Hi, I know that it's not a typical Linux kernel related query but I reckon that people involved in Linux kernel testing/development might have gotten into similar situation. So, please bear with me for this rather generic framework related query. The scenario: 1: Cloned linux-next at time T1 $ git clone blahblah 2: Created a branch called development at T2 $ git checkout -b development 3: Made change1 in development branch and did a commit at T3 $ git commit -a 4: Made another commit in development branch and did another commit at time T4, but during this development phase, *some* of the changes that I made during my previous commit at time T3 were wrong, so had to remove *some* of the changes $ git commit -a 5: Now I create a branch called test, based off the master $ git checkout -b test origin/master 5: So my test branch(and also the master branch) is two commits behind the development branch. Now I wish to create a patch, based on my changes in development branch and apply that patch to my test branch for further testing. $ git format-patch origin/master -o patches The above command creates two patches, which I need to apply in an increasing order(0001 ---> 0002), otherwise, the patch won't work. So far so good, but what If, I am not particularly proud of the first patch, but have to send that anyway, If my patches are to be applied. Another approach would be to create another branch, say development-again, based of origin/master and make the necessary changes and then just create one patch file. But I was wondering that while doing development, don't we make commits in our working branches, which we think is correct, only to find it ridiculous later (say after few more commits in future) ? And what to do in such scenario ? Or how to use git to solve such scenario. Thanks, Kumar _______________________________________________ Kernelnewbies mailing list Kernelnewbies@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies