Junio C Hamano wrote:
Kristian Amlie <kristian.amlie@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
I have a question about git: I have one commit sha1, and I would like
to know the nearest commit that appears in *any* other branch. The
sha1 that I have does not belong to any branch.
The obvious thing to do would be to make a for loop and iterate over
existing branches while calling git merge-base, but I'm wondering if
there's a more clever method.
If the $commit does not belong to any branch, then:
$ git rev-list --bounardy $commit^0 --not --branches | sed -ne 's/^-//p'
would give you boundary commits of the above traversal, which says:
Traverse from $commit following the parents, but stop at anything that
is reachable from any breanch.
which means that the ones that are output are the candidates that are on
some branch.
So pipe that to name-rev like this, perhaps (untested)?
$ git rev-list --bounardy $commit^0 --not --branches |
sed -ne 's/^-//p' |
git name-rev --stdin
Thanks! That did the trick!
Kristian
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