--- stage: Create group: Source Code info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments --- # Merge methods **(FREE ALL)** The merge method you select for your project determines how the changes in your merge requests are merged into an existing branch. The examples on this page assume a `main` branch with commits A, C, and E, and a `feature` branch with commits B and D: ```mermaid gitGraph commit id: "A" branch feature commit id: "B" commit id: "D" checkout main commit id: "C" commit id: "E" ``` ## Configure a project's merge method 1. On the left sidebar, select **Search or go to** and find your project. 1. Select **Settings > Merge requests**. 1. Select your desired **Merge method** from these options: - Merge commit - Merge commit with semi-linear history - Fast-forward merge 1. In **Squash commits when merging**, select the default behavior for handling commits: - **Do not allow**: Squashing is never performed, and the user cannot change the behavior. - **Allow**: Squashing is off by default, but the user can change the behavior. - **Encourage**: Squashing is on by default, but the user can change the behavior. - **Require**: Squashing is always performed, and the user cannot change the behavior. 1. Select **Save changes**. ## Merge commit By default, GitLab creates a merge commit when a branch is merged into `main`. A separate merge commit is always created, regardless of whether or not commits are [squashed when merging](../squash_and_merge.md). This strategy can result in both a squash commit and a merge commit being added to your `main` branch. These diagrams show how the `feature` branch merges into `main` if you use the **Merge commit** strategy. They are equivalent to the command `git merge --no-ff `, and selecting `Merge commit` as the **Merge method** in the GitLab UI: The merge strategy: ```mermaid %%{init: { 'gitGraph': {'logLevel': 'debug', 'showBranches': true, 'showCommitLabel':true,'mainBranchName': 'main'}} }%% gitGraph commit id: "A" branch feature commit id: "B" commit id: "D" checkout main commit id: "C" commit id: "E" merge feature ``` After a feature branch is merged with the **Merge commit** method, your `main` branch looks like this: ```mermaid %%{init: { 'gitGraph': {'logLevel': 'debug', 'showBranches': true, 'showCommitLabel':true,'mainBranchName': 'main'}} }%% gitGraph commit id: "A" commit id: "C" commit id: "E" commit id: "squash commit" commit id: "merge commit" ``` In comparison, a **squash merge** constructs a squash commit, a virtual copy of all commits from the `feature` branch. The original commits (B and D) remain unchanged on the `feature` branch, and the squash commit is placed on the `main` branch: ```mermaid %%{init: { 'gitGraph': {'showBranches': true, 'showCommitLabel':true,'mainBranchName': 'main'}} }%% gitGraph commit id:"A" branch feature checkout main commit id:"C" checkout feature commit id:"B" commit id:"D" checkout main commit id:"E" commit id:"squash commit" type: HIGHLIGHT ``` The squash merge graph is equivalent to these settings in the GitLab UI: - **Merge method**: Merge commit. - **Squash commits when merging** should be set to either: - Require. - Either Allow or Encourage, and squashing must be selected on the merge request. The squash merge graph is also equivalent to these commands: ```shell git checkout `git merge-base feature main` git merge --squash SOURCE_SHA=`git rev-parse HEAD` git checkout
git merge --no-ff $SOURCE_SHA ``` ## Merge commit with semi-linear history A merge commit is created for every merge, but the branch is only merged if a fast-forward merge is possible. This ensures that if the merge request build succeeded, the target branch build also succeeds after the merge. An example commit graph generated using this merge method: ```mermaid gitGraph commit id: "Init" branch mr-branch-1 commit commit checkout main merge mr-branch-1 branch mr-branch-2 commit commit checkout main merge mr-branch-2 commit branch squash-mr commit id: "Squashed commits" checkout main merge squash-mr ``` When you visit the merge request page with `Merge commit with semi-linear history` method selected, you can accept it **only if a fast-forward merge is possible**. When a fast-forward merge is not possible, the user is given the option to rebase, see [Rebasing in (semi-)linear merge methods](#rebasing-in-semi-linear-merge-methods). This method is equivalent to the same Git commands as in the **Merge commit** method. However, if your source branch is based on an out-of-date version of the target branch (such as `main`), you must rebase your source branch. This merge method creates a cleaner-looking history, while still enabling you to see where every branch began and was merged. ## Fast-forward merge Sometimes, a workflow policy might mandate a clean commit history without merge commits. In such cases, the fast-forward merge is appropriate. With fast-forward merge requests, you can retain a linear Git history and a way to accept merge requests without creating merge commits. An example commit graph generated using this merge method: ```mermaid gitGraph commit id: "Init" commit id: "Merge mr-branch-1" commit id: "Merge mr-branch-2" commit id: "Commit on main" commit id: "Merge squash-mr" ``` This method is equivalent to `git merge --ff ` for regular merges, and to `git merge --squash ` for squash merges. When the fast-forward merge ([`--ff-only`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-merge#git-merge---ff-only)) setting is enabled, no merge commits are created and all merges are fast-forwarded. Merging is only allowed if the branch can be fast-forwarded. When a fast-forward merge is not possible, the user is given the option to rebase, see [Rebasing in (semi-)linear merge methods](#rebasing-in-semi-linear-merge-methods). NOTE: Projects that use the fast-forward merge strategy can't [filter merge requests](../index.md#filter-the-list-of-merge-requests) by deployment date, because no merge commit is created. When you visit the merge request page with `Fast-forward merge` method selected, you can accept it **only if a fast-forward merge is possible**. ![Fast-forward merge request](../img/ff_merge_mr.png) ## Rebasing in (semi-)linear merge methods In these merge methods, you can merge only when your source branch is up-to-date with the target branch: - Merge commit with semi-linear history. - Fast-forward merge. If a fast-forward merge is not possible but a conflict-free rebase is possible, GitLab provides: - The [`/rebase` quick action](../../../../topics/git/git_rebase.md#rebase-from-the-ui). - The option to select **Rebase** in the user interface. You must rebase the source branch locally before a fast-forward merge if both conditions are true: - The target branch is ahead of the source branch. - A conflict-free rebase is not possible. ![Fast forward merge rebase locally](../img/ff_merge_rebase_locally.png) Rebasing may be required before squashing, even though squashing can itself be considered equivalent to rebasing. ### Rebase without CI/CD pipeline > - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/118825) in GitLab 14.7 [with a flag](../../../../administration/feature_flags.md) named `rebase_without_ci_ui`. Disabled by default. > - [Generally available](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/350262) in GitLab 15.3. Feature flag `rebase_without_ci_ui` removed. To rebase a merge request's branch without triggering a CI/CD pipeline, select **Rebase without pipeline** from the merge request reports section. This option is: - Available when fast-forward merge is not possible but a conflict-free rebase is possible. - Not available when the **Pipelines must succeed** option is enabled. Rebasing without a CI/CD pipeline saves resources in projects with a semi-linear workflow that requires frequent rebases. ## Related topics - [Squash and merge](../squash_and_merge.md)