On Wed, Apr 30, 2014 at 05:25:59PM -0500, Felipe Contreras wrote: > Marc Branchaud wrote: > > On 14-04-30 04:14 PM, Felipe Contreras wrote: > > > What is wrong when `git pull` merges a fast-forward? > > > > Nothing. Everything. It depends. > > It depends on what? I don't see how a fast-forward `git pull` could > possibly have any trouble. > > > > The problems with `git pull` come when you can't do a fast-forward merge, right? > > > > Some of them, maybe most of them. > > Name one problem with a fast-forward merge. At work, we have a workflow where we merge topic branches as non-fast-forward, so that we have a record of the history (including who reviewed the code), but when we want to just update our local branches, we always want fast-forward: git checkout maintenance-branch # Update our maintenance branch to the latest from the main repo. git pull --ff-only git pull --no-ff developer-remote topic-branch git push main-repo HEAD So there are times when fast-forward merges are the right thing, and times when they're not, and as you can see, this depends on context and isn't per-repository. -- brian m. carlson / brian with sandals: Houston, Texas, US +1 832 623 2791 | http://www.crustytoothpaste.net/~bmc | My opinion only OpenPGP: RSA v4 4096b: 88AC E9B2 9196 305B A994 7552 F1BA 225C 0223 B187
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