How to abort a merge in mercurial?
Asked Answered
K

3

91

I goofed up a merge. I'd like to revert then try again.
Is there a way to revert a merge before it is committed?

hg revert doesn't do what I'd like, it only reverts the text of the files. Mercurial aborts my second attempt at merging and complains original merge is still uncommitted.

Is there a way to undo a merge after an hg merge command but before it's committed?

Krell answered 20/10, 2010 at 18:24 Comment(1)
Possible duplicate of How to abandon a hg merge?Panpsychist
S
114

hg update -C <one of the two merge changesets>

Satiated answered 20/10, 2010 at 18:28 Comment(7)
Simple, efficient and, I think, the best way to do it! :DBarytes
@JonL. - Yes, --clean is a synonym for -C. I'm not sure which changeset . will refer to, but it will always be one of the two merged changesets.Satiated
@Omnifarious, cleaning . should clean to whatever revision you were on prior to initiating the merge. So if you were at r42, attempted to merge with r43, failed, cleaned, you'd be back on a pristine r42.Yah
hg update --clean works, as . seems to be the the implicit default - it's not explicitly documented though.Businesslike
@JoelPurra: The meaning of . in the context of a merge is rather ambiguous.Satiated
@Omnifarious: seemed to default to the working copy changeset that was there before any other changeset was merge'd in as the second parent. Good enough for me =)Businesslike
@JoelPurra: I should look in the code to see if that's the explicit intention. The other possibility I could see is the default being the changeset with the lowest or highest valued hash (which is essentially picking one randomly).Satiated
M
44

After you do hg merge, but before hg commit, your working copy has two parents: the first parent is the changeset you had updated to before the merge and the second parent is the changeset you are merging with. Mercurial will not let you do hg merge again as long as your working copy has two parents.

You have two options on how to proceed:

  1. If you want to abort the merge and get back to where you started, then do

    hg update -C .
    

    This will update the working copy to match the first parent: the . always denotes the first parent of the working copy.

  2. If you want to re-merge some files then do

    hg resolve fileA fileB
    

    This will re-launch the merge tools just as when you did hg merge. The resolve command is good if you find out at hg merge-time that your merge tools are configured badly: fix the configuration and run hg resolve --all. You can run hg resolve as many times as you want until you are satisfied with the merge.

Massey answered 25/10, 2010 at 6:7 Comment(0)
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2

Today there is hg merge --abort. See hg help merge.

Hoot answered 22/12, 2021 at 15:31 Comment(0)

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