Resolving merge conflicts: Difference between revisions

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==Simple Rebase using Gerrit UI==
==Simple Rebase using Gerrit UI==
In some cases, it is possible to resolve merge conflicts issues in Gerrit using simple rebase triggered directly from the Gerrit UI. Just click on "Rebase" button to rebase the change.
In some cases, it is possible to resolve merge conflicts issues in Gerrit using simple rebase triggered directly from the Gerrit UI. Just click on "Rebase" button to rebase the change.

Revision as of 10:42, 13 March 2017

Simple Rebase using Gerrit UI

In some cases, it is possible to resolve merge conflicts issues in Gerrit using simple rebase triggered directly from the Gerrit UI. Just click on "Rebase" button to rebase the change.

The behaviour is described in Gerrit Review UI:

  • If the rebase is successful, a new patch set with the rebased commit is created.
  • If the rebase fails, there are conflicts that have to be resolved manually.

You can specify the parent revision where to rebase. The defaults are:

  • If the change does not depend on another open change, it is rebased onto the tip of the destination branch.
  • If the change depends on another open change, it is rebased onto the current patch set of that other change.

When "Rebase" button is not enough

However, in other cases some choices and updates need be done manually to resolve the conflicts that cannot be done using the Gerrit UI. We recommend the use of "git-review" tool: Using git-review to push and review changes.

Optionally, you can use git and these steps to resolve the conflict manually and update the commit on Gerrit so it can be merged. The following steps assume that the commit is against master branch. You will have to change master to the right branch, if you are trying to review a different branch.

1. Get the last code from the repository

git checkout master
git pull origin master

Note: use the appropriate branch instead of master

2. Create a new branch to work on the code with conflicts. You can use the review number and patchset as name.

git checkout -b <review-number>-<patchset>

3. Pull the patch on the created branch. (To find the command to execute you can open the corresponding change page on Gerrit UI, click on download menu, then copy the "pull" command.)

git pull <url> <ref>

4. Make a rebase of your branch against master

git rebase master

Note: use the appropriate branch instead of master

5. Fix all conflicts that cannot be resolved manually using your editor.

6. Add all updated files to the index.

git add <file> 

Note: You can use git-status to make sure that conflicts are solved

git status

7. Continue the rebase process using the following command

git rebase --continue

8. Submit your change back to the repository

git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master

Note: use the appropriate branch instead of master

9. Go back to Gerrit UI. You will find the change waiting for review.