Launch External Merge Tool For Sourcetree Mac

  • Open sublime, and get to the state of conflict just prior to running the merge command; Open command palette, and run the command 'GitSavvy: enable logging' Perform the failing 'Launch external merge tool' command. Run the command 'GitSavvy: disable logging' Run the command 'GitSavvy: view recorded log', save the file and attach it here.
  • In SourceTree open Tools Options Diff External Diff / Merge. Select TortoiseMerge in both dropdown lists. Hit OK and point SourceTree to your location of TortoiseIDiff.exe and TortoiseMerge.exe. After that, you can select Resolve Conflicts Launch External Merge Tool from context menu on each conflicted file in your local repository.
  • Integrating with Other Apps. Integrating DeltaWalker with other apps is done via command line interface. Macromedia Dreamweaver. Macromedia Dreamweaver supports external file comparison tools and documents the integration steps in its help—just type 'diff tool' in the help search field and the associated topic should come up.

Customize External Source Control to Use MATLAB for Diff and Merge

In this article we will configure winmerge as diff and merge tool in git but you can configure any other tool with same way. Before we start, make sure you have winmerge installed on your machine, you can download from here. You can configure external diff and merge tool by git bash commands as show below.

You can customize external source control tools to use the MATLAB® Comparison Tool for diff and merge. If you want to compare MATLAB files such as live scripts, MAT, SLX, or MDL files from your source control tool, then you can configure your source control tool to open the MATLAB Comparison Tool. The MATLAB Comparison Tool provides tools for merging MathWorks® files and is compatible with popular software configuration management and version control systems. You can use the automerge tool with Git™ to automatically merge branches that contain changes in different subsystems in the same SLX file.

To set up your source control tool to use MATLAB as the application for diff and merge, you must first determine the full paths of the mlDiff, mlMerge, and mlAutoMerge executable files, and then follow the recommended steps for the source control tool you are using.

Finding the Full Paths for MATLAB Diff, Merge, and AutoMerge

To get the required file paths and enable external source control tools to reuse open MATLAB sessions, run this command in MATLAB:

External

This command sets the MATLAB preference, under Comparison, called Allow external source control tools to use open MATLAB sessions for diffs and merges.

This command also displays the file paths to copy and paste into your source control tool setup:

  • On Windows®:

  • On Linux®:

  • On Mac:

where matlabroot is replaced with the full path to your installation, for example, C:Program FilesMATLABR2020b.

Note

Your diff and merge operations use open MATLAB sessions when available, and only open MATLAB when necessary. The operations only use the specified MATLAB installation.

Integration with Git

Command Line

To configure MATLAB diff and merge tools with command-line Git:

  1. Run this command in MATLAB.

    This command displays the full paths of the mlDiff, mlMerge, and mlAutoMerge executable files. It also automatically populates the global .gitconfig file. For example:

    Note

    You need to do step 1 only once for your Git setup.

  2. Configure your repository to use the mlAutoMerge executable file. Open the .gitattributes file in your repository and add:

    Now, when you merge branches that contain changes in different subsystems in the same SLX file, MATLAB handles the merge automatically.

To run the MATLAB diff and merge tools from command-line Git, use git difftool and git mergetool:

  • To compare two revisions of a model using the MATLAB diff tool, type:

    If you do not provide revision IDs, git difftool compares the working copy to the repository copy.

    If you do not specify which model you want to compare, command-line Git will go through all modified files and ask you if you want to compare them one by one.

  • To resolve a merge conflict in a model using the MATLAB merge tool, type:

    If you do not specify which model you want to merge, command-line Git will go through all files and ask you if you want to merge them one by one.

SourceTree

SourceTree is an interactive GUI tool that visualizes and manages Git repositories for Windows and Mac.

  1. Configure the MATLAB diff and merge tools as SourceTree external tools:

    1. With SourceTree open, click Tools > Options.

    2. On the Diff tab, under External Diff / Merge, fill the fields with the following information:

  2. Configure your repository to automerge changes in different subsystems in the same SLX file using the mlAutoMerge executable file:

    1. Open the global .gitconfig file and add:

    2. Open the .gitattributes file in your repository and add:

Tip

Customize the full path of the mlDiff, mlMerge, and mlAutoMerge executables to match both the MATLAB installation and the operating system you are using. For more information, see Finding the Full Paths for MATLAB Diff, Merge, and AutoMerge.

To use the MATLAB diff tool from within SourceTree, right-click a modified file under Unstaged files and select External Diff.

To use the MATLAB merge tool when SourceTree detects a merge conflict, select the Uncommitted changes branch, right-click a modified file, and select Resolve Conflicts > Launch External Merge Tool.

Integration with SVN

TortoiseSVN

With TortoiseSVN, you can customize your diff and merge tools based on the file extension. For example, to use MATLAB diff and merge tools for SLX files:

  1. Right-click in any file explorer window and select TortoiseSVN > Settings to open TortoiseSVN settings.

  2. In the Settings sidebar, select Diff Viewer. Click to specify the diff application based on file extensions.

  3. Click and fill the fields with the extension and the mlDiff executable path:

  4. Click and repeat the same steps to add another file extension.

  5. In the Settings sidebar, select Diff ViewerMerge Tool. Click to specify the merge application based on file extensions.

  6. Click and fill the fields with the extension and mlMerge executable path:

  7. Click and repeat the same steps to add another file extension.

You can now use the MATLAB tools for diff and merge the same way you would use the TortoiseSVN default diff and merge applications.

Note

Automerging binary files with SVN , such as SLX files, is not supported.

Integration with Other Source Control Tools

Perforce P4V

With Perforce® P4V, you can customize your diff and merge tools based on the file extension. To use MATLAB diff and merge tools for SLX files, for example:

  1. In Perforce, click Edit > Preferences.

  2. In the Preferences sidebar, select Diff. Under Specify diff application by extension (overrides default), click .

  3. In the Add File Type dialog box, enter the following information:

  4. Click .

  5. In the Preferences sidebar, select Merge. Under Specify merge application by extension (overrides default), click .

  6. In the Add File Type dialog box, enter the following information:

  7. Click and repeat the steps for other file extensions.

Tip

Customize the full path of the mlDiff and mlMerge executables to match both the MATLAB installation and the operating system you are using. For more information, see Finding the Full Paths for MATLAB Diff, Merge, and AutoMerge.

You can now use the MATLAB tools for diff and merge the same way you would use the Perforce default diff and merge applications.

Launch External Merge Tool For Sourcetree MacExternal

Launch External Merge Tool For Sourcetree Mac Free

Related Topics

Atlassian ID has become the new Atlassian Account. Read more about it here.
Mac


After some great community feedback, we are releasing SourceTree for Mac 1.6. This is a major release that contains many new features.

Interactive Rebase

Having to bring up a terminal when you want to do an interactive rebase is painful. If you aren’t familiar with rebasing or the command-line, the pain levels up to excruciating. We asked ourselves: “How can we make this simpler and keep everything in SourceTree?” Our solution is a visual, drag-and-drop interaction:

The UI gives you visual feedback on each step of this previously advanced function. Want to re-order your commits? Want two commits to be one commit? No problem, just drag and drop the rows around.

Improved Notifications of Remote Changes

Previously, users checked for the pull counts by going into either the bookmarks view or the repository view. If your team commits frequently, you were checking there a lot. Now, the improved notifications center puts this information front and center:

Are you using OS X 10.6/10.7? No worries, we use Growl so it handles everything for you. If you’re on Mountain Lion, we use the notification centre so you’ve got more granular control over notifications. Prior to Mountain Lion, you could use Growl to control the notification granularity. We find them really useful; especially when we’re expecting changes we need in our local copy.

Atlassian ID Integration

SourceTree won’t cost you a penny but we do ask you to register to continue using it after your 30 day trial. Registration helps us gather useful statistics that we use build a better SourceTree. Still, we know registration costs you time, so we’ve improved it. We’ve redesigned registration as a two-step process from within SourceTree. No more web registration. Even better, the in-product registration creates an Atlassian ID that can you can use with other Atlassian products.

Icon Refresh

Have you noticed our new icons? They’ve been out but now we’d like to point them out. We think our new icons have a fresh look that brings SourceTree in line with the rest of Atlassian’s product family.

Mac App Store Note

A final note just to say that we no longer publish to the Mac App Store due to sandboxing restrictions. Check Steve’s blog post about sandboxing for more information.

And much more…

  • You can now Log Selected… on multiple files at once.
  • The push sheet in Mercurial shows which branch you’re pushing to.
  • New preference show the pull count for the currently checked out branch.
  • Git repositories now remember the previously selected options in the pull/merge sheets.
  • Support for the latest Araxis diff/merge tools.
  • The “commit merged changes immediately” setting is now remembered between pulls
  • Support for longer passwords for Bitbucket, Stash, GitHub and Kiln.

Launch External Merge Tool For Sourcetree Mac Software

Work on Windows? We’ve got that covered, too. SourceTree for Windows 0.9.2.2 is now out including git-flow support! Check out our main website for more information and download.