On Tue, 18 Dec 2012 13:49:44 +0100
Thomas Rast <tr...@inf.ethz.ch> wrote:

> Johannes Sixt <j.s...@viscovery.net> writes:
> 
> > Am 12/18/2012 12:00, schrieb Yann Dirson:
> >> On Mon, 17 Dec 2012 13:14:56 -0800
> >> Junio C Hamano <gits...@pobox.com> wrote:
> >> 
> >>> Andreas Schwab <sch...@linux-m68k.org> writes:
> >>>
> >>>> Christian Couder <christian.cou...@gmail.com> writes:
> >>>>
> >>>>> Yeah, at one point I wanted to have a command that created to craft a
> >>>>> new commit based on an existing one.
> >>>>
> >>>> This isn't hard to do, you only have to resort to plumbing:
> >>>>
> >>>> $ git cat-file commit fef11965da875c105c40f1a9550af1f5e34a6e62 |
> >>>> sed
> >>>> s/bfae342c973b0be3c9e99d3d86ed2e6b152b4a6b/790c83cda92f95f1b4b91e2ddc056a52a99a055d/
> >>>> | git hash-object -t commit --stdin -w
> >>>> bb45cc6356eac6c7fa432965090045306dab7026
> >>>
> >>> Good.  I do not think an extra special-purpose command is welcome
> >>> here.
> >> 
> >> Well, I'm not sure this is intuitive enough to be useful to the average 
> >> user :)
> >
> > When I played with git-replace in the past, I imagined that it could be
> >
> >    git replace <object> --commit ...commit options...
> >
> > that would do the trick.
> >
> > We could implement it with a git-replace--commit helper script that
> > generates the replacement commit using the ...commit options... (to be
> > defined what this should be), and git-replace would just pick its output
> > (the SHA1 of the generated commit) as a substitute for the <replacement>
> > argument that would have to be given without the --commit option.
> 
> I wouldn't even want a script -- we'd end up inventing a complicated
> command-line editor for what can simply be done by judicious use of an
> actual text editor.  How about something like the following?

Well, while it does the job, it is still hardly as straightforward as the
old "vi .git/info/grafts", or as a single easily-remembered commandline.

I was again thinking the only commandline stuff that does not exist currently in
git-commit is specifying parents.  One possiblity would be to add such an
option to git-commit, together with a --replace flag that would cause the
new commit to attached a replace ref (not completely unlike --append, in that
we're doing some non-default action instead of just adding the changes to a
new commit).

But well, I don't think we would want to add to git-commit the ability of 
playing
with something else than what's in the index/worktree.  Abstracting the commit
commandline to make it reusable by a git-replace--commit and possibly other 
tools
that may want to rw-manipulate arbitrary commits could make sense ?


> 
>  Documentation/git-replace.txt | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++
>  1 file changed, 21 insertions(+)
> 
> diff --git i/Documentation/git-replace.txt w/Documentation/git-replace.txt
> index 51131d0..2502118 100644
> --- i/Documentation/git-replace.txt
> +++ w/Documentation/git-replace.txt
> @@ -61,6 +61,27 @@ OPTIONS
>       Typing "git replace" without arguments, also lists all replace
>       refs.
>  
> +
> +EXAMPLE
> +-------
> +
> +Replacements (and before them, grafts) are often used to replace the
> +parent list of a commit.  Since commits are stored in a human-readable
> +format, you can in fact change any property using the following
> +recipe:
> +
> +------------------------------------------------
> +$ git cat-file commit original_commit >tmp
> +$ vi tmp
> +------------------------------------------------
> +In the editor, adjust the commit as needed.  For example, you can edit
> +the parent lists by adding/removing lines starting with "parent".
> +When done, replace the original commit with the edited one:
> +------------------------------------------------
> +$ git replace original_commit $(git hash-object -w tmp)

You probably meant "-t commit" - a sign that it's not so trivial to forge ?

> +------------------------------------------------
> +
> +
>  BUGS
>  ----
>  Comparing blobs or trees that have been replaced with those that
> 
> 


-- 
Yann Dirson - Bertin Technologies
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