DEV Community

Karl Stolley
Karl Stolley

Posted on • Originally published at stolley.dev on

Hey, Wait: Git Has a New Complaint

When you upgrade to Git 2.27, one of the first changes you’ll notice is Git issuing this dire warning every time you go to pull from a remote:

$ git pull origin main
warning: Pulling without specifying how to reconcile divergent branches is
discouraged. You can squelch this message by running one of the following
commands sometime before your next pull:

  git config pull.rebase false # merge (the default strategy)
  git config pull.rebase true # rebase
  git config pull.ff only # fast-forward only

You can replace "git config" with "git config --global" to set a default
preference for all repositories. You can also pass --rebase, --no-rebase,
or --ff-only on the command line to override the configured default per
invocation.

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Almost certainly the best option here is to (probably globally) specify fast-forward only:

$ git config --global pull.ff only

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

A fast-forward is what happens under the happiest of circumstances: your local branch has no new changes that aren’t already on the remote, so you’re updating (fast-forwarding) the pointer on the HEAD commit to match the remote. Setting pull.ff only ensures that that happy behavior continues.

But there are plenty of unhappy circumstances. The one that most commonly ruins my day is when I’ve been working on the same branch of the same repo on two different computers. I push the commits from Computer A to the remote, but forget to run git pull from Computer B before writing new commits.

The default strategy, a merge commit, means you can end up with a repository full of merge commits from your own remote branch. It’s ugly and almost always leads to foxtrot commits.

By setting pull.ff only, Git will no longer race ahead and create a merge commit. You can opt to do so manually (git merge origin/main), but if you’re not working on a public branch, or if your divergent commits are still local, you can rebase your local branch onto the missing commits from your remote (git rebase origin/main). They’ll then appear as though they’ve been there the whole time.

Of course, when it comes to working with branches shared with others, it’s better by far to create your own, independent feature-branches and keep your work isolated, and rebase from the parent branch before pushing the commits on your own branch.

Top comments (0)