Thanks a lot Karl,
Your method solved the problem perfectly.
Have a good day,
--
Jean-Christian de Rivaz
Karl Hasselström a écrit :
On 2007-07-10 11:52:47 +0200, Jean-Christian de Rivaz wrote:
I have made the error to use the "git pull" command instead of the
"stg pull" command. The "git pull" have been executed successfuly,
but now stg seem to be confused:
stg pull -n
stg pull: local changes in the tree. Use "refresh" to commit them
stg new dummy -m "dummy"
stg new: HEAD and top are not the same. You probably committed
changes to the tree outside of StGIT. If you know what you
are doing, use the "refresh -f" command
How can I restore the archive to a normal state for stg ?
The problem is that you have committed a merge on top of the StGIT
stack, and StGIT can't deal with that. You can undo the merge
(provided that you haven't committed anything else on top of it) with
"git reset --hard HEAD^".
NOTE: "reset --hard" will erase uncommitted modifications to working
tree files, so first make sure that "git status" doesn't report any
modifications you want to keep.
If you want to get a better view of what it is you're doing, you could
fire up gitk and find the sha1 of the commit that is supposed to be at
the top of the StGIT stack, and "git reset <sha1>" to that commit.
Once the merge is undone, just "stg pull" like you wanted to do in the
first place.
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