On Tuesday 22 January 2008, Ciprian Dorin Craciun wrote: > Hello all! > > My question is how can I use git-rebase -- or a similar command -- > to actually copy the commits from one branch to another. > > For example I have cloned the linux kernel repository and I have > the following branches: > -- v2.6.22-stable > -- v2.6.23-local > -- v2.6.23-stable > -- v2.6.23-local > > The difference between v2.6.x-stable and v2.6.x-local are just a > few minor patches (which are not in the default kernel tree) and some > script files added to make the compilation and deployment easier for > my setup. Thus v2.6.x-local is an ancestor of v2.6.x-stable. Now when > v2.6.24 will arrive I would like to "copy" the commits from > v2.6.23-local to v2.6.24-local. > > One solution would be to use: > git rebase --onto v2.6.24-local v2.6.23-stable v2.6.23-local > > But this will not copy the commits, but actually move them. (And I > do not see anything about this case in the git rebase documentation, > or pointers to other commands similar to rebase.) > > So how should this be done? Actually, you're pretty much on the right track, already. git-rebase does in fact _copy_ the commits onto the target branch. It's just that it also moves the ref (i.e. branch name) along, so that the old commits are no longer reachable. Consider the following: git checkout -b v2.6.24-local_new v2.6.23-local git rebase --onto v2.6.24-local v2.6.23-stable This checks out a new branch (v2.6.24-local_new) that initially points at the same commit as v2.6.23-local. We then rebase all the commits between v2.6.23-stable and v2.6.24-local_new (which is the same as v2.6.23-local) on top of the existing v2.6.24-local branch. v2.6.24-local_new will move along and point to the last commit _after_ rebase, but you haven't moved v2.6.23-local in the process, so it still points to the corresponding last commit _before_ rebase. Have fun! ...Johan -- Johan Herland, <johan@xxxxxxxxxxx> www.herland.net
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