=item git-debrebase [-- <git-rebase options...>]
+=item git-debrebase [-i <further git-rebase options...>]
+
Unstitches and launders the branch.
(See L</UNSTITCHING AND LAUNDERING> below.)
-Then optionally edits the Debian delta queue,
+Then, if any git-rebase options were supplied,
+edits the Debian delta queue,
using git-rebase, by running
git rebase <git-rebase options> <breakwater-tip>
the branch will still have been laundered,
but everything in the rebase will be undone.
+The options for git-rebase must either start with C<-i>,
+or be prececded by C<-->,
+to distinguish them from options for git-debrebase.
+
+=item git-debrebase conclude
+
+Finishes a git-debrebase session,
+tidying up the branch and making it fast forward again.
+
+Specifically: if the branch is unstitched,
+launders and restitches it,
+making a new pseudomerge.
+Otherwise, it is an error,
+unless --noop-ok.
+
+=item git-debrebase quick
+
+Unconditionally launders and restitches the branch,
+consuming any ffq-prev
+and making a new pseudomerge.
+
+If the branch is already laundered and stitched, does nothing.
+
+=item git-debrebase prepush [--prose=<for commit message>]
+
=item git-debrebase stitch [--prose=<for commit message>]
-Stitch the branch,
+Stitches the branch,
consuming ffq-prev.
+This is a good command to run before pushing to a git server.
If there is no ffq-prev, it is an error, unless --noop-ok.
-It is a problem if the branch is not laundered.
+You should consider using B<conclude> instead,
+because that launders the branch too.
=item git-debrebase new-upstream-v0 <new-version> [<upstream-details>...]
onto a new upstream version. In detail:
Firstly, checks that the proposed rebase seems to make sense:
-It is a problem unless the new upstream(s)
+It is a snag unless the new upstream(s)
are fast forward from the previous upstream(s)
as found in the current breakwater anchor.
And, in the case of a multi-piece upstream
The new upstream branch (or commit-ish).
Default is C<upstream>.
-It is a problem if the upstream contains a debian/ directory;
+It is a snag if the upstream contains a debian/ directory;
if forced to proceed,
git-debrebase will disregard the upstream's debian/ and
take (only) the packaging from the current breakwater.
We may want to introduce an incompatible replacement syntax
under the name C<new-upstream>.
+=item git-debrebase make-patches
+
+Generate patches in debian/patches/
+representing the changes made to upstream files.
+
+It is not normally necessary to run this command explicitly.
+When uploading to Debian,
+dgit and git-debrebase
+will cooperate to regenerate patches as necessary.
+When working with pure git remotes,
+the patches are not needed.
+
+Normally git-debrebase make-patches will
+require a laundered branch.
+(A laundered branch does not contain any patches.)
+But if there are already some patches made by
+git-debrebase make-patches,
+and all that has happened is that more
+changes to upstream files have been committed,
+running it again can add the missing patches.
+
=item git-debrebase convert-from-gbp [<upstream-commit-ish>]
Cnnverts a gbp patches-unapplied branch
The upstream commit-ish should correspond to
the gbp upstream branch, if there is one.
-It is a problem if it is not an ancestor of HEAD,
+It is a snag if it is not an ancestor of HEAD,
or if the history between the upstream and HEAD
contains commits which make changes to upstream files.
-It is also a problem if the specified upstream
+It is also a snag if the specified upstream
has a debian/ subdirectory.
This check exists to detect certain likely user errors,
but if this situation is true and expected,
=over
-=item -f<problem-id>
+=item -f<snag-id>
-Turns problems with id <problem-id> into warnings.
+Turns snag(s) with id <snag-id> into warnings.
Some troublesome things which git-debrebase encounters
-are B<problem>s.
+are B<snag>s.
(The specific instances are discussed
in the text for the relvant operation.)
-When a problem is detected,
-a message is printed to stderr containing the problem id
-(in the form C<-f<problem-idE<gt>>),
+When a snag is detected,
+a message is printed to stderr containing the snag id
+(in the form C<-f<snag-idE<gt>>),
along with some prose.
-If problems are detected, git-debrebase does not continue,
-unless the relevant -f<problem-id> is specified,
+If snags are detected, git-debrebase does not continue,
+unless the relevant -f<snag-id> is specified,
or --force is specified.
=item --force
-Turns all problems into warnings.
-See the -f<problem-id> option.
+Turns all snags into warnings.
+See the -f<snag-id> option.
Do not invoke git-debrebase --force in scripts and aliases;
-instead, specify the particular -f<problem-id> for expected problems.
+instead, specify the particular -f<snag-id> for expected snags.
=item --noop-ok
It also disables some coherency checks
which depend on metadata extracted from its commit message,
so
-it is a problem if <commit-ish> is the anchor
+it is a snag if <commit-ish> is the anchor
for the previous upstream version in
git-debrebase new-upstream operations.
which is a semicolon-separated list of glob patterns,
each optionally preceded by !; first match wins.
-In each case it is a problem if
+In each case it is a snag if
the local HEAD is behind the checked remote,
or if local HEAD has diverged from it.
All the checks are done locally using the remote tracking refs: