>> I'm trying to better understand one of the merge algorithms as I had some
>> triumphs and tribulations with using a set of commands during a merge. tldr:
>> can a git merge -s recursive -X patience; // result in a fast-forward merge?
>> will --no-ff stop it
>>
>> So, the scenario is this:
>> - Merging a master branch into a feature branch that is 2+ years old
>> - We found this command was more beneficial when merging a large 20k
>> line text file:
>> - git merge -s recursive -X patience master
>> - In a recent merge using this approach the reflog shows that the merge
>> was performed using a fast-forward from the feature branch's head
>> - 082517-1, feature/branch) HEAD@{23}: merge feature/branch:
>> Fast-forward
>>
>>
>> My question is, is it possible for that command to use a fast-forward like
>> this? (or did something else go horribly wrong? possibly an atlassian git
>> GUI tool corrupting the work):
>> - If it is possible for the command to fast-forward the merge when
>> making the commit does --no-ff force the command to never use fast-forward
>> in this case
>>
>> Thanks for the help,
>> Daniel
>