On Tue, Feb 12, 2008 at 05:20:51PM -0800, David Miller wrote:
> From: Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2008 16:44:47 -0800 (PST)
> 
> >     gitk --merge
>  ...
> > This is something where I actually think git could and should do better: 
> > git has the capability to act as more of a "quilt replacement", but 
> > because it wasn't part of the original design, we never actualy exposed 
> > the simple queue management commands to do this (stgit does things like 
> > that, though).
> > 
> > So if you haven't pushed out, right now you'd have to do this stupid 
> > thing:
> 
> Thanks for all the useful info.
> 
> But as soon as I've applied any patches to my tree I've "pushed out".
> So this scheme doesn't work for me.  The first thing I do when I have
> changes to apply is clone a tree locally and on master.kernel.org,
> then I apply that first patch locally and push it out to master.
> 
> What would be really cool is if you could do the rebase thing, push
> that to a remote tree you were already pushing into and others could
> pull from that and all the right things happen.
> 
> A rebase is just a series of events, and those could propagate to
> people who are pulling from the tree.  I'm pretty sure GIT could
> support this.

        git checkout -b new-tree old-tree
        # hack on new-tree: rebase, drop bad commits, whatever
        git merge -s ours old-tree
        git push your-public-repo new-tree:public-tree

Now public-tree has a merge commit on the top with two parents,
public-tree^1 and public-tree^2.  public-tree^1 is the tip of the new
cleaned-up history, and public-tree^2 points to the old stuff.

I sometimes use that privately as a way to keep track of the history of
a patch-series, but I assume Linus would shoot anyone that tried to
submit such a monstrosity upstream....

--b.
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