this post was submitted on 06 Oct 2023
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Hello! Yesterday I submitted my first merge request to a KDE software! I forked the repo, applied the edits, committed them and pushed to my fork, and then from gitlab created a merge request. after a few hours, the author pushed something into the master, making my merge request 1 commit behind the master. On the merge request details page, I now get this error:

Merge blocked: the source branch must be rebased onto the target branch.  [rebase without pipeline]  [rebase]

If I try to click on [rebase], I get this red error:

Source branch is protected from force push

what should I do to make my merge request "mergeable" again?

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (6 children)

I guess you should rebase or merge the Master branch into your branch and then push again:

git checkout master
git pull origin master
git checkout yourbranch
git rebase master
git push -f origin yourbranch 

But if you got error since that new commit has conflict with your chances:

git merge master
git push origin yourbranch 
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (5 children)

No! Bad dev! No biscuit!

Never merge master into a feature branch. It's called a "wrong-way" merge and it makes the history fucking awful.

You shit in the face of project maintainers when you do this.

You may not care, in fact many don't. Also people buy timeshares, read celebrity gossip magazines, and vote for scumbags. They are fucking idiots who don't know what they are doing. So are people who leave wrong-way merges in shared history.

In fact, wrong-way mergers are worse, because you can't just ignore them - git blame rubs your face in their shit, so they shit in your face forever.

Just don't fucking do it, OK? Or I will hit you in the throat with a cricket bat soaked in wasps. As a first warning.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Not an issue if you're squashing commits before merging into master though, right?

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