Hi, I've been using Git from the start, but only lately have I forced myself to configure upstream branches for all my branches, and I've found a few things more convenient, but others completely contrary to what I expected. Inconvenient: Before, I used to do 'git fetch' to simply fetch from 'origin', but now, it depends on where 'upstream' is set to. Convinient: Now, I can just do 'git rebase --interactive' and I don't have to specify the starting point, which is particularily useful when there's a lot of branches one depending on another. I think I'm using 'upstream' for something it was not intended to, and I think the current 'upstream' behavior should be split into 'upstream' and 'base'. == base == The 'base' branch will be set each time you create a branch from another; 'git checkout -b foobar master' sets 'master' as the 'base' of 'foobar'. Then you can do 'git rebase foobar@{base}' or simply 'git rebase', and Git will pick the right branch to rebase unto, even if you have no 'upstream' configured. This way 'git fetch' will keep picking 'origin', and other commands that make use of 'upstream' would be undisturbed. If both 'base' and 'upstream' are defined, I think 'git rebase' should use 'base', but since that would break old behavior, perhaps there should be a configuration variable to enable a different behavior. I already started writting the patches, and although tedious, I think they they'll be rather straightforward, but I thought it would be best to hear some opinions first. What do you think? -- Felipe Contreras -- 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