I have a local branch named 'my_local_branch', which tracks a remote branch origin/my_remote_branch.

Now, the remote branch has been updated, and I am on the 'my_local_branch' and want to pull in those changes. Should I just do:

git pull origin my_remote_branch:my_local_branch 

Is this the correct way?

0

4 Answers

You don't use the : syntax - pull always modifies the currently checked-out branch. Thus:

git pull origin my_remote_branch 

while you have my_local_branch checked out will do what you want.

Since you already have the tracking branch set, you don't even need to specify - you could just do...

git pull 

while you have my_local_branch checked out, and it will update from the tracked branch.

0

You have set the upstream of that branch

(see:

 git branch -f --track my_local_branch origin/my_remote_branch # OR (if my_local_branch is currently checked out): $ git branch --set-upstream-to my_local_branch origin/my_remote_branch 

(git branch -f --track won't work if the branch is checked out: use the second command git branch --set-upstream-to instead, or you would get "fatal: Cannot force update the current branch.")

That means your branch is already configured with:

branch.my_local_branch.remote origin branch.my_local_branch.merge my_remote_branch 

Git already has all the necessary information.
In that case:

# if you weren't already on my_local_branch branch: git checkout my_local_branch # then: git pull 

is enough.


If you hadn't establish that upstream branch relationship when it came to push your 'my_local_branch', then a simple git push -u origin my_local_branch:my_remote_branch would have been enough to push and set the upstream branch.
After that, for the subsequent pulls/pushes, git pull or git push would, again, have been enough.

6

for somebody accidently mess the local commits.

delete local dirty branch

git branch -D master

then rebuild a branch from remote

git checkout -b master origin/master

1

Note: I am a git novice.

When I do a "git pull", I usually see "error: Your local changes to the following files would be overwritten by merge:" "Please commit your changes or stash them before merge." (Because I've made minor temp changes that I don't really care about.)

I typically don't care about my changes if I am pulling from remote. I just want the latest that the team has pushed. (I have used "stash" on occasion to keep some changes.)

So, what I do to pull the latest from remote and wipe out any of my local changes:

git reset --hard (for current branch)

or

git reset --hard origin/master (for going back to master)

then:

git pull (pulls the current remote files to my local)

1

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