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# Branches
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## Introduction
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Branches are named pointers to revisions (just like they are in Git). You can
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move them without affecting the target revision's identity. Branches
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automatically move when revisions are rewritten (e.g. by `jj rebase`). You can
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pass a branch's name to commands that want a revision as argument. For example,
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`jj co main` will check out the revision pointed to by the "main" branch. Use
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`jj branch list` to list branches and `jj branch` to create, move, or delete
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branches. There is currently no concept of an active/current/checked-out branch.
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2024-01-04 03:09:22 +00:00
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## Remotes and tracked branches
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Jujutsu records the last seen position of a branch on each remote (just like
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Git's remote-tracking branches). This record is updated on every `jj git fetch`
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and `jj git push` of the branch. You can refer to the remembered remote branch
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positions with `<branch name>@<remote name>`, such as `jj new main@origin`. `jj`
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does not provide a way to manually edit these recorded positions.
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A remote branch can be associated with a local branch of the same name. This is
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called a **tracked remote branch**. When you pull a tracked branch from a
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remote, any changes compared to the current record of the remote's state will be
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propagated to the corresponding local branch, which will be created if it
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doesn't exist already.
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!!! note "Details: how `fetch` pulls branches"
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Let's say you run `jj git fetch --remote origin` and, during the fetch, `jj`
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determines that the remote's "main" branch has been moved so that its target is
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now ahead of the local record in `main@origin`.
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`jj` will then update `main@origin` to the new target. If `main@origin` is
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**tracked**, `jj` will also apply the change to the local branch `main`. If the
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local target has also been moved compared to `main@origin` (probably because you
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ran `jj branch set main`), then the two updates will be merged. If one is ahead
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of the other, then that target will become the new target. Otherwise, the local
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branch will become conflicted (see the ["Conflicts" section](#conflicts) below
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for details).
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Most commands don't show the tracked remote branch if it has the same target as
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the local branch. The local branch (without `@<remote name>`) is considered the
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branch's desired target. Consequently, if you want to update a branch on a
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remote, you first update the branch locally and then push the update to the
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remote. If a local branch also exists on some remote but points to a different
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target there, `jj log` will show the branch name with an asterisk suffix (e.g.
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`main*`). That is meant to remind you that you may want to push the branch to
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some remote.
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2024-01-04 03:09:22 +00:00
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If you want to know the internals of branch tracking, consult the
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[Design Doc][design].
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2024-01-04 06:56:20 +00:00
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### Terminology summary
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- A **remote branch** is a branch ref on the remote. `jj` can find out its
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actual state only when it's actively communicating with the remote. However,
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`jj` does store the last-seen position of the remote branch; this is the
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commit `jj show <branch name>@<remote name>` would show. This notion is
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completely analogous to Git's "remote-tracking branches".
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- A **tracked (remote) branch** is defined above. You can make a remote branch
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tracked with the [`jj branch track` command](#manually-tracking-a-branch), for
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example.
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- A **tracking (local) branch** is the local branch that `jj` tries to keep in
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sync with the tracked remote branch. For example, after `jj branch track
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mybranch@origin`, there will be a local branch `mybranch` that's tracking the
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remote `mybranch@origin` branch. A local branch can track a branch of the same
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name on 0 or more remotes.
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The notion of tracked branches serves a similar function to the Git notion of an
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"upstream branch". Unlike Git, a single local branch can be tracking remote
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branches on multiple remotes, and the names of the local and remote branches
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must match.
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### Manually tracking a branch
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To track a branch permanently use `jj branch track <branch name>@<remote name>`.
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It will now be imported as a local branch until you untrack it or it is deleted
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on the remote.
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Example:
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```sh
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$ # List all available branches, as we want our colleague's branch.
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$ jj branch list --all
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$ # Find the branch.
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$ # [...]
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$ # Actually track the branch.
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$ jj branch track <branch name>@<remote name> # Example: jj branch track my-feature@origin
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$ # From this point on, <branch name> will be imported when fetching from <remote name>.
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$ jj git fetch --remote <remote name>
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$ # A local branch <branch name> should have been created or updated while fetching.
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$ jj new <branch name> # Do some local testing, etc.
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```
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### Untracking a branch
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To stop following a remote branch, you can `jj branch untrack` it. After that,
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subsequent fetches of that remote will no longer move the local branch to match
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the position of the remote branch.
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Example:
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```sh
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$ # List all local and remote branches.
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$ jj branch list --all
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$ # Find the branch we no longer want to track.
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$ # [...]
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# # Actually untrack it.
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$ jj branch untrack <branch name>@<remote name> # Example: jj branch untrack stuff@origin
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$ # From this point on, this remote branch won't be imported anymore.
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$ # The local branch (e.g. stuff) is unaffected. It may or may not still
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$ # be tracking branches on other remotes (e.g. stuff@upstream).
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```
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2024-02-21 18:27:50 +00:00
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### Listing tracked branches
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To list tracked branches, you can `jj branch list --tracked` or `jj branch list -t`.
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This command omits local Git-tracking branches by default.
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You can see if a specific branch is tracked with `jj branch list --tracked <branch name>`.
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2024-01-04 03:09:22 +00:00
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### Automatic tracking of branches & `git.auto-local-branch` option
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There are two situations where `jj` tracks branches automatically. `jj git
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clone` automatically sets up the default remote branch (e.g. `main@origin`) as
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tracked. When you push a local branch, the newly created branch on the remote is
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marked as tracked.
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By default, every other remote branch is marked as "not tracked" when it's
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fetched. If desired, you need to manually `jj branch track` them. This works
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well for repositories where multiple people work on a large number of branches.
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The default can be changed by setting the config `git.auto-local-branch = true`.
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Then, `jj git fetch` tracks every *newly fetched* branch with a local branch.
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Branches that already existed before the `jj git fetch` are not affected. This
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is similar to Mercurial, which fetches all its bookmarks (equivalent to Git
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branches) by default.
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2021-12-17 21:28:09 +00:00
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## Conflicts
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Branches can end up in a conflicted state. When that happens, `jj status` will
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include information about the conflicted branches (and instructions for how to
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mitigate it). `jj branch list` will have details. `jj log` will show the branch
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name with a question mark suffix (e.g. `main?`) on each of the conflicted
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branch's potential target revisions. Using the branch name to look up a revision
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will resolve to all potential targets. That means that `jj co main` will error
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out, complaining that the revset resolved to multiple revisions.
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Both local branches (e.g. `main`) and the remote branch (e.g. `main@origin`) can
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have conflicts. Both can end up in that state if concurrent operations were run
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in the repo. The local branch more typically becomes conflicted because it was
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updated both locally and on a remote.
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To resolve a conflicted state in a local branch (e.g. `main`), you can move the
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branch to the desired target with `jj branch`. You may want to first either
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merge the conflicted targets with `jj merge`, or you may want to rebase one side
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on top of the other with `jj rebase`.
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To resolve a conflicted state in a remote branch (e.g. `main@origin`), simply
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pull from the remote (e.g. `jj git fetch`). The conflict resolution will also
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propagate to the local branch (which was presumably also conflicted).
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[design]: design/tracking-branches.md
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