Hello,
What's the best way to find all commits in a branch A that have not been
cherry-picked from (or to) another branch B?
I think I could format-patch all commits in every branch into separate
files, hash the Author and Date of each files, and then compare the two
lists. But I'm hoping there's
On Jun 20 2016, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> Nikolaus Rath writes:
>
>> What's the best way to find all commits in a branch A that have not been
>> cherry-picked from (or to) another branch B?
>>
>> I think I could format-patch all commits in every branch into sep
On Jun 20 2016, Nikolaus Rath wrote:
> On Jun 20 2016, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>> Nikolaus Rath writes:
>>
>>> What's the best way to find all commits in a branch A that have not been
>>> cherry-picked from (or to) another branch B?
>>>
>>>
On Jun 21 2016, Michael J Gruber wrote:
> Nikolaus Rath venit, vidit, dixit 21.06.2016 01:21:
>> On Jun 20 2016, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>>> Nikolaus Rath writes:
>>>
>>>> What's the best way to find all commits in a branch A that have not been
>
On Jun 21 2016, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> Nikolaus Rath writes:
>
>> On Jun 20 2016, Nikolaus Rath wrote:
>>> On Jun 20 2016, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>>>> Nikolaus Rath writes:
>>>>
>>>>> What's the best way to find all commits
Hello,
Is there a way to specify revision ranges that has more power than
what's described in gitrevisions(7)?
For example, is there a way to show "the three most recent commits
preceding a tag that starts with "release-" that are also descendants of
commit aebecf."?
In Mercurial, this can be do
Hello,
I would like to store Simulink models in a Git
repository. Unfortunately, the file format is binary. But luckily, the
binary format happens to be a zipfile containing nicely formatted XML
files.
Is there a way to teach Git to take advantage of this when storing,
diff-ing and merging these
On Aug 16 2016, David Lang wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Aug 2016, Nikolaus Rath wrote:
>
>> I would like to store Simulink models in a Git
>> repository. Unfortunately, the file format is binary. But luckily, the
>> binary format happens to be a zipfile containing nicely formatte
On Aug 16 2016, David Lang wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Aug 2016, Nikolaus Rath wrote:
>
>> I would like to store Simulink models in a Git
>> repository. Unfortunately, the file format is binary. But luckily, the
>> binary format happens to be a zipfile containing nicely formatte
Hello,
What's the easiest way to find the most recent revision (of any file in
the repository, including those that have been deleted in the current
HEAD) that contains a given string?
I was hoping that "git grep" would do this (like in Mercurial), but as
far as I can tell it only greps through t
On Aug 21 2016, Eric Wong wrote:
> Nikolaus Rath wrote:
>> What's the easiest way to find the most recent revision (of any file in
>> the repository, including those that have been deleted in the current
>> HEAD) that contains a given string?
>
> I normally do s
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