I'm using git-cvs, and my general workflow is something like this:

...write some code...
$ git commit
$ git cvsexportcommit -c -p -v <asdf>
$ git cvs-import $CVSROOT
$ git pull

This generally works fine for pushing my commits back to the CVS server and keeping things in sync. However, I'm wondering how I will realize that something is missing if I happen to do the "git commit" but forget to export it to the CVS server.

Is there a reasonable way to get a diff between my git repository and the CVS server, so I would know that something hadn't been committed all the way through? Or perhaps there's a better method of doing this altogether?

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check out this answer link

if you do your work on branches and merge them on master for commit (without fast-forward) you can reference the commit parent and it commits all changes back to cvs

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