On 10/11/11 13:38, Simo Sorce wrote:
> On Thu, 2011-11-10 at 19:07 +0800, Mathieu Bridon wrote:
>
>> Yes, in case of such a fast-forward then rebasing gives the same result
>> as merging.
>
> No, you are dead wrong here. Merging does *join* the history of 2
> branches in git, and the top commit has multiple ancestors.
Not if it is a fast forward merge, unless you force it. Here's what the
manual says:
--ff, --no-ff
Do not generate a merge commit if the merge resolved as a
fast-forward, only update the branch pointer. This is the default
behavior of git-merge.
With --no-ff Generate a merge commit even if the merge resolved as
a fast-forward.
Tom
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Tom Hughes ([email protected])
http://compton.nu/
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