Hi Norbert, On Fri, Mar 8, 2019 at 2:51 AM Norbert Nemec <Norbert.Nemec@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi there, > > I've struggled for quite some time to sort out documented, intended and actual behavior of git fast-import. Unless I'm completely mistaken, it seems to be a straightforward bug, but if that is the case, I am really surprised why nobody else has stumbled over it before: > > I managed to use fast-import for a chain of commits onto a new branch into an empty repository. > I managed to use fast-import to create a new branch starting from an existing parent using the 'from' command as documented. > > What I failed to do is to add commits on top of an existing branch in a new fast-import stream. As it seems, the variant of using 'commit' without 'from' only works on branches that were created within the same fast-import stream! > > The different approaches I tried (each with new fast-import stream on existing repo with existing branch) > * 'commit' without 'from' > -> Error: "Not updating <branch> (new tip <hash> does not contain <hash>) > And indeed looking into the repo afterwards, a new commit exists without any parent. > * 'commit' with 'from' both naming the same branch > -> Error: "Can't create a branch from itself" > The only workarounds that I could find are to either explicitly looking up the top commit on the target branch and hand that to fast-import or create a temporary branch with a different name. I would have just used "from <sha1>" where <sha1> is something I look up from the current branch I want to update. But, re-looking at the docs, it appears git-fast-import.txt covers this already with a possibly easier syntax: """ The special case of restarting an incremental import from the current branch value should be written as: ---- from refs/heads/branch^0 ---- The `^0` suffix is necessary as fast-import does not permit a branch to start from itself, and the branch is created in memory before the `from` command is even read from the input. Adding `^0` will force fast-import to resolve the commit through Git's revision parsing library, rather than its internal branch table, thereby loading in the existing value of the branch. """ Perhaps try that? > Looking through the code of fast-import.c, I can indeed lookup_branch and new_branch only deal with internal data structures and the only point were read_ref is called to actually read existing branches from the repo is in update_branch to check whether the parent was set correctly. What is missing is a call to read_ref in either lookup_branch or new_branch (probably both have to be reworked in some way to handle this cleanly). From all I can see a fix should be fairly straightforward to implement, but I am really not sure whether I have the full picture on this. > > (I found all of this struggling with git-p4.py which appears to contains a complex and not fully correct mechanism to determine the 'initalParent' that appears to implement just such a workaround.) > > I would be grateful for any input on this issue! Greetings, > Norbert Hope that helps, Elijah