I forked a project in Github.
Let the remote upstream be upstream and my remote repository be origin.
My local master branch is set to track the remote master branch.
Then I added some stuff in local master,
and I merge with the upstream every now and then.
Not until today when I want to issue a pull request did I find the problem:
the pull request consists those merge commits, and those unwanted commits that
I did previously without care.
However what I want is just to submit the last commit I did, which should be
pulled as a single commit.
What can I do to rescue this?
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Instead of merging you want to rebase. You can do this manually, or automatically when pulling.
Once you've started doing merges though this will get hard to do, you'll need to reset the branch back to before you did a merge commit. |
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On Github, You can't create a pull request for a single specific checkin on a branch that has multiple checkins separating it from upstream. Create a branch specifically for each pull request you intend to make. This allows you to continue working without fear of polluting a pull request. |
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If I understand your question, you want to get rid of the intermediate/throwaway commits that you did in your branch. Try something like this:
this should give you a local "for-upstream" branch which contains just the upstream master + your 1 commit. You can then submit that branch for pull request |
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Would this work: Create a separate branch with just the commit you want and issue a pull request on that branch. |
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