X-Git-Url: http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/ucgi/~ianmdlvl/git?p=dgit.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=git-debrebase.1.pod;h=00b664b756f2d81bcb77464065a229fdfebfc448;hp=ca81c19780a531e5c88215bbbab6f770c61e9560;hb=35c93d228a9287b0c66fdfeba971c7a404566f17;hpb=e66c2cf3f7182a3e6f52945636a807ed4a959d5b diff --git a/git-debrebase.1.pod b/git-debrebase.1.pod index ca81c197..00b664b7 100644 --- a/git-debrebase.1.pod +++ b/git-debrebase.1.pod @@ -254,18 +254,39 @@ If the problem is simply that the existing patches were not made by git-debrebase, using dgit quilt-fixup instead should succeed. +=item git-debrebase convert-from-unapplied [] + =item git-debrebase convert-from-gbp [] -Cnnverts a gbp patches-unapplied branch -(not a gbp pq patch queue branch) -into a git-debrebase interchange branch. +Cnnverts any of the following into a git-debrebase interchange branch: + +=over + +=item + +a gbp patches-unapplied branch (but not a gbp pq patch-queue branch) + +=item + +a patches-unapplied git packaging branch containing debian/patches, +as used with quilt + +=item + +a git branch for a package which has no Debian delta - +ie where upstream files are have not been modified in Debian, +so there are no patches + +=back + +(These two commands operate identically and are simply aliases.) -This is done by generating a new anchor merge, -converting the quilt patches as a delta queue, +The conversion is done by generating a new anchor merge, +converting any quilt patches as a delta queue, and dropping the patches from the tree. The upstream commit-ish should correspond to -the gbp upstream branch, if there is one. +the upstream branch or tag, if there is one. 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. @@ -284,14 +305,14 @@ and if it finds it will make a pseduomerge so that your new git-debrebase view is appropriately fast forward. The result is a well-formed git-debrebase interchange branch. -The result is also fast-forward from the gbp branch. +The result is also fast-forward from the original branch. It is a snag if the new branch looks like it will have diverged, just as for a laundering/unstitching call to git-debrebase; See L, below. Note that it is dangerous not to know whether you are -dealing with a gbp patches-unapplied branch containing quilt patches, +dealing with a (gbp) patches-unapplied branch containing quilt patches, or a git-debrebase interchange branch. At worst, using the wrong tool for the branch format might result in @@ -422,6 +443,20 @@ and it should not be necessary. =back +=item git-debrebase forget-was-ever-debrebase + +Deletes the ffq-prev and debrebase-last refs +associated with this branch, +that git-debrebase and dgit use to determine +whether this branch is managed by git-debrebase, +and what previous head may need to be stitched back in. + +This can be useful if you were just playing with git-debrebase, +and have used git-reset --hard to go back to a commit +before your experiments. + +Do not use this if you expect to run git-debrebase on the branch again. + =back =head1 OPTIONS @@ -496,6 +531,17 @@ This is provided mostly for the benefit of the test suite. Requests (more) debugging. May be repeated. +=item --experimntal-merge-resolution + +Enable experimental code for handling general merges +(see L). + +This option may generate lossage of various kinds, +including misleading error messages, +references to nonexistent documentation, and +you being handed an incomprehensible pile of +multidimensional merge wreckage. + =back =head1 UNSTITCHING AND LAUNDERING