So my history looks like this:
o---o---o---o master
\
o---o---o A
\
o B
So, to explain:
- I have branch
A
which was started frommaster
- I have branch
B
(with only 1 commit) which was started fromA
What I want is this:
o---o---o---o master
\
o---o---o A
\
o B
What I did was:
1).
git checkout A
git rebase master
This resulted in a lot of conflicts which, after some significant time spent fixing, the following history emerged:
o---o---o---o master
\
o---o---o A
Which is exactly what I wanted.
(I don't know where B
is right now)
2).
After this I did a lot of squashes and changed the order of commits on A
, to make the history look like I want.
3).
Now, what I also want to do is:
git checkout B
git rebase A
However this doesn't seem to work and I don't know why. If I do git log
I see the commits which were there before I did step 1.
Also, I get the same huge number of conflicts which I already solved at step 1. I spent significant time doing it, don't want to do it again.
This example suggested to use --onto
, which I did:
git checkout B
git rebase --onto A
But this deletes the commit on B
entirely and makes A
and B
point to the same commit i.e. the last one on A
.
My question is: How can I effectively rebase B off A so that it looks like B started from A ? (which was actually true in the beginning).
My best guess is that I'm using --onto
wrong. Or that I should use something else (like cherry-pick
).