git log
reveals the following:
commit 1abcd[...]
Author: [...]
Date: [...]
[Useful commit]
commit 2abcd[...]
Author: [...]
Date: [...]
Merge branch [...] of [etc. etc.]
commit 3abcd[...]
Author: [...]
Date: [...]
[Useful commit]
That merge commit is useless to me - it doesn't represent a meaningful state of the branch and was generated from a remote pull, so I have the real commits of the remote history - no need for a commit to mark the fact that I pulled. I would like to squash this merge commit. My usual technique for doing a squash is:
git rebase --interactive HEAD~2
(or however far back I need to go)
And then I would squash it into a neighboring commit. I do this some times if for example I make a commit, realize I missed a tiny important detail (single file, or hadn't changed a line in one of the files), and do another commit that's basically just a quick oops. That way when I push my changes back to the remote, everything is nice and clean and tells a cohesive narrative.
However, in this case, when I run the git rebase ...
command, commit 2abcd
doesn't appear! It seems to skip right over 2abcd
and instead displays 1abcd
and 3abcd
. Is there something special about a merge commit that prevents it from being appearing in git rebase --interactive
? What other technique could I use to squash that merge commit?
UPDATE per @Cupcake's request:
The output of git log --graph --oneline --decorate
looks like this:
* 1abcd (useful commit)
* 2abcd (merge)
| \ <-- from remote
| * 3abcd (useful commit)
| |
Helpful?
-p
or--preserve-merges
flag for that...but there's probably an easier way to do what you want to do. Also, using interactive rebase while preserving merges can produce unexpected results if you reorder commits (see the documentation), but if you just squash you might be ok, but let's still see if there's an alternative. Please add the output ofgit log --graph --oneline --decorate
for the commits in question.