On Fri, Nov 29, 2013 at 1:07 PM, Thomas Rast wrote:
> Tom Miller writes:
>
>> When a DF conflict occurs during a fetch, --prune should be able to fix
>> it. When fetching with --prune, the fetching process happens before
>> pruning causing the DF conflict to persist and report an error. This
>> p
Tom Miller writes:
> When a DF conflict occurs during a fetch, --prune should be able to fix
> it. When fetching with --prune, the fetching process happens before
> pruning causing the DF conflict to persist and report an error. This
> patch prunes before fetching, thus correcting DF conflicts du
When a DF conflict occurs during a fetch, --prune should be able to fix
it. When fetching with --prune, the fetching process happens before
pruning causing the DF conflict to persist and report an error. This
patch prunes before fetching, thus correcting DF conflicts during a
fetch.
Signed-off-by:
I encountered a directory/file conflict when running `git fetch --prune
origin`. I figured passing --prune would automatically fix DF conflicts. After
looking in the code I found that prune is called after fetching. It seemed to
be intentional according historical commits. I made this patch to cha
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