The documentation for -m 1 seemed to say it would only do the most recent ("first") of the commits, not all of them.

On 2/18/2012 11:50 AM, Alex wrote:
Well, I tried the -m 1 thing locally and it *seemed* to revert all the
commits introduced by the merge commit itself.

Regards,
Alex

On Sat, Feb 18, 2012 at 8:49 PM, Walter Bright<[email protected]>  wrote:
Eh, I had to make a script that reverted each of the commits that made up
the merge in reverse order. Apparently there is no command to revert a
commit of commits.


On 2/18/2012 11:33 AM, Alex wrote:
Oh, hrm, can you try: git revert -m 1
03e8dddc8a53e42d73b04dd23287f206fcc35dd0

Regards,
Alex

On Sat, Feb 18, 2012 at 8:26 PM, Walter Bright<[email protected]>
  wrote:
This is the message it gave me:

fatal: Commit 03e8dddc8a53e42d73b04dd23287f206fcc35dd0 is a merge but no
-m
option was given.


On 2/18/2012 11:20 AM, Alex wrote:
git revert 03e8dddc8a53e42d73b04dd23287f206fcc35dd0 should do the
trick (the hash being the merge commit).

Regards,
Alex

On Sat, Feb 18, 2012 at 8:16 PM, Walter Bright<[email protected]>
  wrote:
This needs to be reverted:

https://github.com/D-Programming-Language/dmd/pull/727

Is there a simple command to do it?
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