Hi, Mike Strauch wrote: > I'm fairly new to git and I'm trying to figure out the best way to > ignore certain commits when merging one branch into another. An interesting question. The answer (as so often) depends on what you want to do. "man 7 gitworkflows" might help. Below I will pretend you are trying to backport some changes to a more stable branch; others may chime in with other scenarios. First, a general hint: when using git and similar systems, it is generally best if each merged result is somehow "better" than all of its parents. I will give an example below of what can go wrong if this invariant is violated. Merging to a maintenance branch ------------------------------- Suppose given a history like this (1): o --- v1.0 [maint] \ feature --- feature --- bugfix --- bugfix [master] Development has been happening on the "master" branch and now you want to merge back the relevant fixes to make a new point release, something like the following: [*] o --- v1.0 ------------------------------------ v1.1 [maint] \ / master-only feature --- bugfix --- M [master] "a dangerous history" Let's consider what that would mean. Someone builds some new work off of maint: o --- v1.0 --- v1.1 --- o ... o --- A [someone] / What happens when you pull the "someone" branch into master? The relevant piece of history looks like this: v1.1 --- o ... o --- A [someone] / ... M --- new development --- ... --- B [master] When you try to pull A into B, git runs a three-way merge to apply the changes from the someone branch after the branch point (M) on the master branch. In particular, the changes from M to v1.1 are pulled in. The main change from M to v1.1 is to drop a bunch of features. So by pulling from someone, you lose features on the master branch. So a merge like [*] that drops desirable changes is generally not a good idea. Cherry-picking to a maintenance branch -------------------------------------- As a result, starting from a history like (1), there is only one choice: cherry-pick only the bugfixes, so the new features are not incorporated into the history of the maint branch. $ git checkout maint $ git cherry-pick bugfix1 bugfix2 Afterwards, it is best to merge the maint branch into master, so later changes on the maint branch can be merged into master more easily. Usually despite the duplicate changes will not result in conflicts. $ git checkout master $ git merge maint $ git diff HEAD^ $ : looks good $ git push public maint master If there are conflicts, no need to worry: make sure that "master" really includes all desirable changes from maint and merge with strategy ours instead. $ git reset --merge $ git merge -s ours maint Writing a new bugfix -------------------- Suppose you have an idea for a new bugfix. As discussed above, if you write it directly on top of master, when it is time to apply it to maint it will need cherry-picking. If you base the patch on maint, you can avoid that: $ git checkout -b bugfix maint ... hack hack hack ... $ make test $ : looks good $ git checkout master $ git merge bugfix $ make test $ git push public bugfix master v1.1 [maint] --- X [bugfix] \ \ o --- ... --- N [master] Once the patch gets enough testing from users of master, it is time to apply it to maint. $ git checkout maint $ git merge bugfix $ make test $ git checkout master $ git merge maint $ git push public maint master v1.1 ----------- X [maint] \ \ o --- ... --- N [master] One benefit of this approach is that during development, the patch is tested against the maintenance branch, which is incidentally probably where it is most important that it get testing. Hope that helps, Jonathan -- 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