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-rw-r--r-- | using-git.texinfo | 40 |
1 files changed, 40 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/using-git.texinfo b/using-git.texinfo index 9f19087..9fef442 100644 --- a/using-git.texinfo +++ b/using-git.texinfo @@ -835,6 +835,46 @@ file or stage the removal of it if it as been removed from the working directory. +Git trackes file renames implicitly, +so @command{git mv} is same thing as: + +@example +cp FILE NEW_NAME +git rm FILE +git add NEW_NAME +@end example + +This approach is flexible, but +it has some caveats. GNU Arch +keeps track files by giving +them unique identifier, this +solves the problem were you in +git can get an evil merge if +the pulled branch does not have +any common commits@footnote{Identified +with commit ID, not snapshots, +which reflects on more than the +file content.}, for example, +the pull patch was not made from +a clone repository or did not +contain commit history. Other +systems tracks renames explicitly +when a rename command is made, +that is worst because than mean +that you need to use the rename +commit, and evil merges are even +more probable. A problem will +merging when where is a rename +is that the changes are automerged +instead of creating a conflict, +you can get evil merges where +the content of the resulting file +refers to the files old name, +naturally this is still a problem +if another file depending on +the renamed file is edited in +parallel. + If you want to know the file staging difference between the index and working directory |