On Sat, Jun 16, 2007 at 01:28:13AM -0400, Daniel Barkalow wrote:
> That's not actually the right image. There's a graph of commits with a lot
> of splitting and joining lines. Each branch and each tag sits something in
> this web. The difference between branches and tags is that you're expected
> to move branch pointers around, and tags stay mostly in place. There's no
> accounting of commits newer than the current spot in the web for a branch
> belonging to that branch, so if you move a branch back to an older tag (or
> other commit), the spot it's leaving is no longer "on the branch".
Okay, it took me two hours before I understood this... but here's the
picture that I have in mind now:
master->X (merge point)
/|
/ |
^ branch->3 X
Time | | |
| 2 X
| |
1 X
| |
\ |
\|
X (branch point)
|
Then if I define a branch pointer to point to '3', then the branch is
3--2--1. If next I move the branch pointer to point to '2', node '3' is
no longer on the branch because now the branch exists of 2--1, and
HEAD moves to '2' as well.
This seems to make most sense in the light of your last sentence.
I don't understand how I'd have moved branch pointers however. I thought
I would just change my working copy along the branch by specifying
tag nodes. Ie, I have a branch '3'(--2--1) and I say: give me '2',
then give me '1' - and when I do: git reset --hard HEAD - it moves
me to 3 because the branch was never touched.
> So master is a point in the web, and bisect jumps around through the web
> according to some special rules (due to having git-bisect use the good/bad
> marks do determine which commit to try next, and jump there). git-bisect
> doesn't really even care that you started on any single branch. It's just
> operating on the web, and the branch you start on is treated as an
> arbitrary commit that has the problem.
Ok - so it does something magical that I don't have to understand :P
The only thing that matters is that I choose the begin and end point,
the first two points, correctly: where one is bad and the other is good.
I seems that git bisect can't deal with swapping good/bad (the 'bad'
one always has to be the newest revision), so I had decided to call
'kernel hangs' good and 'kernel works' bad. The problem then is that
I can't find any starting point anymore that is 'bad'.
> You may find "gitk --all" informative.
The dates on the right side seem to make no sense. Even in a part
where there are no branches/merges at all, the date goes in both
direction (sometimes older, sometimes newer). Roughly it seems that
the newest date is at the top - but I see a lot of times things like:
|||O|| Description Author1 2007-05-14 03:43:20
|||O|| Description Author2 2007-05-15 15:10:34
|||O|| Description Author3 2007-05-13 17:50:27
Thus, there seems to be no time related ordering :/
> It looks like you moved master back to 2.6.22-rc4 (with git reset --hard
> v2.6.22-rc4) at some point.
Yup, I can see that in the gitk --all graph :)
> What you should do now is:
>
> $ git checkout master
> $ git merge origin
>
> Which should move master forward through the web to "origin", which is
> (unless you've moved it) what you got from upsteam.
$ git merge origin
fatal: Needed a single revision
Usage: /usr/bin/git-merge [-n] [--no-commit] [--squash] [-s <strategy>]... <merge-message> <head> <remote>+
For some reason I don't think I should be needing commands that need
"<merge-message>"; I don't want to change the (local) tree in anyway.
Isn't there another way to just move master back to the HEAD of origin?
> Alternatively:
>
> $ git checkout master
> $ git pull
>
> Should fetch the latest stuff and advance master to the fetched version.
I'd rather first reproduce a working kernel - that should be possible
without pulling in more commits.
--
Carlo Wood <[email protected]>
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