che
che

Reputation: 12273

Why does git branch -t fail with "Not tracking: ambiguous information"?

When I try to create a new branch tracking a remote branch, I get this:

$ git branch -t test origin/foo
error: Not tracking: ambiguous information for ref refs/remotes/origin/foo

The source seems to somehow search for branches to track and throws me out because it finds less more than one, but I don't exactly get what it's looking for since I already told it what to track on the command line.

Can anybody tell me what's going on and how to fix it?

Upvotes: 35

Views: 15705

Answers (5)

VonC
VonC

Reputation: 1329742

because it finds less than one

Nope: because it finds more than one matching remote branch, which means the function remote_find_tracking() returns more than one tracking branch for a given local branch ref.

Is some_remote_branch not already tracked by one of your local branches?
(a git config -l would allow you to check what you have currently have set up).
(a git branch -r can also help to list your current remote-tracking branches. )

See also "copy a branch from one to another repo" for more details with Git 2.36 (Q2 2022).


remote branches, which I thought are something different that remote-tracking branches.

Wrong, as illustrated by this thread:

remote-branches are the "real" remote-tracking-branches. You don't commit to them locally, they are essentially read-only copies of exactly what is happening in a remote repository.
If you try to 'git-checkout' a remote-tracking branch, you will get a detached HEAD.

Local branch:
A branch to which you may commit changes. Optionally, the branch can be configured to "follow" one of your remote-tracking branches. This means that a 'git-pull' without arguments (when your local branch is checked out), will automatically 'git-fetch' and then 'git-merge' the remote-tracking branch.

Now:

it's the job of git-fetch to update remote-tracking branches with any changes found in the remote repository.
Git-pull runs git-fetch and then runs a git-merge to update the currently-checked-out branch.

The problem is, for git-merge:

When this happens, git-merge must decide which remote-tracking-branch to merge into the currently checked out local branch.
You can set which remote-tracking-branch will be selected in this situation with the --track option.

--track sets up a local following branch to refer to a remote's branch, not to the tracking branch

Consider that remote_find_tracking() takes a single remote and a refspec with src filled, and returns the given refspec after filling its dst, if an appropriate tracking was configured for the remote, meaning git.

/*
 * For the given remote, reads the refspec's src and sets the other fields.
 */
int remote_find_tracking(struct remote *remote, struct refspec *refspec);

May be it considers it already has a local following branch matching some_remote_branch. Do you have any local branch with that exact same name?
Or, the other way around: your current branch has a remote branch with a similar name, which makes it a natural candidate for any git-merge: trying to make it track another remote branch would make the git-merge unable to choose which local branch to update/merge with changes of a remote.

Upvotes: 17

Matthew Phillips
Matthew Phillips

Reputation: 1284

I saw this also when I had two remote repo's with the same (default) fetch pattern (fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*) and the same branches.

The original mistake was in creating two remotes with the same fetch configuration. The new remote has a different name, and therefore the name of its folder should have been changed as well. Here is an example of a proper multiple-remote configuration:

[remote "origin"]
    url = <primary-source>
    fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
[remote "alt"]
    url = <alternate-source>
    fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/alt/*

In place of alt put any name of your choosing.

Explanation:

The meaning of refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* is: take all the remote reference in refs/heads on the remote side, and put the to refs/heads/origin on our side. refs/heads is the path where branches are stored, so if you have branch foo on the remote, it will be fetched to origin/foo in your local repo. The + on the beginning means that the destination branches should be always overwritten (w/o that there are some additional checks).

Alternatively:

You can also manually add the info to the project's .git/config, e.g.:

[branch "mybranch"]
    remote = origin
    merge = refs/heads/mybranch

Upvotes: 45

GuSuku
GuSuku

Reputation: 1521

None of the other fixes mentioned here worked for me. The one that ended up working was this:

$ git branch -t test origin/test
error: Not tracking: ambiguous information for ref refs/remotes/origin/test

After running the above, even though git complained, it did end up creating a local branch test but no upstream set.

Now, I opened the .git/config file (which did not have any record of a branch test) and added the following manually:

[branch "test"]
        remote = origin
        merge = refs/heads/test

After which everything worked fine.

Upvotes: 5

amacleod
amacleod

Reputation: 1560

I got in a situation like this, but I do not know how. The listing from git branch -av showed me only a single remote tracking branch for the branch I cared about (origin/dev).

What I did to fix it was to use the hexadecimal commit hash instead of origin/dev:

git checkout -b dev abc123
git push -u origin dev

When I did the push with -u Git said Branch dev set up to track remote branch dev from origin. Subsequent pulls and pushes worked as I expected.

Upvotes: 2

che
che

Reputation: 12273

Got it! The problem was that I have previously set up a remote with --mirror, for the purpose of having a backup / public copy of my repository.

If you run

git remote add --mirror <name> <url>

it does not only flag the remote as mirror (which is what I wanted for pushes), but also configures remote.<mirror>.fetch option for the mirror to +refs/*:refs/*, which means that all of your branches suddenly "track" your mirror repository and any attempt to create a tracking branch is going to fail.

(As an added bonus, running git fetch <mirror> is going to overwrite all your refs with old ones from your backup repo.)

The solution that seems to fix this issue is setting remote.<mirror>.fetch to : (which, I hope, means "never fetch anything"). This apparently fixes the tracking issue and eliminates the deadly fetch.

Upvotes: 13

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