Aidan Van Dyk <aidan@highrise.ca> writes:
> On Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 11:27 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
>> man git-pull sayeth
>>
>> � � In its default mode, git pull is shorthand for git fetch followed by
>> � � git merge FETCH_HEAD.
>>
>> However, I just tried that and it failed rather spectacularly. �How do
>> you *really* update your local repo without an extra git fetch step?
> If you have a "local copy of the remote" setup already that's been
> updated already, you can to the merge directly:
> git merge <branch>
> where a branch would normally be something like:
> origin/master
> or
> origin/REL9_0STABLE
> That will make a merge commit. Another option, if you're trying to
> keep linear development would be:
> git rebase origin/master
Yeah, I don't want a merge. I have these config entries (as per our
wiki recommendations):
[branch "master"]rebase = true
[branch]autosetuprebase = always
and what I really want is to update all my workdirs the same way git
pull would do, but not have to repeat the "git fetch" part. This isn't
only a matter of saving network time, it's that I don't necessarily want
the branch heads moving underneath me for branches I already updated.
BTW, I've noticed that "git push" will reject an attempt to push an
update in one branch if my other branches are not up to date, even
if I am not trying to push anything for those branches. That's
pretty annoying too; is there a way around that?
regards, tom lane