Answered my own question. git gui seems to be the tool needed for this job. With this it will permit easy organization of the deltas into a patch series.
Thanks for the pointers/help. This will be useful. On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 6:06 AM, Bill Fischofer <[email protected]> wrote: > git add -p looks promising. Is there a GUI front-end to this available? > > On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 5:48 AM, Taras Kondratiuk < > [email protected]> wrote: > >> On 11/20/2014 01:41 PM, Bill Fischofer wrote: >> >>> That isn't the question. The presumption is that you do not have a set >>> of patches to reorganize. You have a set of files that should be >>> replaced by a different set of files and from that you want to organize >>> the diff into a logical sequence of patches on the assumption that a >>> single patch that effected the diff would be too big. >>> >> >> That's exactly what I've described. >> 1. You have your changes in a working directory. >> 2. Use 'git add -p' to add a part of changes which will form one commit. >> 3. Commit added changes. >> 4. Repeat from step 2 until no changes left. >> > >
_______________________________________________ lng-odp mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/lng-odp
