It is something you can do locally though, from your machine, the following way:
1. Assume you have repos https://bitbucket.org/my-workspace/repo-1/ and https://bitbucket.org/my-workspace/repo-2/, and you want to merge code from repo-2 to repo-1
Navigate to your local clone of repo-1
2. Add the second repo as a remote with a command like the following (I’m adding the SSHL URL; if you don’t use SSH, you can replace with the HTTPS URL:
git remote add second_remote git@bitbucket.org:my-workspace/repo-2.git
then
git fetch --all
3. Then create (in repo-1) a branch that tracks the remote branch from repo-2 you want to merge, named e.g. feature2-branch
git checkout -b feature2-branch --track second_remote/feature2-branch
4. If you wang to merge that to master branch of repo-1, then you can do
git merge master --allow-unrelated-histories
The –allow-unrelated-histories will be necessary if the repos have no common history, otherwise Git will refuse to make the merge.
I’m Rajesh Kumar, a DevOps, SRE, DevSecOps, Cloud, and Platform Engineering expert passionate about sharing practical knowledge, real-world experiences, and industry best practices. I have worked at Cotocus and regularly write about technology, travel, investing, health, product reviews, and digital marketing through my various platforms.
I publish technical articles at DevOps School, travel stories at Holiday Landmark, stock market insights at Stocks Mantra, health and fitness guidance at My Medic Plus, product reviews at TrueReviewNow, and SEO and digital marketing strategies at Wizbrand.
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