On Fri, Jul 27, 2018 at 10:34:20AM -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote: > Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> writes: > > >> $ git rebase --onto HEAD @{-1}~3 @{-1}^0 > > > > Interesting. I'd have probably done it with an interactive rebase: > > > > $ git rebase -i HEAD~4 > > [change first "pick" to "edit"; after stopping...] > > $ git reset --hard HEAD^ ;# throw away patch 1 > > $ git am -s mbox ;# apply single patch > > $ git rebase --continue > > > > Which is really the same thing,... > > I have unfounded fear for doing anything other than "edit", "commit > --amend", "rebase --continue", or "rebase --abort" during a "rebase > -i" session. > > Especiallly "reset --hard" with anything but HEAD. I guess that is > because I do not fully trust/understand how the sequencer machinery > replays the remainder of todo tasks on top of the HEAD that is > different from what it left me to futz with when it relinquished the > control. I jump around via "reset --hard" all the time during interactive rebases. I don't recall having any issues, though that does not mean there isn't a corner case lurking. :) > Also "am" during "rebase -i" is scary to me, as "am" also tries to > keep its own sequencing state. Do you know if "rebase --continue" > would work correctly in the above sequence if "am" conflicted, I > gave up, and said "am --abort", for example? I don't offhand know. This one is trickier. I _assumed_ it would be fine to "am" during a rebase, but I didn't actually try it (in fact, I rarely do anything exotic with "am", since my main use is just test-applying patches on a detached head). It _seems_ to work with this example: -- >8 -- git init repo cd repo for i in 1 2 3 4; do echo $i >file git add file git commit -m $i done git format-patch --stdout -1 >patch git reset --hard HEAD^ GIT_EDITOR='perl -i -pe "/2$/ and s/pick/edit/"' git rebase -i HEAD~2 git am patch git am --abort -- 8< -- I think because "am" lives in $GIT_DIR/rebase-apply, and "rebase -i" lives in ".git/rebase-merge". Of course "rebase" can use the rebase-apply directory, but I think interactive-rebase never will. So it works, but mostly by luck. :) In my ideal world, operations like this that can be continued would be stored in a stack, and each stack element would know its operation type. So you could do: # push a rebase onto the stack git rebase foo # while stopped, you might do another operation which pushes onto the # stack git am ~/patch # aborting an operation (or finishing it naturally) pops it off the # stack; now we just have the rebase on the stack git am --abort # aborting an operation that's not at the top of the stack would # either be an error, or could auto-abort everybody on top git am ~/patch git rebase --abort ;# aborts the am, too! # you could even nest similar operations; by default we find the # top-most one in the stack, but you could refer to them by stack # position. # # put us in a rebase that stops at a conflict git rebase foo # oops, rewrite the last few commits as part of fixing the conflict git rebase -i HEAD~3 # nope, let's abort the whole thing (stack level 0) git rebase --abort=0 # it would also be nice to have generic commands to manipulate the # stack git op list ;# show the stack git op abort ;# abort the top operation, whatever it is git op continue ;# continue the top operation, whatever it is I've hacked something similar to "git op continue" myself and find it very useful, but: - it's intimately aware of all the possible operations, including some custom ones that I have. I wouldn't need to if each operation touched a well-known directory to push itself on the stack, and provided a few commands in the stack directory for things like "run this to abort me". - it sometimes behaves weirdly, because I "canceled" an operation with "reset" or "checkout", and later I expect to continue operation X, but find that some other operation Y was waiting. Having a stack means it's much easier to see which operations are still hanging around (we have this already with the prompt logic that shows things like rebases, but again, it has to be intimate with which operations are storing data in $GIT_DIR) Anyway. That's something I've dreamed about for a while, but the thought of retro-fitting the existing multi-command operations turned me off. The current systems _usually_ works. -Peff