On Mon, Feb 14, 2011 at 05:41:03PM +0000, Varnau, Steve (Neoview) wrote: > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Stefan Sperling > Sent: Saturday, February 12, 2011 5:10 AM > To: Daniel Becroft > Cc: Varnau, Steve (Neoview); [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Dangerous to keep re-integrated branches alive? > > After the reintegration merge, /trunk and the branch should be bit-by-bit > > identical. Period. > > No. That's not true in the general case. It's a common misunderstanding > though. > See here for details: > http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/subversion-users/201009.mbox/%[email protected]%3E > > -------------- > Thanks for both replies. So, at least one could do a double-check if the > files involved in the re-integration check-in revision are identical on the > branch. They should be, and if so, then it is safe to block the merge and > keep the branch alive. > > -Steve No, the files can differ. E.g. consider what happens if the branch modifies the very last line of a file. Now the branch is synced to trunk to prepare it for reintegration. The file receives no changes. Next, someone commits a change to trunk changing the very first line of the file. Then you perform the reintegrate merge, and it's likely that this merge is conflict-free (unless the file is very short). Now you commit the result of the reintegration merge, and the files on the branch and the trunk are not the same -- they differ in the first line.
