ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

master branch and 'origin/master' have diverged, how to 'undiverge' branches'?

Somehow my master and my origin/master branch have diverged.
I actually don't want them to diverge.

How can I view these differences and merge them?

what do you mean by diverging? do you rebase your master after pushing it?
I get a message saying "Your branch and 'origin/master' have diverged, # and have 1 and 1 different commit(s) each, respectively."
I have updated my answer to reflect that "diverged" warning message.
The explanation at this blog helped me infinitely more than any answer below: sebgoo.blogspot.com/2012/02/…
To undo all changes to my own local branch after it had 'diverged' (needed push and pull, when I made no changes I can remember): git reset --hard origin/my-branch . Only do this if you know you did not make any local changes that you want to keep.

N
Nima Mehanian

You can review the differences with a:

git log HEAD..origin/master

before pulling it (fetch + merge) (see also "How do you get git to always pull from a specific branch?")

When you have a message like:

"Your branch and 'origin/master' have diverged, # and have 1 and 1 different commit(s) each, respectively."

, check if you need to update origin. If origin is up-to-date, then some commits have been pushed to origin from another repo while you made your own commits locally.

... o ---- o ---- A ---- B  origin/master (upstream work)
                   \
                    C  master (your work)

You based commit C on commit A because that was the latest work you had fetched from upstream at the time.

However, before you tried to push back to origin, someone else pushed commit B. Development history has diverged into separate paths.

You can then merge or rebase. See Pro Git: Git Branching - Rebasing for details.

Merge

Use the git merge command:

$ git merge origin/master

This tells Git to integrate the changes from origin/master into your work and create a merge commit.
The graph of history now looks like this:

... o ---- o ---- A ---- B  origin/master (upstream work)
                   \      \
                    C ---- M  master (your work)

The new merge, commit M, has two parents, each representing one path of development that led to the content stored in that commit.

Note that the history behind M is now non-linear.

Rebase

Use the git rebase command:

$ git rebase origin/master

This tells Git to replay commit C (your work) as if you had based it on commit B instead of A. CVS and Subversion users routinely rebase their local changes on top of upstream work when they update before commit. Git just adds explicit separation between the commit and rebase steps.

The graph of history now looks like this:

... o ---- o ---- A ---- B  origin/master (upstream work)
                          \
                           C'  master (your work)

Commit C' is a new commit created by the git rebase command. It is different from C in two ways:

It has a different history: B instead of A. Its content accounts for changes in both B and C; it is the same as M from the merge example.

Note that the history behind C' is still linear.
We have chosen (for now) to allow only linear history in cmake.org/cmake.git.
This approach preserves the CVS-based workflow used previously and may ease the transition.
An attempt to push C' into our repository will work (assuming you have permissions and no one has pushed while you were rebasing).

The git pull command provides a shorthand way to fetch from origin and rebase local work on it:

$ git pull --rebase

This combines the above fetch and rebase steps into one command.


I found this while looking up the same problem, can you explain why 'git reset --hard HEAD' didn't fix the problem?
@Neth: because it is not about staged modifications (i.e. modifications present in the index but not yet committed), but about local commits (which differs from commits present on the remote). git reset --hard HEAD would only remove any local indexed non-committed modification, and would do nothing to reconcile the differences between local and remote commits. Only a merge or a rebase will bring the two set of commits (the local one and the remote one) together.
Wow, thanks for this awesome response. We had accidentally done a "git pull" without "--rebase", and "git rebase origin/master" was just the fix!
How about - I just want to ignore/dump my local changes and be with my local branch where the remote is? In other words, I want master to point to B at your example.
@CygnusX1 that would be a git reset --hard origin/master as mentioned in the answer just below: stackoverflow.com/a/8476004/6309
J
Jalal

I had this and am mystified as to what has caused it, even after reading the above responses. My solution was to do

git reset --hard origin/master

Then that just resets my (local) copy of master (which I assume is screwed up) to the correct point, as represented by (remote) origin/master.

WARNING: You will lose all changes not yet pushed to origin/master.


yes, it feels a bit like the dummies option, but if there's no real danger and you're here for a quick fix - this works (for me anyway)
This requires to be on the master branch before ("git checkout master").
Hi skiphoppy, thanks for the tip. I agree with PandaWood (no offence meant) that it seems like a bit of a dummies option. But in saying that, I'm not that experienced with the more advanced aspects of Git.
The origin/master bit is what I needed -- somehow I just got out of sorts locally and really wanted to revert to origin, but resetting without the explicit remote name was not working. Thanks!
@PedroLoureiro Commits are note really lost, you can still find the commits with git reflog or see them in gitk --all. But yet, of course the hard reset is another thing than a rebase.
k
ktamlyn
git pull --rebase origin/master 

is a single command that can help you most of the time.

Edit: Pulls the commits from the origin/master and applies your changes upon the newly pulled branch history.


please mention what the command does, else people might run it and end up screwing up
If there is no problem, you should end up with your master containing all the changes origin/master plus all your local commits will be replayed on top of it. Seems good to me.
Except when there are real differences and it leaves you in an aborted rebase.
This yields an error: error: Failed to merge in the changes. Patch failed at 0024 Request and Response models
C
Community

I found myself in this situation when I tried to rebase a branch that was tracking a remote branch, and I was trying to rebase it on master. In this scenario if you try to rebase, you'll most likely find your branch diverged and it can create a mess that isn't for git nubees!

Let's say you are on branch my_remote_tracking_branch, which was branched from master

$ git status # On branch my_remote_tracking_branch nothing to commit (working directory clean)

And now you are trying to rebase from master as:

git rebase master

STOP NOW and save yourself some trouble! Instead, use merge as:

git merge master

Yes, you'll end up with extra commits on your branch. But unless you are up for "un-diverging" branches, this will be a much smoother workflow than rebasing. See this blog for a much more detailed explanation.

On the other hand, if your branch is only a local branch (i.e. not yet pushed to any remote) you should definitely do a rebase (and your branch will not diverge in this case).

Now if you are reading this because you already are in a "diverged" scenario due to such rebase, you can get back to the last commit from origin (i.e. in an un-diverged state) by using:

git reset --hard origin/my_remote_tracking_branch


A rule of thumb is to use rebase if the branch you're rebasing has not been published (and used by other people). Otherwise, use merge. If you rebase already published (and used) branches, you have to coordinate a conspiracy to rewrite history across every developer that has used your branch.
Unfortunately I did not read this message before doing the git rebase master...
If i do git rebase master while on branch 'foobar' then technically foobar is diverged from origin/foobar until I do a git push -f , right?
git reset --hard origin/my_remote_tracking_branch is what really worked
D
Darren Cook

In my case here is what I did to cause the diverged message: I did git push but then did git commit --amend to add something to the commit message. Then I also did another commit.

So in my case that simply meant origin/master was out of date. Because I knew no-one else was touching origin/master, the fix was trivial: git push -f (where -f means force)


+1 for git push -f to overwrite the changes previously committed and pushed to origin. I also am sure nobody else touched the repository.
Very risky command. Please write a short information regarding risk factor of the command.
@Trickster: I already had described the risk: "as I knew no-one else was touching origin/master". I believe, in that case, this is not a risky command.
If someone commits on master and then one person run the command git push -f then it is high risk command
Thanks for this answer. My CI had a git commit --amend and would fail because of that. Amending local commits makes sense, in CI if you amend before committing you are technically amending a remote commit thats already been pushed and hence it sees it as a diversion.
R
Rishi Kulshreshtha

I believe this should have helped me:

git reset --hard origin/master

But it didn't, somehow I was getting the same message & as soon as I was pulling the changes from the remote branch the conflicts were happening. Since I was sure that I don't need my existing local branch at all & I just need an exact replica of the master branch from remote, hence I came up with this solution:

Checkout to a new branch, for instance git checkout -b placeholder-branch. Note: This branch can be deleted later.

git branch -D master, I did this as I was sure that my local branch is screwed up & I actually don't need this, I just need a fresh copy from the remote instance.

git checkout --track origin/master & you're done, now you can delete the placeholder-branch using git branch -D


L
Laryx Decidua

In my case I have pushed changes to origin/master and then realised I should not have done so :-( This was complicated by the fact that the local changes were in a subtree. So I went back to the last good commit before the "bad" local changes (using SourceTree) and then I got the "divergence message".

After fixing my mess locally (the details are not important here) I wanted to "move back in time" the remote origin/master branch so that it would be in sync with the local master again. The solution in my case was:

git push origin master -f

Note the -f (force) switch. This deleted the "bad changes" that had been pushed to origin/master by mistake and now the local and remote branches are in sync.

Please keep in mind that this is a potentially destructive operation so perform it only if you are 100% sure that "moving back" the remote master in time is OK.


Always useful but surely doesn't answer the question.
@ThibaultD. even if it didn't, this is exactly what I was looking for.
I'm getting You are not allowed to force push code to a protected branch on this project. . I'm trying to push to my fork.
I had to remove protection on gitlab repo stackoverflow.com/questions/32246503/…
Yes I had a few commits on master that shouldn't have been there, if you don't care about deleting them, the above or "git push --force" works (REWRITES HISTORY AND DELETES THE DIVERGED REMOTE COMMITS). If you want to keep the commits but not on master then it is possible to move them to another branch.
B
Bianca Daniciuc

I know there are plenty of answers here, but I think git reset --soft HEAD~1 deserves some attention, because it let you keep changes in the last local (not pushed) commit while solving the diverged state. I think this is a more versatile solution than pull with rebase, because the local commit can be reviewed and even moved to another branch.

The key is using --soft, instead of the harsh --hard. If there is more than 1 commit, a variation of HEAD~x should work. So here are all the steps that solved my situation (I had 1 local commit and 8 commits in the remote):

1) git reset --soft HEAD~1 to undo local commit. For the next steps, I've used the interface in SourceTree, but I think the following commands should also work:

2) git stash to stash changes from 1). Now all the changes are safe and there's no divergence anymore.

3) git pull to get the remote changes.

4) git stash pop or git stash apply to apply the last stashed changes, followed by a new commit, if wanted. This step is optional, along with 2), when want to trash the changes in local commit. Also, when want to commit to another branch, this step should be done after switching to the desired one.


Actually, these days, the pull --rebase would stash automatically anyway. stackoverflow.com/a/30209750/6309
S
Shohin

I have fixed it by moving to commit_sha that last is committed to origin/master.

git reset --hard commit_sha

WARNING: You will lose all that is committed after the 'commit_sha' commit.


C
C Johnson

To view the differences:

git difftool --dir-diff master origin/master

This will display the changes or differences between the two branches. In araxis (My favorite) it displays it in a folder diff style. Showing each of the changed files. I can then click on a file to see the details of the changes in the file.


Interesting use of git-dir: +1
M
Matt Bond

In my case this was caused by not committing my conflict resolution.

The problem was caused by running the git pull command. Changes in the origin led to conflicts with my local repo, which I resolved. However, I did not commit them. The solution at this point is to commit the changes (git commit the resolved file)

If you have also modified some files since resolving the conflict, the git status command will show the local modifications as unstaged local modifications and merge resolution as staged local modifications. This can be properly resolved by committing changes from the merge first by git commit, then adding and committing the unstaged changes as usual (e.g. by git commit -a).


d
dsmith63

Replace 123 with number of commits your branch has diverged from origin.

git reset HEAD~123 && git reset && git checkout . && git clean -fd && git pull

G
GPopat

git reset --soft origin/my_remote_tracking_branch

This way you will not loose your local changes

H
Hashim Aziz

To more directly answer the original question, you can inspect the actual conflicting differences with:

git diff HEAD..origin/master

and use this information to decide whether to pull the origin's changes into your local repo or push your local changes to the origin.


i
igronus

I prefer doing it more convenient and safer way.

# copying your commit(s) to separate branch
git checkout <last_sync_commit>
git checkout -b temp
git cherry-pick <last_local_commit>

git checkout master
git reset --soft HEAD~1 # or how many commits you have only on local machine
git stash               # safer, can be avoided using hard resetting on the above line
git pull
git cherry-pick <last_local_commit>

# deleting temporary branch
git branch -D temp

L
LoveForDroid

I had same message when I was trying to edit last commit message, of already pushed commit, using: git commit --amend -m "New message" When I pushed the changes using git push --force-with-lease repo_name branch_name there were no issues.


J
Jeff Wong

Met this problem when I created a branch based on branch A by

git checkout -b a

and then I set the up stream of branch a to origin branch B by

git branch -u origin/B

Then I got the error message above.

One way to solve this problem for me was,

Delete the branch a

Create a new branch b by

git checkout -b b origin/B

S
S G

In my case I got this message when I pushed X ver.1 commit from branch B to its remote-tracking branch remote_B.Then on my local repository I made changes and amend it to same commit ie.X ver.2.

Now we have commit X ver1 on remote repo and commit X ver.2 on local. Then git will show you warning that

Your local branch and remote_ have 1 and 1 different commits each, respectively

to solve this you have two option:

1.pull the changes from remote tracking branch .

git reset --hard HEAD
git checkout --track remoteRepoName/branch_name 

2.force push the amended commit to remote repo. (Only recommended if remote repo is not pulled by anyone after pushing the X ver1 commit)

git push -f remote_repo_name remote_branch_name

couple things wrong here: 1. this would overwrite remote master with local master, thus erasing forever any collaborative work that hasn't been pulled to local. i think they wanted to re-combine a diverged branch, with multiple changes, not delete one in favour of the other. 2. you'd have to delete the branch for the git checkout --track command to work - it gives a warning if the branch already exists.