Created
May 6, 2012 13:06
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A script for rebasing a merge
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#!/bin/sh -x | |
# remerge <onto> [<merge_commit>] | |
# e.g.: remerge origin/trunk | |
# merge_commit defaults to HEAD | |
onto=$1 | |
mc=${2:-HEAD} | |
mc_sha=$(git rev-parse $mc) # original merge commit | |
p1_sha=$(git rev-parse $onto) # what we want its new first parent to be | |
p2_sha=$(git rev-parse $mc^2) # keep the original second parent | |
# write out a script to finish the merge in case the merge step has conflicts | |
cat >finish_merge.sh<<__EOF__ | |
tree=\$(git log -1 HEAD --pretty=%T) | |
git reset --hard \$(git cat-file commit $mc_sha | sed '1,/^$/d' | git commit-tree \$tree -p $p1_sha -p $p2_sha) | |
__EOF__ | |
git checkout $mc_sha # checkout the merge commit | |
git merge $p1_sha || { echo "Resolve and commit the merge; then run finish_merge.sh"; exit 1; } | |
# recreate the original merge using this new tree and new first parent | |
. ./finish_merge.sh | |
rm -f finish_merge.sh |
Wow. This is an eight-year old gist. I'm almost certain the -m
option to cherry-pick
didn't exist at the time. (I was a git contributor around that time frame and I was pretty familiar with it.)
In any case, I wrote this while I was working at a startup that was shipping a fork of Chromium, and when I was responsible for merging Chromium development daily into our fork. It did the job just fine. Thanks for the feedback though.
Looks like -m
was added in late 2007. Not sure why I wrote the script the way I did.
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this script seems terribly over-complicated to me. the core of a sufficient process is this:
git merge --no-commit -s ours candidate^2
git cherry-pick -m 1 candidate
this may cause new conflicts that need to be resolved, and the resolution committed the usual way.