test_must_fail git pull --rebase . seq 2>err >out &&
- grep "When you have resolved this problem" out
+ test_i18ngrep "When you have resolved this problem" out
'
test_expect_success 'failed --rebase shows advice' '
git checkout -f -b fails-to-rebase HEAD^ &&
test_commit v2-without-cr file "2" file2-lf &&
test_must_fail git pull --rebase . diverging 2>err >out &&
- grep "When you have resolved this problem" out
+ test_i18ngrep "When you have resolved this problem" out
'
test_expect_success '--rebase fails with multiple branches' '