I have flagged this question as duplicate. I will write what I explained
the other answer but using your example.
The approach that I use for such use cases is to merge all the branches
to be moved into 1 common artificial node, and then use the rebase command
with the --preserve-merges
option. Merging all the branches will expose 1
end-point that will be used as the final input parameter for rebase --onto
. The
start point is usually obvious, the origin of the subtree to move.
When merging to get the subtree endpoint, conflicts should be explicity
avoided. Therefore the merge commands shall be instructed to solve them
automatically with the -Xours
option. The merging result is not important
since these artificial merge nodes will be discarded after the rebase.
It is recommended to create a new branch pack in order to not lose the
original references. In the example above the following commands would be
performed:
$ git checkout -b pack WIP1 # create new branch at 'WIP1'
$ git merge -s recursive -Xours WIP2 # merges WIP2 into pack (node p2)
$ git merge -s recursive -Xours WIP3 # merges WIP3 into pack
Below can be seen what the tree would become. Two new artificial nodes
p2 and pack have been created with the merges.
o (master)
/
/ (WIP1) (p2)
/ o-----o-----o----o (pack)
/ / / /
o--o--o--o-----o-----o / (WIP2)
(X) \ /
o------------o (WIP3)
Now it's time to rebase. Since now there is a common endpoint for all the
branches (pack), it's easy to move the whole subtree with:
$ git rebase --preserve-merges --onto master X pack
Which produces this:
(WIP1') (p2')
o-----o-----o----o (pack')
(master) / / /
o----o----o--o--o-----o-----o / (WIP2')
(X) \ /
o------------o (WIP3')
Now it's time to rearrange the references. I don't know why, in some
cases the references are moved and in others are not. Type this for
each reference WIP1, WIP2, WIP3 or whatever you need:
$ git checkout WIP1
$ git reset --hard <WIP1' hash>
And finally, get rid of the artificial commits that were created for
generating a common subtree end node.
$ git branch -D pack
$ git branch -D p2 # if there is any
So the final tree would be:
(WIP1')
o-----o
(master) /
o----o----o--o--o-----o-----o (WIP2')
(X) \
o------------o (WIP3')