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authorJeff King <peff@peff.net>2016-02-23 01:04:41 -0500
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2016-02-22 22:36:05 -0800
commit1a92e53ba3614105b7a58a4820f4d33f3cf33a3a (patch)
tree096f6cd80e02e7c9774d2335a1e34c0ce2b5f443 /xdiff
parenta2558fb8e1e387b630312311e1d22c95663da5d0 (diff)
downloadgit-1a92e53ba3614105b7a58a4820f4d33f3cf33a3a.tar.gz
git-1a92e53ba3614105b7a58a4820f4d33f3cf33a3a.tar.xz
merge-one-file: use empty blob for add/add base
When we see an add/add conflict on a file, we generate the conflicted content by doing a 3-way merge with a "virtual" base consisting of the common lines of the two sides. This strategy dates back to cb93c19 (merge-one-file: use common as base, instead of emptiness., 2005-11-09). Back then, the next step was to call rcs merge to generate the 3-way conflicts. Using the virtual base produced much better results, as rcs merge does not attempt to minimize the hunks. As a result, you'd get a conflict with the entirety of the files on either side. Since then, though, we've switched to using git-merge-file, which uses xdiff's "zealous" merge. This will find the minimal hunks even with just the simple, empty base. Let's switch to using that empty base. It's simpler, more efficient, and reduces our dependencies (we no longer need a working diff binary). It's also how the merge-recursive strategy handles this same case. We can almost get rid of git-sh-setup's create_virtual_base, but we don't here, for two reasons: 1. The functions in git-sh-setup are part of our public interface, so it's possible somebody is depending on it. We'd at least need to deprecate it first. 2. It's also used by mergetool's p4merge driver. It's unknown whether its 3-way merge is as capable as git's; if not, then it is benefiting from the function. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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