very usefull indeed, where can I find it ? I have a big rebase/merge/reorganise 
work that is comming soon and that is going to be tremendously usefull...

    Cordialement

    Jérémy Rosen

fight key loggers : write some perl using vim

----- Mail original -----
> Hi,
>   I made this script to help me see the logical connections between
> commits.  It produces a .svg graph showing the commits that affected
> a
> file.
> 
> For example, say you have the commits:
> 
> commit1 - modify hello.c
> commit2 - modify goodbye.c
> commit3 - modify hello.c and goodbye.c
> 
> It will draw a graph showing the first two commits as siblings, and
> commit3 as a child of commit1 and commit2.
> 
> I have found this very useful when squashing and rebasing development
> branches that have got a lot of "fix typo" and "fix"  type commit
> messages.  From the graph you can quickly see which commit they were
> fixing (the parent, in the graph).
> 
> Here is an example output, running it on kwin for the last 100
> commits:
> 
> $ graph_git.pl --nofiles -100
> 
> http://imagebin.org/252754
> 
> And again with files for the last 10 commits:
> 
> $ graph_git.pl -10
> 
> http://imagebin.org/252756
> 
> (Note that it has tooltips)
> 
> JohnFlux
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