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I've been using Git for about a year now and think it's fantastic, but I've just started on a second version of the project and started a new branch for it. I'm struggling a little with the best way to handle things going forward.

I have two branches called say master10 (for v1) and master20 (for v2). I've been making bug fixes in v1 on branch master10, and developing new stuff of master20. Whenever I make a bug fix I merge it into v2 by checking out master20 and doing git merge master10. So far so good.

Now however, I've made a change in v1 that I don't want in v2, but I want to continue merging other bug fixes. How do I tell Git to skip that particular commit (or a range of commits), but that going forward I still want to merge other bug fixes.

I thought git rebase might be what I need but read the doc and my head nearly exploded.

I think what I want is something like a "git sync" command that tells git that two branches are now in-sync and in future only merge the commits from this sync-point on.

Any help appreciated.

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If you want to merge most but not all of the commits on branch "maint" to "master", for instance, you can do this. It requires some work---- as mentioned above, the usual use case is to merge everything from a branch--- but sometimes it happens that you made a change to a release version that shouldn't be integrated back (maybe that code's been superceded in master already), so how do you represent that? Here goes...

So let's suppose maint has had 5 changes applied, and one of those (maint~3) is not to be merged back into master, although all the others should be. You do this in three stages: actually merge everything before that one, tell git to mark maint~3 as merged even when it isn't, and then merge the rest. The magic is:

bash <master>$ git merge maint~4
bash <master>$ git merge -s ours maint~3
bash <master>$ git merge maint

The first command merges everything before your troublesome maint commit onto master. The default merge log message will explain you're merging "branch 'maint' (early part)".

The second command merges the troublesome maint~3 commit, but the "-s ours" option tells git to use a special "merge strategy" which, in fact, works by simply keeping the tree you are merging into and ignoring the commit(s) you are merging completely. But it does still make a new merge commit with HEAD and maint~3 as the parents, so the revision graph now says that maint~3 is merged. So in fact you probably want to use the -m option to git merge as well, to explain that that maint~3 commit is actually being ignored!

The final command simply merges the rest of maint (maint~2..maint) into master so that you're all synced up again.


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