Henning Moll <newssc...@gmx.de> writes:

> 1. For P, A is the nearest prior commit on 'master'
> 2. on master: git rebase -i A^
> 3. change A from pick to edit. save. quit
> 4. git merge P
> 5. git rebase --continue
>
> From the perspective of 'master' this worked. But as all of the commits
> have been rewritten, the branches b1 and b2 no longer refer to
> 'master'. Branch b2, for example, still branches off at B and not B'.

You only rebased master, so b1 and b2 were unchanged.  If you want to
change b1 and b2 you have to rebase them as well.

Andreas.

-- 
Andreas Schwab, sch...@linux-m68k.org
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"And now for something completely different."
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