Hi all-
I have a branch history that looks like this:
----------M-----M-- master
\ / /
x---------------- feature
\ \
x-------------A- maint
In other words we had a new feature that was "so cool" that after testing on
master was back-ported to maint (luckily we knew ahead of time this was
likely). When it came time to merge feature into maint the process looked
something like this:
Yesterday (not shown above):
$ git checkout master
$ git merge maint
Today:
$ git checkout maint
$ git merge feature
Merge made by the 'recursive' strategy.
$ git checkout master
$ git merge maint
Already up-to-date!
Merge made by the 'recursive' strategy.
$ git --version
git version 1.8.1.5
In the past, I've only seen "Already up-to-date!" when there is literally
nothing to do (all commits are reachable from HEAD). In this case, the merge
of feature into maint (commit A) is the only commit not reachable from HEAD,
and Git does create a merge commit (though the new commit and the first parent
point to the same tree). The fact that a commit is created makes me call this
something more than a no-op, even though no content changed.
So what is the actual meaning of "Already up-to-date!"? Is it based on the
tree, the reachable commits, or something more complicated?
Thanks,
Stephen
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