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f412d72c19
In git-replay documentation, linkgit to git-rev-parse is missing the man section, which breaks its rendering. Add section number as done in other references to this command. Signed-off-by: Yehezkel Bernat <YehezkelShB@gmail.com> Acked-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
128 lines
4.3 KiB
Plaintext
128 lines
4.3 KiB
Plaintext
git-replay(1)
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=============
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NAME
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----
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git-replay - EXPERIMENTAL: Replay commits on a new base, works with bare repos too
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SYNOPSIS
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--------
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[verse]
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(EXPERIMENTAL!) 'git replay' ([--contained] --onto <newbase> | --advance <branch>) <revision-range>...
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DESCRIPTION
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-----------
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Takes ranges of commits and replays them onto a new location. Leaves
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the working tree and the index untouched, and updates no references.
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The output of this command is meant to be used as input to
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`git update-ref --stdin`, which would update the relevant branches
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(see the OUTPUT section below).
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THIS COMMAND IS EXPERIMENTAL. THE BEHAVIOR MAY CHANGE.
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OPTIONS
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-------
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--onto <newbase>::
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Starting point at which to create the new commits. May be any
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valid commit, and not just an existing branch name.
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+
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When `--onto` is specified, the update-ref command(s) in the output will
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update the branch(es) in the revision range to point at the new
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commits, similar to the way how `git rebase --update-refs` updates
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multiple branches in the affected range.
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--advance <branch>::
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Starting point at which to create the new commits; must be a
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branch name.
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+
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When `--advance` is specified, the update-ref command(s) in the output
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will update the branch passed as an argument to `--advance` to point at
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the new commits (in other words, this mimics a cherry-pick operation).
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<revision-range>::
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Range of commits to replay. More than one <revision-range> can
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be passed, but in `--advance <branch>` mode, they should have
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a single tip, so that it's clear where <branch> should point
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to. See "Specifying Ranges" in linkgit:git-rev-parse[1] and the
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"Commit Limiting" options below.
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include::rev-list-options.txt[]
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OUTPUT
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------
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When there are no conflicts, the output of this command is usable as
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input to `git update-ref --stdin`. It is of the form:
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update refs/heads/branch1 ${NEW_branch1_HASH} ${OLD_branch1_HASH}
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update refs/heads/branch2 ${NEW_branch2_HASH} ${OLD_branch2_HASH}
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update refs/heads/branch3 ${NEW_branch3_HASH} ${OLD_branch3_HASH}
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where the number of refs updated depends on the arguments passed and
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the shape of the history being replayed. When using `--advance`, the
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number of refs updated is always one, but for `--onto`, it can be one
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or more (rebasing multiple branches simultaneously is supported).
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EXIT STATUS
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-----------
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For a successful, non-conflicted replay, the exit status is 0. When
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the replay has conflicts, the exit status is 1. If the replay is not
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able to complete (or start) due to some kind of error, the exit status
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is something other than 0 or 1.
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EXAMPLES
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--------
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To simply rebase `mybranch` onto `target`:
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------------
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$ git replay --onto target origin/main..mybranch
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update refs/heads/mybranch ${NEW_mybranch_HASH} ${OLD_mybranch_HASH}
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------------
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To cherry-pick the commits from mybranch onto target:
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------------
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$ git replay --advance target origin/main..mybranch
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update refs/heads/target ${NEW_target_HASH} ${OLD_target_HASH}
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------------
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Note that the first two examples replay the exact same commits and on
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top of the exact same new base, they only differ in that the first
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provides instructions to make mybranch point at the new commits and
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the second provides instructions to make target point at them.
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What if you have a stack of branches, one depending upon another, and
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you'd really like to rebase the whole set?
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------------
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$ git replay --contained --onto origin/main origin/main..tipbranch
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update refs/heads/branch1 ${NEW_branch1_HASH} ${OLD_branch1_HASH}
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update refs/heads/branch2 ${NEW_branch2_HASH} ${OLD_branch2_HASH}
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update refs/heads/tipbranch ${NEW_tipbranch_HASH} ${OLD_tipbranch_HASH}
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------------
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When calling `git replay`, one does not need to specify a range of
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commits to replay using the syntax `A..B`; any range expression will
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do:
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------------
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$ git replay --onto origin/main ^base branch1 branch2 branch3
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update refs/heads/branch1 ${NEW_branch1_HASH} ${OLD_branch1_HASH}
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update refs/heads/branch2 ${NEW_branch2_HASH} ${OLD_branch2_HASH}
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update refs/heads/branch3 ${NEW_branch3_HASH} ${OLD_branch3_HASH}
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------------
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This will simultaneously rebase `branch1`, `branch2`, and `branch3`,
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all commits they have since `base`, playing them on top of
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`origin/main`. These three branches may have commits on top of `base`
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that they have in common, but that does not need to be the case.
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GIT
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---
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Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite
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