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Suppose we have the following revision graph:

A-X-Z--B
     \
      \-C

with A preceding both B and C. Further suppose I rebase A from upstream, creating a new commit A*, and then rebase both B and C onto A*. The resulting revision graph is the following:

A*-X'-Z'-B
 \
  \-X"-Z"-C

Note that the shared history is no longer shared. Is there a simple way to fix this, other than, say, rebasing B and then rebasing C onto Z' explicitly. In other words is there a better way to automatically rebase multiple branches at the same time in order to preserve shared history? It just seems a little bit awkward to have to either artificially place a tag at the split point, or manually inspect the graph to find out sha1 of the commit on which to rebase C to keep the shared history, not to mention opening up the possibility of mistakes, especially since I have to do this every time I rebase until I check the changes into the upstream branch.

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2 Answers 2

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git rebase --committer-date-is-author-date --preserve-merges --onto A* A C
git rebase --committer-date-is-author-date --preserve-merges --onto A* A B

This should keep the common commits having the same sha1 and any merges preserved. Preserve merges is not required in this case, but will become an issue with a less trivial history.

To do this for all branches that contain A in their history do:

git branch --contains A | xargs -n 1 git rebase --committer-date-is-author-date --preserve-merges --onto A* A 

Hope this helps.

UPDATE:

This may be cleaner syntax:

for branch in $(git branch --contains A); do git rebase --committer-date-is-author-date --preserve-merges --onto A* A $branch; done
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  • What version of git are you using? May 28, 2011 at 7:45
  • Cool, didn't know about --contains. However, the same problem occurs, and strangely git branch --contains A prints files in addition to branches when used in a for loop, but not elsewhere.
    – jonderry
    May 28, 2011 at 16:06
  • Check the man page for rebase. Perhaps there is a hyphen where one shouldn't be or there is a spelling mistake. May 30, 2011 at 5:55
  • 3
    One day I'll have to sit and understand all this. Meanwhile this is a nightmare.
    – dnuske
    May 2, 2014 at 1:04
  • For me, --committer-date-is-author-date has no effect if --preserve-merges is present. I tested with version 2.6.3 and 2.7.2.
    – Jon-Eric
    Mar 2, 2016 at 20:01
2

The problem in the general case

I was concerned with a similar problem: rebasing a whole subhistory -- several branches, with some links between them resulting from merge:

A--B-B2-B3 <--topicB
\   /
 \-C-C2-C3 <--topicC

If I run several git rebase sequentially (for topicB and topicC), then I doubt the merges between the branches can be preserved correctly. So I would need to rebase all the branches at once, hoping that would reconstruct the merges between them correctly.

A "solution" that worked in a specific subcase

In my case, I had luck that topicC was actually merged into topicB:

A-B-----------B2-B3 <--topicB
   \         /
    \-C-C2-C3 <--topicC

so to rebase the whole subhistory, I could just run

git rebase -p A topicB --onto A*

(where A* is the new base, instead of A, as in your question; topicB is the branch name that would initially point to the old commit B3 and to the rewritten commit B3' afterwards; -p is a short name for --preserve-merges option), obtaining a history like:

A-B-----------B2-B3
   \         /
    \-C-C2-C3 <--topicC

A*-B'-------------B2'-B3' <--topicB
    \            /
     \-C'-C2'-C3'

and then reset all remaining branch refs (and tags) to the new corresponding commits (in the new subhistory), e.g.

git branch -f topicC C3'

It worked:

A*-B'-------------B2'-B3' <--topicB
    \            /
     \-C'-C2'-C3' <--topicC

(Moving the branch refs and tags could perhaps be done with a script.)

A "solution" for the general case inspired by that specific one

If topicC was not merged into topicB, I could create a fake top commit to merge all the branches I want to rebase, e.g.:

git checkout -b fake topicB
git merge -s ours topicC

and then rebase it that way:

git rebase -p A fake --onto A*

and reset the topic branches to the new commits, delete the fake branch.

Other answers

I believe that the other answer with --committer-date-is-author-date is also good and sensible, but in my experience with Git, I hadn't had that idea and solved the problem of keeping the shared history really shared after a rebase the way I have described in my additional answer here.

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  • I can't follow your answer. You say topicC was already merged into topicB, but the diagram shows otherwise. Also, why would you even want to preserve an already merged branch head after a rebase?
    – kynan
    May 27, 2012 at 23:47
  • @kynan: that was just a specific subcase of the general problem where the working solution was simpler. Then this case inspired the idea of the more general solution (with a fake merge of everything). May 28, 2012 at 0:39
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    @kynan: as for preserving an already merged branch -- the branches have their intentions, for example, one was a simple bugfix prepared for a submission upstream, and the other one (the subsuming one) was an implementation of a whole new experimental feature (which however depended on the bugfix). If they haven't yet been pulled by the upstream, I'd like to preserve them after the rebase (which was for the cleanliness&clarity for the upstream). May 28, 2012 at 0:41
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    After looking at the examples in this answer that explains git's “rebase --preserve-merges”, this answer became easier to understand. Jan 4, 2016 at 18:48
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    @sampablokuper I've written the 1st part of my answer in a more explicit manner now, so that it is more ready for an exact reproduction (by a reader). As for the 2nd part, I don't know why I omitted --preserve-merges; I'm afraid, it's just because my answer was hasty and schematic. I should fix that. Thanks! Apr 8, 2018 at 13:06

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