Thank you Bob!

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Bob Archer [mailto:bob.arc...@amsi.com] 
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 30. Juni 2010 17:53
An: Graf, Andreas; Giulio Troccoli; users@subversion.apache.org
Cc: Bruedern, Ivonne
Betreff: RE: Reintegrate merge to another branch

>>> From: Graf, Andreas [mailto:andreas.g...@ext.eu.panasonic.com]
>>> We are using Tortoise reintegrate successfully to merge changes
>>> back to the branch that have been used for branch-off.
>>> 
>>> But if we are using reintegrate to apply the same differences to
>>> another branch, we are getting bad merge results.
>>> Is there a bug-fix for that problem available or is it only
>>> possible to do that merge using range-merging?
>>>

>> Von: Giulio Troccoli [mailto:giulio.trocc...@uk.linedata.com]
>> I don't think is possible to use --reintegrate. You can always to a
>> "old style" merge with a revision range.
>> 
>> But there is something I don't understand. I presume you have
>> created both branches from trunk, so after you have reintegrated
>> the first branch, isn't it ebough to do a merge from trunk in the
>> second branch?

> From: Graf, Andreas [mailto:andreas.g...@ext.eu.panasonic.com]
> From my point of view, the bennefit of reintegrate is that users do
> not have to take care about the used revisions, so we would like to
> use that functionality for submitting changes to other branches
> too. For instance when we have to provide patches to a test-branch
> before patches are merged back to trunk.

--reintegrate is used to merge changes made to a branch (copy really) back to 
its parent/ancestor path. 

So, your point of view is a bit skewed. Since your branch is not a child copy 
of the other branch you can not use --reintegrate. 

You have several options... you can merge from one branch to the other. It just 
wouldn't be an integration merge... it would be a regular merge. Merge tracking 
will ensure that you don't merge the same changes more than once. 

Say you have....

/trunk
/branch/Feature1
/branch/Feature1.1

In the above you copied /trunk to /branch/Feature one. You then branched 
/branch/Fature1 to /branch/Feature1.1. 

Let's assume you have made changes to feature 1 and finished those changes. You 
can --reintegrate Feature1 into trunk. That is fine, since that was its 
ancestral parent. 

However, if you want to bring everything you did in Feature1 to Feature1.1 you 
would merge from /Feature1 into /Feature1.1 but it would NOT be a reintegration 
merge. 

Bottom line... reintegrate is always used to put the changes made on a branch 
back into its parent assuming you have merged all changes made on the parent 
into that branch first.

BOb




..............................................................................
Confidentiality Notice
The information contained in this Email, and any attachments, is intended for 
the named recipients only. It may contain confidential and/or legally 
privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, you must not 
copy, store, distribute or take any action in reliance on it. Any views 
expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of the company.

If you receive this Email by mistake, please advise the sender by using the 
reply facility in your Email software and then delete it.
.............................................................................

Reply via email to