Ingo Molnar wrote:
quoted text > * Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@xenotime.net> wrote:
>
>> Junio C Hamano wrote:
>>> Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu> writes:
>>>
>>>> So i have to do something like:
>>>>
>>>> git revert $(git log -1 --pretty=format:"%h" kernel/softlockup.c)
>>>>
>>>> (tucked away in a tip-revert-file helper script.)
>>>>
>>>> But it would be so much nicer if i could do the intuitive:
>>>>
>>>> git revert kernel/softlockup.c
>>>>
>>>> Or at least, to separate it from revision names cleanly, something like:
>>>>
>>>> git revert -- kernel/softlockup.c
>>> All three shares one issue. Does the syntax offer you a way to give
>>> enough information so that you can confidently say that it will find the
>>> commit that touched the path most recently? How is the "most recently"
>>> defined?
>>>
>>> At least you can restate the first one to:
>>>
>>> git revert $(git log -1 --pretty=format:"%h" core/softlockup -- kernel/softlockup.c)
>>>
>>> to limit to "the one that touched this file _on this topic_".
>>>
>>>> Would something like this be possible in generic Git? It would sure be a
>>>> nice little touch that i would make use of frequently.
>>>>
>>>> Or is it a bad idea perhaps? Or have i, out of sheer ignorance, failed to
>>>> discover some nice little shortcut that can give me all of this already?
>>> The closest I can think of is
>>>
>>> git revert ':/the title of the commit'
>>>
>>> but it shares the exact same issue of "how would I limit the search space
>>> to make sure it finds the right commit".
>> And it should revert whatever commit is the last/most recent to the
>> currently used file, i.e., not always revert the same commit.
>
> i'm not sure i understand, what do you mean precisely?
Just that someone should be able to use "git revert <filename>" on the
same file more than one time and git will revert <last> then <last-1> then
<last-2> etc...
Or it will always revert <last>, where <last> is relative to the currently
used version of the file.
Does that help?
~Randy
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