Hi, [please do not look the other way when you respond to me, i.e. do not cull me from the Cc: list. Thankyouverymuch] On Sun, 10 Feb 2008, Paul Gardiner wrote: > Johannes Schindelin wrote: > > > The thing is, filter-branch was _written for this purpose_. So if you > > know what commit you rewrote last, you can make the process > > faster/safer by issuing > > > > $ git filter-branch --msg-filter="<blabla>" <old-commit>..master > > That does look just what I need, but did you see the reason I thought I > couldn't use it? I need to repeatedly sync the git repository from a > live cvs repository, and repeatedly filter the new commit messages. Oh, I thought you saw why I put in that "<old-commit>...". You do not really need it, as filter-branch will come up with the _same_ commit hashes, unless _something_ was changed. IOW if you have only commits without that "Summary: " prefix, the filter-branch call will be a (not so cheap) no-op. But of course, I meant to suggest (admittedly, in a very short short-hand) that you use "git filter-branch ... origin@{1}..origin" after cvsimport. Hth, Dscho - 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