We maintain web application which has common master branch and many parallel branches, one for each installation, each have few specific changes. Source code is managed in git and it is terrific tool when we need transfer features and bugfixes from master branch into parallel ones. But are few files that are sensitive and automatic merging usually give bad results. So merging would be much easier if they can be somehow marked and every merge would result in conflict requiring manual merge.
I searched for an answer :
edit: variant 4. description
You can use the git reset --merge command. You can also use the git merge --abort command. As always, make sure you have no uncommitted changes before you start a merge.
Option 5, a custom merge driver, is probably the way to get closest to what you want. It is surprisingly easy to do. Below is an example of one that I think should get you pretty close to the behavior you desire.
First, create a merge driver script called merge-and-verify-driver
. Make it executable and put it in a suitable location (you may want to consider checking this script into the repo, even, since the repo's config file is going to depend on it). Git is going to execute this shell script to perform the merge of the sensitive files:
#!/bin/bash git merge-file "${1}" "${2}" "${3}" exit 1
This just does the default merge behavior that Git itself normally does. The key difference is that the script always returns non-zero (to indicate that there was a conflict, even if the merge was actually resolved without conflicts).
Next, you need to tell Git about the existence of your custom merge driver. You do this in the repo's config file (.git/config
):
[merge "verify"] name = merge and verify driver driver = ./merge-and-verify-driver %A %O %B
In this example, I've put merge-and-verify-driver
in the repo's top level directory (./
). You will need to specify the path to the script accordingly.
Now, you just need to give the sensitive files the proper attributes so that the custom merge driver is used when merging those files. Add this to your .gitattributes
file:
*.sensitive merge=verify
Here, I've told Git that any file with a name matching the pattern *.sensitive
should use the custom merge driver. Obviously, you need to use pattern that is appropriate for your file(s).
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