If I am working in multiple branches on a single feature, I use git pull branch1 branch2 branch3 to pull all the changes into my master branch. However, all the commit logs of each branch are copied as well. How do I flatten the commit log down to a single message?

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up vote 13 down vote accepted

You can use interactive rebase and "squash" the commits -- see also the Git Ready Tutorial on squashing via rebase. Sorry to just dump a link on you but that's a pretty thorough tutorial. Oh, and this will also squash away your merges just fine.

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Interactive rebasing is not the only way. The easier way would be to simply merge --squash as mentioned in the other answer. The effect (i.e. dump all changes from branch as single diff on current branch) would be the same, but with half the work. – Yuval Adam May 1 '11 at 15:03
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"git merge --squash" (after "git fetch"; "git pull" is just fetch+merge, pehaps it also allows --squash option) might be what you want.

From git-merge(1):

--squash

Produce the working tree and index state as if a real merge happened, but do not actually make a commit or move the HEAD, nor record $GIT_DIR/MERGE_HEAD to cause the next git commit command to create a merge commit. This allows you to create a single commit on top of the current branch whose effect is the same as merging another branch (or more in case of an octopus).

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