Robert Goldman <rpgold...@real-time.com> writes:

> On 4/29/10 Apr 29 -8:58 AM, Carsten Dominik wrote:
>> Applied, thanks.
>> 
>> I had two email saying patch 4/4, I too one of them, what happened with
>> 1/4, 2/4, 3/4?
>
> What happened was that I am incompetent with git.  Somehow git thinks
> that my copy is four patches away from origin/master.  But, in fact,
> only the last patch (hence 4/4) is a bona fide diff from origin/master
> (your version).
>
> To use a cliche, I need to figure out how to convince git that I am now
> on the same page as the origin.  I think this may have something to do
> with submitting patches by email instead of pushing them.  I will try to
> figure this out before submitting my next patch.

git format-patch -1

should give you a single patch with no numbers.  You can specify how
many commits to include with -n  (eg. git format-patch -3 ) and it
numbers the 3 patches appropriately.

You can turn off the patch numbering if they are unrelated with
--no-numbered.

If you are using git send-email it uses the same format-patch parameters
IIRC.

I use git send-email --annotate

which brings each patch into an edit buffer where I can add extra
(non-commit message) information before the diffstat.

HTH,
Bernt


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