Difference between git pull and git pull --rebase

I started using git sometime back and do not fully understand the intricacies. My basic question here is to find out the difference between a git pull and git pull --rebase , since adding the --rebase option does not seem to do something very different : just does a pull.

Please help me with understanding the difference.


Solution 1:

git pull = git fetch + git merge against tracking upstream branch

git pull --rebase = git fetch + git rebase against tracking upstream branch

If you want to know how git merge and git rebase differ, read this.

Solution 2:

Sometimes we have an upstream that rebased/rewound a branch we're depending on. This can be a big problem -- causing messy conflicts for us if we're downstream.

The magic is git pull --rebase

A normal git pull is, loosely speaking, something like this (we'll use a remote called origin and a branch called foo in all these examples):

# assume current checked out branch is "foo"
git fetch origin
git merge origin/foo

At first glance, you might think that a git pull --rebase does just this:

git fetch origin
git rebase origin/foo

But that will not help if the upstream rebase involved any "squashing" (meaning that the patch-ids of the commits changed, not just their order).

Which means git pull --rebase has to do a little bit more than that. Here's an explanation of what it does and how.

Let's say your starting point is this:

a---b---c---d---e  (origin/foo) (also your local "foo")

Time passes, and you have made some commits on top of your own "foo":

a---b---c---d---e---p---q---r (foo)

Meanwhile, in a fit of anti-social rage, the upstream maintainer has not only rebased his "foo", he even used a squash or two. His commit chain now looks like this:

a---b+c---d+e---f  (origin/foo)

A git pull at this point would result in chaos. Even a git fetch; git rebase origin/foo would not cut it, because commits "b" and "c" on one side, and commit "b+c" on the other, would conflict. (And similarly with d, e, and d+e).

What git pull --rebase does, in this case, is:

git fetch origin
git rebase --onto origin/foo e foo

This gives you:

 a---b+c---d+e---f---p'---q'---r' (foo)

You may still get conflicts, but they will be genuine conflicts (between p/q/r and a/b+c/d+e/f), and not conflicts caused by b/c conflicting with b+c, etc.

Answer taken from (and slightly modified):
http://gitolite.com/git-pull--rebase