If you want to keep track of the changes, which happened during the index rebuild you could use the IntervalAsynchronousStrategy as your index rebuild strategy.
<strategies hint="list:AddStrategy">
<intervalAsyncMaster type="Sitecore.ContentSearch.Maintenance.Strategies.IntervalAsynchronousStrategy, Sitecore.ContentSearch">
<param desc="database">master</param>
<param desc="interval">00:00:05</param>
<!-- whether full index rebuild should be triggered if the number of items in history engine exceeds ContentSearch.FullRebuildItemCountThreshold -->
<CheckForThreshold>true</CheckForThreshold>
</intervalAsyncMaster>
</strategies>
This reads through the History table and updates your index accordingly.
If you check the Sitecore implementation of this class, you can see that it handles the rebuilding event. If rebuilding is running it doesn't do anything and waits for the next time it is scheduled, and if the rebuild has finished it collects the entries from History table and applies them to the index. See Run method of the class:
...
if (IndexCustodian.IsIndexingPaused(this.index))
{
CrawlingLog.Log.Debug(string.Format("[Index={0}] IntervalAsynchronousUpdateStrategy triggered but muted. Indexing is paused.", this.index.Name), null);
}
else if (IndexCustodian.IsRebuilding(this.index))
{
CrawlingLog.Log.Debug(string.Format("[Index={0}] IntervalAsynchronousUpdateStrategy triggered but muted. Index is being built at the moment.", this.index.Name), null);
}
else
{
CrawlingLog.Log.Debug(string.Format("[Index={0}] IntervalAsynchronousUpdateStrategy executing.", this.index.Name), null);
HistoryEntry[] history = HistoryReader.GetHistory(this.Database, this.index.Summary.LastUpdated);
...