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I am trying to copy the commits of one file to another remote branch. The flow is described in the picture below:

flow

The important part is that I would like to keep the history of the commits (so not one merge commit without a reference to who made the changes in Remote 1) when "copying" the file from one remote to another. Also, I don't want to copy other files as well, so only the file I want.

I have tried a git checkout but once I committed the merge, and pushed this to Remote 2, the commits from Remote 1 were gone and only the merge commit was there.

Could git cherry-pick be the answer here?

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Sounds like git cherry-pick is indeed what you need (provided that indeed no commit affects both file 1 and file 2)

In your case, it would look something like:

git checkout <some-branch from remote 2 on which you wish to push the changes>
git cherry-pick <sha F2C1> <sha F2C2> <sha F2C3>
git push

where FiCj means File i Commit j

Edit:

In case the condition that no commit affects both F1 and F2. This is what you could do:

git checkout <some-branch from remote 1 from which you get the changes>
git rebase <some-branch from remote 2 on which you wish to push the changes> -- interactive

then you get a text editor letting you choose commits. Mark all commits only affecting F2 as pick, those only affecting F1 as skip and the others as edit.

You will be able to edit each individual commit. Every time, execute the following

git checkout HEAD~1 F1
git commit --amend
git rebase --continue

What you are doing is: for every dirty commit (editing both files) checkout F1 as it was before teh commit, and commit it that way (i.e., undo changes to F1)

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  • Would it be possible to overcome the prerequisite that no commit affects both file 1 and file 2? Oct 5, 2015 at 11:35
  • Nice, but how can you do the interactive merging programmatically? I would like to automate all this if possible. Oct 5, 2015 at 12:29

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