Resolve Git Conflicts
Identify, resolve, and recover from merge and rebase conflicts.
When to Use
- •A
git mergeorgit rebasereports conflicts - •A
git cherry-pickcannot apply cleanly - •A
git pullresults in conflicting changes - •A
git stash popconflicts with current working tree
Inputs
- •Required: Repository with active conflicts
- •Optional: Preferred resolution strategy (ours, theirs, manual)
- •Optional: Context about which changes should take priority
Procedure
Step 1: Identify the Conflict Source
Determine what operation caused the conflict:
# Check current status git status # Look for indicators: # "You have unmerged paths" — merge conflict # "rebase in progress" — rebase conflict # "cherry-pick in progress" — cherry-pick conflict
The status output tells you which files have conflicts and what operation is in progress.
Expected: git status shows files listed under "Unmerged paths" and indicates the active operation.
On failure: If git status shows a clean tree but you expected conflicts, the operation may have already been completed or aborted. Check git log for recent activity.
Step 2: Read Conflict Markers
Open each conflicting file and locate the conflict markers:
<<<<<<< HEAD // Your current branch's version const result = calculateWeightedMean(data, weights); ======= // Incoming branch's version const result = computeWeightedAverage(data, weights); >>>>>>> feature/rename-functions
- •
<<<<<<< HEADto=======: Your current branch (or the branch you're rebasing onto) - •
=======to>>>>>>>: The incoming changes (the branch being merged or the commit being applied)
Expected: Each conflicting file contains one or more blocks with <<<<<<<, =======, and >>>>>>> markers.
On failure: If no markers are found but files show as conflicting, the conflict may be a binary file or a deleted-vs-modified conflict. Check git diff --name-only --diff-filter=U for the full list.
Step 3: Choose a Resolution Strategy
Manual merge (most common): Edit the file to combine both changes logically, then remove all conflict markers.
Accept ours (keep current branch's version):
# For a single file git checkout --ours path/to/file.R git add path/to/file.R # For all conflicts git checkout --ours . git add -A
Accept theirs (keep incoming branch's version):
# For a single file git checkout --theirs path/to/file.R git add path/to/file.R # For all conflicts git checkout --theirs . git add -A
Expected: After resolution, the file contains the correct merged content with no remaining conflict markers.
On failure: If you chose the wrong side, re-read the conflicting version from the merge base. During a merge, git checkout -m path/to/file re-creates the conflict markers so you can try again.
Step 4: Mark Files as Resolved
After editing each conflicting file:
# Stage the resolved file git add path/to/resolved-file.R # Check remaining conflicts git status
Repeat for every file listed under "Unmerged paths".
Expected: All files move from "Unmerged paths" to "Changes to be committed". No conflict markers remain in any file.
On failure: If git add fails or markers remain, re-open the file and ensure all <<<<<<<, =======, and >>>>>>> lines are removed.
Step 5: Continue the Operation
Once all conflicts are resolved:
For merge:
git commit # Git auto-populates the merge commit message
For rebase:
git rebase --continue # May encounter more conflicts on subsequent commits — repeat steps 2-4
For cherry-pick:
git cherry-pick --continue
For stash pop:
# Stash pop conflicts don't need a continue — just commit or reset git add . git commit -m "Apply stashed changes with conflict resolution"
Expected: The operation completes. git status shows a clean working tree (or moves to the next commit during rebase).
On failure: If the continue command fails, check git status for remaining unresolved files. All conflicts must be resolved before continuing.
Step 6: Abort if Needed
If resolution is too complex or you chose the wrong approach, abort safely:
# Abort merge git merge --abort # Abort rebase git rebase --abort # Abort cherry-pick git cherry-pick --abort
Expected: Repository returns to the state before the operation started. No data loss.
On failure: If abort fails (rare), check git reflog to find the commit before the operation and git reset --hard <commit> to restore it. Use with caution — this discards uncommitted changes.
Step 7: Verify Resolution
After the operation completes:
# Verify clean working tree git status # Check that the merge/rebase result is correct git log --oneline -5 git diff HEAD~1 # Run tests to confirm nothing is broken # (language-specific: devtools::test(), npm test, cargo test, etc.)
Expected: Clean working tree, correct merge history, tests pass.
On failure: If tests fail after resolution, the merge may have introduced logical errors even though syntax conflicts are resolved. Review the diff carefully and fix.
Validation
- • No conflict markers (
<<<<<<<,=======,>>>>>>>) remain in any file - •
git statusshows a clean working tree - • The merge/rebase history is correct in
git log - • Tests pass after conflict resolution
- • No unintended changes were introduced
Common Pitfalls
- •Blindly accepting one side:
--oursor--theirsdiscards the other side entirely. Only use when you are certain one version is completely correct. - •Leaving conflict markers in code: Always search the entire file for remaining markers after editing. A partial resolution breaks the code.
- •Amending during rebase: During an interactive rebase, do not
--amendunless the rebase step specifically calls for it. Usegit rebase --continueinstead. - •Losing work on abort:
git rebase --abortandgit merge --abortdiscard all resolution work. Only abort if you want to start over. - •Not testing after resolution: A syntactically clean merge can still be logically wrong. Always run tests.
- •Force-pushing after rebase: After rebasing a shared branch, coordinate with collaborators before force-pushing, as it rewrites history.
Related Skills
- •
commit-changes- committing after conflict resolution - •
manage-git-branches- branch workflows that lead to conflicts - •
configure-git-repository- repository setup and merge strategies