I had one Git repository (A) which contains the development of a project until a certain point. Then I lost the USB stick this repo A was on. Luckily I had a backup of the latest commit, so I could create a new repository (B) later where I imported the latest project's state and continue development. Now I recovered that lost USB stick, so I have two Git repositories.
I think I just have to rebase repo B onto repo A somehow, but I have no idea how to do that, maybe using fetch/pull and rebase?
If A and B are not the same repo (you created B by using the latest working copy you had), you have to use a graft to pretend that they have common history.
Let’s assume you’ve added A as a remote for B as per VonC’s answer, and the repo looks like this1:
Create a graft telling the root of B that its parent is the head of A:
Now the two histories above will appear as one when you request the history for B. Making the graft permanent is a simple
git filter-branch
with no arguments. After the filter-branch, though, you aren’t on any branch, so you shouldgit branch -D master; git checkout -b master
.1
git tnylog
=git log --oneline --graph --decorate
First of all, start by making a working clone of repo A.
Then simply pull into it from B and merge. You might prefer to create a new branch, pull onto it, then merge the two branches. You might also need a forcing flag; I've done things like this in Mercurial (grafting two apparently-unrelated repositories together) and it needs "-f".
If A and B are the same repo (the first SHA1 are common), you can:
git remote add A /path/to/A
git fetch A
to update all remote A branches on the B repogit checkout dev
(on B, where you are developing)git rebase A/devBranch
to replay B (i.e. what you develop or re-develop from your backup) on top ofA/devBranch
(the development you lost). A bit like this SO question.The last step allows you to sync your dev with the one you lost.
But actually, once you have fetch from A, you are done: B now contains the "all" history (the one you lost and your current work)