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| 1 | +Rerere |
| 2 | +====== |
| 3 | + |
| 4 | +This document describes the rerere logic. |
| 5 | + |
| 6 | +Conflict normalization |
| 7 | +---------------------- |
| 8 | + |
| 9 | +To ensure recorded conflict resolutions can be looked up in the rerere |
| 10 | +database, even when branches are merged in a different order, |
| 11 | +different branches are merged that result in the same conflict, or |
| 12 | +when different conflict style settings are used, rerere normalizes the |
| 13 | +conflicts before writing them to the rerere database. |
| 14 | + |
| 15 | +Different conflict styles and branch names are normalized by stripping |
| 16 | +the labels from the conflict markers, and removing the common ancestor |
| 17 | +version from the `diff3` conflict style. Branches that are merged |
| 18 | +in different order are normalized by sorting the conflict hunks. More |
| 19 | +on each of those steps in the following sections. |
| 20 | + |
| 21 | +Once these two normalization operations are applied, a conflict ID is |
| 22 | +calculated based on the normalized conflict, which is later used by |
| 23 | +rerere to look up the conflict in the rerere database. |
| 24 | + |
| 25 | +Removing the common ancestor version |
| 26 | +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 27 | + |
| 28 | +Say we have three branches AB, AC and AC2. The common ancestor of |
| 29 | +these branches has a file with a line containing the string "A" (for |
| 30 | +brevity this is called "line A" in the rest of the document). In |
| 31 | +branch AB this line is changed to "B", in AC, this line is changed to |
| 32 | +"C", and branch AC2 is forked off of AC, after the line was changed to |
| 33 | +"C". |
| 34 | + |
| 35 | +Forking a branch ABAC off of branch AB and then merging AC into it, we |
| 36 | +get a conflict like the following: |
| 37 | + |
| 38 | + <<<<<<< HEAD |
| 39 | + B |
| 40 | + ======= |
| 41 | + C |
| 42 | + >>>>>>> AC |
| 43 | + |
| 44 | +Doing the analogous with AC2 (forking a branch ABAC2 off of branch AB |
| 45 | +and then merging branch AC2 into it), using the diff3 conflict style, |
| 46 | +we get a conflict like the following: |
| 47 | + |
| 48 | + <<<<<<< HEAD |
| 49 | + B |
| 50 | + ||||||| merged common ancestors |
| 51 | + A |
| 52 | + ======= |
| 53 | + C |
| 54 | + >>>>>>> AC2 |
| 55 | + |
| 56 | +By resolving this conflict, to leave line D, the user declares: |
| 57 | + |
| 58 | + After examining what branches AB and AC did, I believe that making |
| 59 | + line A into line D is the best thing to do that is compatible with |
| 60 | + what AB and AC wanted to do. |
| 61 | + |
| 62 | +As branch AC2 refers to the same commit as AC, the above implies that |
| 63 | +this is also compatible what AB and AC2 wanted to do. |
| 64 | + |
| 65 | +By extension, this means that rerere should recognize that the above |
| 66 | +conflicts are the same. To do this, the labels on the conflict |
| 67 | +markers are stripped, and the common ancestor version is removed. The above |
| 68 | +examples would both result in the following normalized conflict: |
| 69 | + |
| 70 | + <<<<<<< |
| 71 | + B |
| 72 | + ======= |
| 73 | + C |
| 74 | + >>>>>>> |
| 75 | + |
| 76 | +Sorting hunks |
| 77 | +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 78 | + |
| 79 | +As before, lets imagine that a common ancestor had a file with line A |
| 80 | +its early part, and line X in its late part. And then four branches |
| 81 | +are forked that do these things: |
| 82 | + |
| 83 | + - AB: changes A to B |
| 84 | + - AC: changes A to C |
| 85 | + - XY: changes X to Y |
| 86 | + - XZ: changes X to Z |
| 87 | + |
| 88 | +Now, forking a branch ABAC off of branch AB and then merging AC into |
| 89 | +it, and forking a branch ACAB off of branch AC and then merging AB |
| 90 | +into it, would yield the conflict in a different order. The former |
| 91 | +would say "A became B or C, what now?" while the latter would say "A |
| 92 | +became C or B, what now?" |
| 93 | + |
| 94 | +As a reminder, the act of merging AC into ABAC and resolving the |
| 95 | +conflict to leave line D means that the user declares: |
| 96 | + |
| 97 | + After examining what branches AB and AC did, I believe that |
| 98 | + making line A into line D is the best thing to do that is |
| 99 | + compatible with what AB and AC wanted to do. |
| 100 | + |
| 101 | +So the conflict we would see when merging AB into ACAB should be |
| 102 | +resolved the same way---it is the resolution that is in line with that |
| 103 | +declaration. |
| 104 | + |
| 105 | +Imagine that similarly previously a branch XYXZ was forked from XY, |
| 106 | +and XZ was merged into it, and resolved "X became Y or Z" into "X |
| 107 | +became W". |
| 108 | + |
| 109 | +Now, if a branch ABXY was forked from AB and then merged XY, then ABXY |
| 110 | +would have line B in its early part and line Y in its later part. |
| 111 | +Such a merge would be quite clean. We can construct 4 combinations |
| 112 | +using these four branches ((AB, AC) x (XY, XZ)). |
| 113 | + |
| 114 | +Merging ABXY and ACXZ would make "an early A became B or C, a late X |
| 115 | +became Y or Z" conflict, while merging ACXY and ABXZ would make "an |
| 116 | +early A became C or B, a late X became Y or Z". We can see there are |
| 117 | +4 combinations of ("B or C", "C or B") x ("X or Y", "Y or X"). |
| 118 | + |
| 119 | +By sorting, the conflict is given its canonical name, namely, "an |
| 120 | +early part became B or C, a late part becames X or Y", and whenever |
| 121 | +any of these four patterns appear, and we can get to the same conflict |
| 122 | +and resolution that we saw earlier. |
| 123 | + |
| 124 | +Without the sorting, we'd have to somehow find a previous resolution |
| 125 | +from combinatorial explosion. |
| 126 | + |
| 127 | +Conflict ID calculation |
| 128 | +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 129 | + |
| 130 | +Once the conflict normalization is done, the conflict ID is calculated |
| 131 | +as the sha1 hash of the conflict hunks appended to each other, |
| 132 | +separated by <NUL> characters. The conflict markers are stripped out |
| 133 | +before the sha1 is calculated. So in the example above, where we |
| 134 | +merge branch AC which changes line A to line C, into branch AB, which |
| 135 | +changes line A to line C, the conflict ID would be |
| 136 | +SHA1('B<NUL>C<NUL>'). |
| 137 | + |
| 138 | +If there are multiple conflicts in one file, the sha1 is calculated |
| 139 | +the same way with all hunks appended to each other, in the order in |
| 140 | +which they appear in the file, separated by a <NUL> character. |
| 141 | + |
| 142 | +Nested conflicts |
| 143 | +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 144 | + |
| 145 | +Nested conflicts are handled very similarly to "simple" conflicts. |
| 146 | +Similar to simple conflicts, the conflict is first normalized by |
| 147 | +stripping the labels from conflict markers, stripping the common ancestor |
| 148 | +version, and the sorting the conflict hunks, both for the outer and the |
| 149 | +inner conflict. This is done recursively, so any number of nested |
| 150 | +conflicts can be handled. |
| 151 | + |
| 152 | +The only difference is in how the conflict ID is calculated. For the |
| 153 | +inner conflict, the conflict markers themselves are not stripped out |
| 154 | +before calculating the sha1. |
| 155 | + |
| 156 | +Say we have the following conflict for example: |
| 157 | + |
| 158 | + <<<<<<< HEAD |
| 159 | + 1 |
| 160 | + ======= |
| 161 | + <<<<<<< HEAD |
| 162 | + 3 |
| 163 | + ======= |
| 164 | + 2 |
| 165 | + >>>>>>> branch-2 |
| 166 | + >>>>>>> branch-3~ |
| 167 | + |
| 168 | +After stripping out the labels of the conflict markers, and sorting |
| 169 | +the hunks, the conflict would look as follows: |
| 170 | + |
| 171 | + <<<<<<< |
| 172 | + 1 |
| 173 | + ======= |
| 174 | + <<<<<<< |
| 175 | + 2 |
| 176 | + ======= |
| 177 | + 3 |
| 178 | + >>>>>>> |
| 179 | + >>>>>>> |
| 180 | + |
| 181 | +and finally the conflict ID would be calculated as: |
| 182 | +`sha1('1<NUL><<<<<<<\n3\n=======\n2\n>>>>>>><NUL>')` |
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