On 2009.12.08 18:44:49 +0200, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > On Tue, Dec 08, 2009 at 05:37:37PM +0100, Björn Steinbrink wrote: > > On 2009.12.08 18:14:07 +0200, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > > > On Tue, Dec 08, 2009 at 05:08:22PM +0100, Björn Steinbrink wrote: > > > > On 2009.12.08 16:47:42 +0200, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > > > > > Add --revisions flag to rebase, so that it can be used > > > > > to apply an arbitrary range of commits on top > > > > > of a current branch. > > > > > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > --- > > > > > > > > > > I've been wishing for this functionality for a while now, > > > > > so here goes. This isn't yet properly documented and I didn't > > > > > write a test, but the patch seems to work fine for me. > > > > > Any early flames/feedback? > > > > > > > > This pretty much reverses what rebase normally does. Instead of "rebase > > > > this onto that" it's "'rebase' that onto this". And instead of updating > > > > the branch head that got rebased, the, uhm, "upstream" gets updated. > > > > > > The last sentence is wrong I think - it is still the branch head that > > > is updated. > > > > But you don't rebase the branch head. Before the rebase, the branch head > > doesn't reference the commits that get rebased. For example: > > > > git checkout bar > > git rebase --revisions foo bar > > > > You "rebase" the commits in foo's history, but you update bar. > > Yes, that's the who point of the patch. Yes, and it's "backwards" compared to the existing "rebase" modes, but more like "cherry-pick". > The above applies a single commit, foo, on top of current branch bar. Hm, no. I expected it to turn all commits reachable from foo into patches and applying them to bar. But actually, that should hit the special <since> mode of format-patch. So git rebase --revisions foo bar is (with your patch) actually the same as git rebase foo bar So actually the example should have been: git rebase --root --revisions foo bar Both invocations probably mess up the diff-stat as that becomes: git diff --stat --summary foo So it creates a diffstat of the diff from the working tree to "foo", which can't be right. > > > WRT the result, the above command should be equivalent to: > > git checkout bar > > git reset --hard foo > > git rebase --root --onto ORIG_HEAD; > > > > And here, the commits currently reachable through "bar" are rebased, and > > "bar" also gets updated. > > So this > 1. won't be very useful, as you show it is easy > to achieve with existing commands. One can "almost" achieve it. git rebase --revision A..B foo is about the same as: git checkout foo git reset --hard B git rebase --onto ORIG_HEAD A But: a) The "reset --hard" obviously lacks the safety checks for clean index/working tree. b) "git rebase --abort" won't take you back to your initial state, but to B. c) It's not really obvious that you can do it and how to do it. Another possibility would be: git checkout B^0 # detach HEAD at B git rebase foo # rebase onto foo git checkout foo git merge HEAD@{1} # Fast-forwards foo to the rebased stuff That fixes a), avoid b) [because you don't mess up any branch head early] but is still subject to c). And for both methods, the ORIG_HEAD and HEAD@{1} arguments are somewhat "unstable", e.g. checking out the wrong branch head first, and only then the correct one, you'd have to use HEAD@{2} instead of HEAD@{1} (because the reflog for HEAD got a new entry). So you can already do what you want to do, but wrapping it in a single porcelain might still be useful because it's obviously a lot easier and safer that way. That said, I wonder what kind of workflow you're using though, and why you require that feature. I've never needed something like that. > 2. interprets "foo" as branch name as opposed to > revision range. Well, a single committish is a "range" as far as the range-based commands are concerned, e.g. "git log master" treats "master" to mean all commits reachable it. If "rebase --revisions master" would do the same, that's at least consistent (and for single commit picks, there's already cherry-pick). The problem with your patch is that it passes the revision argument to format-patch as is, and: git format-patch foo is the same as git format-patch foo..HEAD > OTOH, rebase --revisions as I implemented is a "smarter cherry-pick" > which can't easily be achieved with existing commands, especially if > you add "-i". And that "is a 'smarter cherry-pick'" is why I think that rebase is actually the wrong command to get that feature. While rebase internally does just mass-cherry-picking, it does that with commits in the current branch onto a specified branch. The --revisions flag makes it do things the other way around. Björn -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html