[darcs-users] Problems with darcs 1.03
Bryn Keller
xoltar at xoltar.org
Fri Sep 9 20:45:25 UTC 2005
Tommy Pettersson wrote:
>On Fri, Sep 09, 2005 at 10:39:18AM -0700, Bryn Keller wrote:
>
>
>>Oh well. The original problem I had was that I accidentally included a
>>binary file in a repo, call it repo A, that I didn't really want in
>>there. Before realizing this, I pulled a copy, call it repo B, and did a
>>bunch of work in there. Changes to the binary file were made, and
>>inadvertently included in the patch I then recorded. When I tried to
>>push B's patch back to A, it failed because of a conflict in this binary
>>file. As it happens, I don't even care about this binary file, I'd be
>>happy to overwrite it, but there's no option for that. Also, the error
>>message suggests a --mark-conflicts option:
>>
>>darcs failed: Refusing to apply patches leading to conflicts.
>>If you would rather apply the patch and mark the conflicts,
>>use the --mark-conflicts option to apply.
>>
>>However, the option isn't recognized:
>>
>>C:\A\B\src>darcs push --mark-conflicts
>>
>>darcs failed: unrecognized option `--mark-conflicts'
>>
>>
>
>This is a common case of confusion due to the cryptic "help"
>from darcs. The 'push' will start a second invocation of
>darcs that runs the 'apply' command to apply the selected
>patches in the target repo. It is 'apply' that doesn't allow
>conflicts without one of the --conflict options. 'Push'
>doesn't recognize nor propagates those flags (in version
>1.0.3 at least). The easy workaround is to go to repo A and
>'pull' the patches from B. It is also possible to add a line
>"apply --mark-conflicts" in A/_darcs/prefs/defaults to always
>have 'apply' use that option in that repo -- including when
>pushed to from another repo. But experience has shown that
>you usually don't want to create conflicts in a "remote" repo.
>
>
>
Thanks, that was very helpful. I've managed to get my patch moved over now.
Bryn
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