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1 git-rebase(1)
2 =============
3
4 NAME
5 ----
6 git-rebase - Reapply commits on top of another base tip
7
8 SYNOPSIS
9 --------
10 [verse]
11 'git rebase' [-i | --interactive] [options] [--exec <cmd>] [--onto <newbase>]
12 [<upstream> [<branch>]]
13 'git rebase' [-i | --interactive] [options] [--exec <cmd>] [--onto <newbase>]
14 --root [<branch>]
15 'git rebase' --continue | --skip | --abort | --quit | --edit-todo | --show-current-patch
16
17 DESCRIPTION
18 -----------
19 If <branch> is specified, 'git rebase' will perform an automatic
20 `git checkout <branch>` before doing anything else. Otherwise
21 it remains on the current branch.
22
23 If <upstream> is not specified, the upstream configured in
24 branch.<name>.remote and branch.<name>.merge options will be used (see
25 linkgit:git-config[1] for details) and the `--fork-point` option is
26 assumed. If you are currently not on any branch or if the current
27 branch does not have a configured upstream, the rebase will abort.
28
29 All changes made by commits in the current branch but that are not
30 in <upstream> are saved to a temporary area. This is the same set
31 of commits that would be shown by `git log <upstream>..HEAD`; or by
32 `git log 'fork_point'..HEAD`, if `--fork-point` is active (see the
33 description on `--fork-point` below); or by `git log HEAD`, if the
34 `--root` option is specified.
35
36 The current branch is reset to <upstream>, or <newbase> if the
37 --onto option was supplied. This has the exact same effect as
38 `git reset --hard <upstream>` (or <newbase>). ORIG_HEAD is set
39 to point at the tip of the branch before the reset.
40
41 The commits that were previously saved into the temporary area are
42 then reapplied to the current branch, one by one, in order. Note that
43 any commits in HEAD which introduce the same textual changes as a commit
44 in HEAD..<upstream> are omitted (i.e., a patch already accepted upstream
45 with a different commit message or timestamp will be skipped).
46
47 It is possible that a merge failure will prevent this process from being
48 completely automatic. You will have to resolve any such merge failure
49 and run `git rebase --continue`. Another option is to bypass the commit
50 that caused the merge failure with `git rebase --skip`. To check out the
51 original <branch> and remove the .git/rebase-apply working files, use the
52 command `git rebase --abort` instead.
53
54 Assume the following history exists and the current branch is "topic":
55
56 ------------
57 A---B---C topic
58 /
59 D---E---F---G master
60 ------------
61
62 From this point, the result of either of the following commands:
63
64
65 git rebase master
66 git rebase master topic
67
68 would be:
69
70 ------------
71 A'--B'--C' topic
72 /
73 D---E---F---G master
74 ------------
75
76 *NOTE:* The latter form is just a short-hand of `git checkout topic`
77 followed by `git rebase master`. When rebase exits `topic` will
78 remain the checked-out branch.
79
80 If the upstream branch already contains a change you have made (e.g.,
81 because you mailed a patch which was applied upstream), then that commit
82 will be skipped. For example, running `git rebase master` on the
83 following history (in which `A'` and `A` introduce the same set of changes,
84 but have different committer information):
85
86 ------------
87 A---B---C topic
88 /
89 D---E---A'---F master
90 ------------
91
92 will result in:
93
94 ------------
95 B'---C' topic
96 /
97 D---E---A'---F master
98 ------------
99
100 Here is how you would transplant a topic branch based on one
101 branch to another, to pretend that you forked the topic branch
102 from the latter branch, using `rebase --onto`.
103
104 First let's assume your 'topic' is based on branch 'next'.
105 For example, a feature developed in 'topic' depends on some
106 functionality which is found in 'next'.
107
108 ------------
109 o---o---o---o---o master
110 \
111 o---o---o---o---o next
112 \
113 o---o---o topic
114 ------------
115
116 We want to make 'topic' forked from branch 'master'; for example,
117 because the functionality on which 'topic' depends was merged into the
118 more stable 'master' branch. We want our tree to look like this:
119
120 ------------
121 o---o---o---o---o master
122 | \
123 | o'--o'--o' topic
124 \
125 o---o---o---o---o next
126 ------------
127
128 We can get this using the following command:
129
130 git rebase --onto master next topic
131
132
133 Another example of --onto option is to rebase part of a
134 branch. If we have the following situation:
135
136 ------------
137 H---I---J topicB
138 /
139 E---F---G topicA
140 /
141 A---B---C---D master
142 ------------
143
144 then the command
145
146 git rebase --onto master topicA topicB
147
148 would result in:
149
150 ------------
151 H'--I'--J' topicB
152 /
153 | E---F---G topicA
154 |/
155 A---B---C---D master
156 ------------
157
158 This is useful when topicB does not depend on topicA.
159
160 A range of commits could also be removed with rebase. If we have
161 the following situation:
162
163 ------------
164 E---F---G---H---I---J topicA
165 ------------
166
167 then the command
168
169 git rebase --onto topicA~5 topicA~3 topicA
170
171 would result in the removal of commits F and G:
172
173 ------------
174 E---H'---I'---J' topicA
175 ------------
176
177 This is useful if F and G were flawed in some way, or should not be
178 part of topicA. Note that the argument to --onto and the <upstream>
179 parameter can be any valid commit-ish.
180
181 In case of conflict, 'git rebase' will stop at the first problematic commit
182 and leave conflict markers in the tree. You can use 'git diff' to locate
183 the markers (<<<<<<) and make edits to resolve the conflict. For each
184 file you edit, you need to tell Git that the conflict has been resolved,
185 typically this would be done with
186
187
188 git add <filename>
189
190
191 After resolving the conflict manually and updating the index with the
192 desired resolution, you can continue the rebasing process with
193
194
195 git rebase --continue
196
197
198 Alternatively, you can undo the 'git rebase' with
199
200
201 git rebase --abort
202
203 CONFIGURATION
204 -------------
205
206 include::rebase-config.txt[]
207
208 OPTIONS
209 -------
210 --onto <newbase>::
211 Starting point at which to create the new commits. If the
212 --onto option is not specified, the starting point is
213 <upstream>. May be any valid commit, and not just an
214 existing branch name.
215 +
216 As a special case, you may use "A\...B" as a shortcut for the
217 merge base of A and B if there is exactly one merge base. You can
218 leave out at most one of A and B, in which case it defaults to HEAD.
219
220 <upstream>::
221 Upstream branch to compare against. May be any valid commit,
222 not just an existing branch name. Defaults to the configured
223 upstream for the current branch.
224
225 <branch>::
226 Working branch; defaults to HEAD.
227
228 --continue::
229 Restart the rebasing process after having resolved a merge conflict.
230
231 --abort::
232 Abort the rebase operation and reset HEAD to the original
233 branch. If <branch> was provided when the rebase operation was
234 started, then HEAD will be reset to <branch>. Otherwise HEAD
235 will be reset to where it was when the rebase operation was
236 started.
237
238 --quit::
239 Abort the rebase operation but HEAD is not reset back to the
240 original branch. The index and working tree are also left
241 unchanged as a result.
242
243 --keep-empty::
244 Keep the commits that do not change anything from its
245 parents in the result.
246
247 --skip::
248 Restart the rebasing process by skipping the current patch.
249
250 --edit-todo::
251 Edit the todo list during an interactive rebase.
252
253 --show-current-patch::
254 Show the current patch in an interactive rebase or when rebase
255 is stopped because of conflicts.
256
257 -m::
258 --merge::
259 Use merging strategies to rebase. When the recursive (default) merge
260 strategy is used, this allows rebase to be aware of renames on the
261 upstream side.
262 +
263 Note that a rebase merge works by replaying each commit from the working
264 branch on top of the <upstream> branch. Because of this, when a merge
265 conflict happens, the side reported as 'ours' is the so-far rebased
266 series, starting with <upstream>, and 'theirs' is the working branch. In
267 other words, the sides are swapped.
268
269 -s <strategy>::
270 --strategy=<strategy>::
271 Use the given merge strategy.
272 If there is no `-s` option 'git merge-recursive' is used
273 instead. This implies --merge.
274 +
275 Because 'git rebase' replays each commit from the working branch
276 on top of the <upstream> branch using the given strategy, using
277 the 'ours' strategy simply discards all patches from the <branch>,
278 which makes little sense.
279
280 -X <strategy-option>::
281 --strategy-option=<strategy-option>::
282 Pass the <strategy-option> through to the merge strategy.
283 This implies `--merge` and, if no strategy has been
284 specified, `-s recursive`. Note the reversal of 'ours' and
285 'theirs' as noted above for the `-m` option.
286
287 -S[<keyid>]::
288 --gpg-sign[=<keyid>]::
289 GPG-sign commits. The `keyid` argument is optional and
290 defaults to the committer identity; if specified, it must be
291 stuck to the option without a space.
292
293 -q::
294 --quiet::
295 Be quiet. Implies --no-stat.
296
297 -v::
298 --verbose::
299 Be verbose. Implies --stat.
300
301 --stat::
302 Show a diffstat of what changed upstream since the last rebase. The
303 diffstat is also controlled by the configuration option rebase.stat.
304
305 -n::
306 --no-stat::
307 Do not show a diffstat as part of the rebase process.
308
309 --no-verify::
310 This option bypasses the pre-rebase hook. See also linkgit:githooks[5].
311
312 --verify::
313 Allows the pre-rebase hook to run, which is the default. This option can
314 be used to override --no-verify. See also linkgit:githooks[5].
315
316 -C<n>::
317 Ensure at least <n> lines of surrounding context match before
318 and after each change. When fewer lines of surrounding
319 context exist they all must match. By default no context is
320 ever ignored.
321
322 -f::
323 --force-rebase::
324 Force a rebase even if the current branch is up to date and
325 the command without `--force` would return without doing anything.
326 +
327 You may find this (or --no-ff with an interactive rebase) helpful after
328 reverting a topic branch merge, as this option recreates the topic branch with
329 fresh commits so it can be remerged successfully without needing to "revert
330 the reversion" (see the
331 link:howto/revert-a-faulty-merge.html[revert-a-faulty-merge How-To] for details).
332
333 --fork-point::
334 --no-fork-point::
335 Use reflog to find a better common ancestor between <upstream>
336 and <branch> when calculating which commits have been
337 introduced by <branch>.
338 +
339 When --fork-point is active, 'fork_point' will be used instead of
340 <upstream> to calculate the set of commits to rebase, where
341 'fork_point' is the result of `git merge-base --fork-point <upstream>
342 <branch>` command (see linkgit:git-merge-base[1]). If 'fork_point'
343 ends up being empty, the <upstream> will be used as a fallback.
344 +
345 If either <upstream> or --root is given on the command line, then the
346 default is `--no-fork-point`, otherwise the default is `--fork-point`.
347
348 --ignore-whitespace::
349 --whitespace=<option>::
350 These flag are passed to the 'git apply' program
351 (see linkgit:git-apply[1]) that applies the patch.
352 Incompatible with the --interactive option.
353
354 --committer-date-is-author-date::
355 --ignore-date::
356 These flags are passed to 'git am' to easily change the dates
357 of the rebased commits (see linkgit:git-am[1]).
358 Incompatible with the --interactive option.
359
360 --signoff::
361 This flag is passed to 'git am' to sign off all the rebased
362 commits (see linkgit:git-am[1]). Incompatible with the
363 --interactive option.
364
365 -i::
366 --interactive::
367 Make a list of the commits which are about to be rebased. Let the
368 user edit that list before rebasing. This mode can also be used to
369 split commits (see SPLITTING COMMITS below).
370 +
371 The commit list format can be changed by setting the configuration option
372 rebase.instructionFormat. A customized instruction format will automatically
373 have the long commit hash prepended to the format.
374
375 -p::
376 --preserve-merges::
377 Recreate merge commits instead of flattening the history by replaying
378 commits a merge commit introduces. Merge conflict resolutions or manual
379 amendments to merge commits are not preserved.
380 +
381 This uses the `--interactive` machinery internally, but combining it
382 with the `--interactive` option explicitly is generally not a good
383 idea unless you know what you are doing (see BUGS below).
384
385 -x <cmd>::
386 --exec <cmd>::
387 Append "exec <cmd>" after each line creating a commit in the
388 final history. <cmd> will be interpreted as one or more shell
389 commands.
390 +
391 You may execute several commands by either using one instance of `--exec`
392 with several commands:
393 +
394 git rebase -i --exec "cmd1 && cmd2 && ..."
395 +
396 or by giving more than one `--exec`:
397 +
398 git rebase -i --exec "cmd1" --exec "cmd2" --exec ...
399 +
400 If `--autosquash` is used, "exec" lines will not be appended for
401 the intermediate commits, and will only appear at the end of each
402 squash/fixup series.
403 +
404 This uses the `--interactive` machinery internally, but it can be run
405 without an explicit `--interactive`.
406
407 --root::
408 Rebase all commits reachable from <branch>, instead of
409 limiting them with an <upstream>. This allows you to rebase
410 the root commit(s) on a branch. When used with --onto, it
411 will skip changes already contained in <newbase> (instead of
412 <upstream>) whereas without --onto it will operate on every change.
413 When used together with both --onto and --preserve-merges,
414 'all' root commits will be rewritten to have <newbase> as parent
415 instead.
416
417 --autosquash::
418 --no-autosquash::
419 When the commit log message begins with "squash! ..." (or
420 "fixup! ..."), and there is already a commit in the todo list that
421 matches the same `...`, automatically modify the todo list of rebase
422 -i so that the commit marked for squashing comes right after the
423 commit to be modified, and change the action of the moved commit
424 from `pick` to `squash` (or `fixup`). A commit matches the `...` if
425 the commit subject matches, or if the `...` refers to the commit's
426 hash. As a fall-back, partial matches of the commit subject work,
427 too. The recommended way to create fixup/squash commits is by using
428 the `--fixup`/`--squash` options of linkgit:git-commit[1].
429 +
430 This option is only valid when the `--interactive` option is used.
431 +
432 If the `--autosquash` option is enabled by default using the
433 configuration variable `rebase.autoSquash`, this option can be
434 used to override and disable this setting.
435
436 --autostash::
437 --no-autostash::
438 Automatically create a temporary stash entry before the operation
439 begins, and apply it after the operation ends. This means
440 that you can run rebase on a dirty worktree. However, use
441 with care: the final stash application after a successful
442 rebase might result in non-trivial conflicts.
443
444 --no-ff::
445 With --interactive, cherry-pick all rebased commits instead of
446 fast-forwarding over the unchanged ones. This ensures that the
447 entire history of the rebased branch is composed of new commits.
448 +
449 Without --interactive, this is a synonym for --force-rebase.
450 +
451 You may find this helpful after reverting a topic branch merge, as this option
452 recreates the topic branch with fresh commits so it can be remerged
453 successfully without needing to "revert the reversion" (see the
454 link:howto/revert-a-faulty-merge.html[revert-a-faulty-merge How-To] for details).
455
456 include::merge-strategies.txt[]
457
458 NOTES
459 -----
460
461 You should understand the implications of using 'git rebase' on a
462 repository that you share. See also RECOVERING FROM UPSTREAM REBASE
463 below.
464
465 When the git-rebase command is run, it will first execute a "pre-rebase"
466 hook if one exists. You can use this hook to do sanity checks and
467 reject the rebase if it isn't appropriate. Please see the template
468 pre-rebase hook script for an example.
469
470 Upon completion, <branch> will be the current branch.
471
472 INTERACTIVE MODE
473 ----------------
474
475 Rebasing interactively means that you have a chance to edit the commits
476 which are rebased. You can reorder the commits, and you can
477 remove them (weeding out bad or otherwise unwanted patches).
478
479 The interactive mode is meant for this type of workflow:
480
481 1. have a wonderful idea
482 2. hack on the code
483 3. prepare a series for submission
484 4. submit
485
486 where point 2. consists of several instances of
487
488 a) regular use
489
490 1. finish something worthy of a commit
491 2. commit
492
493 b) independent fixup
494
495 1. realize that something does not work
496 2. fix that
497 3. commit it
498
499 Sometimes the thing fixed in b.2. cannot be amended to the not-quite
500 perfect commit it fixes, because that commit is buried deeply in a
501 patch series. That is exactly what interactive rebase is for: use it
502 after plenty of "a"s and "b"s, by rearranging and editing
503 commits, and squashing multiple commits into one.
504
505 Start it with the last commit you want to retain as-is:
506
507 git rebase -i <after-this-commit>
508
509 An editor will be fired up with all the commits in your current branch
510 (ignoring merge commits), which come after the given commit. You can
511 reorder the commits in this list to your heart's content, and you can
512 remove them. The list looks more or less like this:
513
514 -------------------------------------------
515 pick deadbee The oneline of this commit
516 pick fa1afe1 The oneline of the next commit
517 ...
518 -------------------------------------------
519
520 The oneline descriptions are purely for your pleasure; 'git rebase' will
521 not look at them but at the commit names ("deadbee" and "fa1afe1" in this
522 example), so do not delete or edit the names.
523
524 By replacing the command "pick" with the command "edit", you can tell
525 'git rebase' to stop after applying that commit, so that you can edit
526 the files and/or the commit message, amend the commit, and continue
527 rebasing.
528
529 If you just want to edit the commit message for a commit, replace the
530 command "pick" with the command "reword".
531
532 To drop a commit, replace the command "pick" with "drop", or just
533 delete the matching line.
534
535 If you want to fold two or more commits into one, replace the command
536 "pick" for the second and subsequent commits with "squash" or "fixup".
537 If the commits had different authors, the folded commit will be
538 attributed to the author of the first commit. The suggested commit
539 message for the folded commit is the concatenation of the commit
540 messages of the first commit and of those with the "squash" command,
541 but omits the commit messages of commits with the "fixup" command.
542
543 'git rebase' will stop when "pick" has been replaced with "edit" or
544 when a command fails due to merge errors. When you are done editing
545 and/or resolving conflicts you can continue with `git rebase --continue`.
546
547 For example, if you want to reorder the last 5 commits, such that what
548 was HEAD~4 becomes the new HEAD. To achieve that, you would call
549 'git rebase' like this:
550
551 ----------------------
552 $ git rebase -i HEAD~5
553 ----------------------
554
555 And move the first patch to the end of the list.
556
557 You might want to preserve merges, if you have a history like this:
558
559 ------------------
560 X
561 \
562 A---M---B
563 /
564 ---o---O---P---Q
565 ------------------
566
567 Suppose you want to rebase the side branch starting at "A" to "Q". Make
568 sure that the current HEAD is "B", and call
569
570 -----------------------------
571 $ git rebase -i -p --onto Q O
572 -----------------------------
573
574 Reordering and editing commits usually creates untested intermediate
575 steps. You may want to check that your history editing did not break
576 anything by running a test, or at least recompiling at intermediate
577 points in history by using the "exec" command (shortcut "x"). You may
578 do so by creating a todo list like this one:
579
580 -------------------------------------------
581 pick deadbee Implement feature XXX
582 fixup f1a5c00 Fix to feature XXX
583 exec make
584 pick c0ffeee The oneline of the next commit
585 edit deadbab The oneline of the commit after
586 exec cd subdir; make test
587 ...
588 -------------------------------------------
589
590 The interactive rebase will stop when a command fails (i.e. exits with
591 non-0 status) to give you an opportunity to fix the problem. You can
592 continue with `git rebase --continue`.
593
594 The "exec" command launches the command in a shell (the one specified
595 in `$SHELL`, or the default shell if `$SHELL` is not set), so you can
596 use shell features (like "cd", ">", ";" ...). The command is run from
597 the root of the working tree.
598
599 ----------------------------------
600 $ git rebase -i --exec "make test"
601 ----------------------------------
602
603 This command lets you check that intermediate commits are compilable.
604 The todo list becomes like that:
605
606 --------------------
607 pick 5928aea one
608 exec make test
609 pick 04d0fda two
610 exec make test
611 pick ba46169 three
612 exec make test
613 pick f4593f9 four
614 exec make test
615 --------------------
616
617 SPLITTING COMMITS
618 -----------------
619
620 In interactive mode, you can mark commits with the action "edit". However,
621 this does not necessarily mean that 'git rebase' expects the result of this
622 edit to be exactly one commit. Indeed, you can undo the commit, or you can
623 add other commits. This can be used to split a commit into two:
624
625 - Start an interactive rebase with `git rebase -i <commit>^`, where
626 <commit> is the commit you want to split. In fact, any commit range
627 will do, as long as it contains that commit.
628
629 - Mark the commit you want to split with the action "edit".
630
631 - When it comes to editing that commit, execute `git reset HEAD^`. The
632 effect is that the HEAD is rewound by one, and the index follows suit.
633 However, the working tree stays the same.
634
635 - Now add the changes to the index that you want to have in the first
636 commit. You can use `git add` (possibly interactively) or
637 'git gui' (or both) to do that.
638
639 - Commit the now-current index with whatever commit message is appropriate
640 now.
641
642 - Repeat the last two steps until your working tree is clean.
643
644 - Continue the rebase with `git rebase --continue`.
645
646 If you are not absolutely sure that the intermediate revisions are
647 consistent (they compile, pass the testsuite, etc.) you should use
648 'git stash' to stash away the not-yet-committed changes
649 after each commit, test, and amend the commit if fixes are necessary.
650
651
652 RECOVERING FROM UPSTREAM REBASE
653 -------------------------------
654
655 Rebasing (or any other form of rewriting) a branch that others have
656 based work on is a bad idea: anyone downstream of it is forced to
657 manually fix their history. This section explains how to do the fix
658 from the downstream's point of view. The real fix, however, would be
659 to avoid rebasing the upstream in the first place.
660
661 To illustrate, suppose you are in a situation where someone develops a
662 'subsystem' branch, and you are working on a 'topic' that is dependent
663 on this 'subsystem'. You might end up with a history like the
664 following:
665
666 ------------
667 o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o master
668 \
669 o---o---o---o---o subsystem
670 \
671 *---*---* topic
672 ------------
673
674 If 'subsystem' is rebased against 'master', the following happens:
675
676 ------------
677 o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o master
678 \ \
679 o---o---o---o---o o'--o'--o'--o'--o' subsystem
680 \
681 *---*---* topic
682 ------------
683
684 If you now continue development as usual, and eventually merge 'topic'
685 to 'subsystem', the commits from 'subsystem' will remain duplicated forever:
686
687 ------------
688 o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o master
689 \ \
690 o---o---o---o---o o'--o'--o'--o'--o'--M subsystem
691 \ /
692 *---*---*-..........-*--* topic
693 ------------
694
695 Such duplicates are generally frowned upon because they clutter up
696 history, making it harder to follow. To clean things up, you need to
697 transplant the commits on 'topic' to the new 'subsystem' tip, i.e.,
698 rebase 'topic'. This becomes a ripple effect: anyone downstream from
699 'topic' is forced to rebase too, and so on!
700
701 There are two kinds of fixes, discussed in the following subsections:
702
703 Easy case: The changes are literally the same.::
704
705 This happens if the 'subsystem' rebase was a simple rebase and
706 had no conflicts.
707
708 Hard case: The changes are not the same.::
709
710 This happens if the 'subsystem' rebase had conflicts, or used
711 `--interactive` to omit, edit, squash, or fixup commits; or
712 if the upstream used one of `commit --amend`, `reset`, or
713 `filter-branch`.
714
715
716 The easy case
717 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
718
719 Only works if the changes (patch IDs based on the diff contents) on
720 'subsystem' are literally the same before and after the rebase
721 'subsystem' did.
722
723 In that case, the fix is easy because 'git rebase' knows to skip
724 changes that are already present in the new upstream. So if you say
725 (assuming you're on 'topic')
726 ------------
727 $ git rebase subsystem
728 ------------
729 you will end up with the fixed history
730 ------------
731 o---o---o---o---o---o---o---o master
732 \
733 o'--o'--o'--o'--o' subsystem
734 \
735 *---*---* topic
736 ------------
737
738
739 The hard case
740 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
741
742 Things get more complicated if the 'subsystem' changes do not exactly
743 correspond to the ones before the rebase.
744
745 NOTE: While an "easy case recovery" sometimes appears to be successful
746 even in the hard case, it may have unintended consequences. For
747 example, a commit that was removed via `git rebase
748 --interactive` will be **resurrected**!
749
750 The idea is to manually tell 'git rebase' "where the old 'subsystem'
751 ended and your 'topic' began", that is, what the old merge-base
752 between them was. You will have to find a way to name the last commit
753 of the old 'subsystem', for example:
754
755 * With the 'subsystem' reflog: after 'git fetch', the old tip of
756 'subsystem' is at `subsystem@{1}`. Subsequent fetches will
757 increase the number. (See linkgit:git-reflog[1].)
758
759 * Relative to the tip of 'topic': knowing that your 'topic' has three
760 commits, the old tip of 'subsystem' must be `topic~3`.
761
762 You can then transplant the old `subsystem..topic` to the new tip by
763 saying (for the reflog case, and assuming you are on 'topic' already):
764 ------------
765 $ git rebase --onto subsystem subsystem@{1}
766 ------------
767
768 The ripple effect of a "hard case" recovery is especially bad:
769 'everyone' downstream from 'topic' will now have to perform a "hard
770 case" recovery too!
771
772 BUGS
773 ----
774 The todo list presented by `--preserve-merges --interactive` does not
775 represent the topology of the revision graph. Editing commits and
776 rewording their commit messages should work fine, but attempts to
777 reorder commits tend to produce counterintuitive results.
778
779 For example, an attempt to rearrange
780 ------------
781 1 --- 2 --- 3 --- 4 --- 5
782 ------------
783 to
784 ------------
785 1 --- 2 --- 4 --- 3 --- 5
786 ------------
787 by moving the "pick 4" line will result in the following history:
788 ------------
789 3
790 /
791 1 --- 2 --- 4 --- 5
792 ------------
793
794 GIT
795 ---
796 Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite