That's actually the result of using Github's Merge button. So it would create 
another commit every time you click on the merge button.

On 10 ?.?. 2554, at 19:24, John Firebaugh wrote:

> This is what the recent commit history looks like:
> 
> http://imgur.com/YAOq9
> 
> Does anyone else miss the days when all commits were rebased? I find that the 
> super-non-linear history makes it much more difficult to figure out what has 
> changed between two points, or to pinpoint the cause of a regression.
> 
> It's too bad github's otherwise awesome pull request functionality doesn't 
> provide the option of rebasing rather than merging.
> 
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