How to rebase a branch off a rebased branch?
Short answer to How can I effectively rebase B off A so that it looks like B started from A? Assuming you want to move exactly one commit:
git rebase --onto A B~ B
If you want to move more then one commit use:
git rebase --onto A old_A B
The rest of the answer.
Your branch of B is still around (you can check it out), but its parent is still the exact commit object that A
was before.
to see a graphical representation of this I use:
git log --graph --decorate --all
to see all branches and where they are with respect to each other.
What you originally had:
o---o---o---o master
\
o---o---o A
\
o B
What you have now:
o---o---o-----------o master
\ \
o---o---o(B~) o---o---o A
\
o B
In terms of using --onto
, you need to have a starting point and an ending point.
use:
git rebase --onto [target] [rebasing stops] [rebasing head]
git rebase --onto A B~ B
And what you get:
o---o---o----------o master
\ \
o---o---o o---o---o A
(old_A) \
o B
[branch_name]~
indicates the parent commit of the branch.
The B~
is the branch that you do not want to change. (It happens to be the old A
)
Alternatively, if B was the only commit that had A as a parent, (i.e., B is the end of a chain of commits that branch off master) you could do
git checkout B
git rebase master
git checkout B~ # this is the commit before B (the A commit)
git branch -d A # remove the old A branch (it was rebased, and so is now invalid
git branch A # recreate the A branch on the commit that is based on the original A
I have the same issue of my git flow, and I found a best and fast way to do it.
(1) Project history in the beginning:
master ---A---B---C
\
D---E---F feature1
\
G---H feature2
(2) Rebase feature1 onto master and force pushed:
master ---A---B------------------------C
\ \
D---E---F feature1(old) D---E---F feature1
\
G---H feature2
(3) Rebase feature2 onto featrue1 (the new one)
master ---A---B------------------------C
\
D---E---F feature1
\
G---H feature2
The most confused part is how to do (3) .. but no one has a clear answer of doing it.
I believe many people encountered the same issue as I did, when we were trying to do "rebase --onto", we found that feature1(old) is actually not existing!
git rebase --onto feature1 feature1(old) feature2
Solution is to use below instead:
git rebase --onto feature1 feature1@{1} feature2
The syntax feature1@{1} means "the last known state of feature1 before the rebase", answer is refereed from https://coderwall.com/p/xzsr9g/rebasing-dependent-branches-with-git
If you have already re-based A. It should be the case that B is exactly where you left it. The branch (a pointer) that was A has simply moved to it's new location.
What I would recommend to effectively rebase B onto A is, as you suggested, to use 'cherry-pick'. This command attempts to apply the changes made in a commit to the branch on which you run it.
So if the commit IDs of the commit to which B originally pointed was '123456' then I would recommend moving your current 'B' to the same place as the new 'A' with git branch -f B A
then run git cherry-pick 123456
which will apply the changes onto A.
I believe the --onto
flag is used to set the target location from which to apply the commits.It defaults to "upstream" (source: http://git-scm.com/docs/git-rebase).
The way I like to think of the rebase command is as follows:
git rebase --onto <Starting here> <Apply all commits from HERE> <TO HERE>
Using this, it would probably have been simpler to rebase B onto master, then point A to the commit preceding B.
git rebase master B
(as the start point (--onto) is implicitly 'master')
then to use git branch -f A B^
(the ^ means 'the parent of')