Yes, `git rebase --onto topic1 topic1@{1} topic2` is the answer!

Thanks so much, learned something new today.

On Wed, Nov 16, 2016 at 3:44 PM, Junio C Hamano <gits...@pobox.com> wrote:
> Norbert Kiesel <nkie...@gmail.com> writes:
>
>> I currently have a situation with cascading topic branches that I need to 
>> rebase
>> regularly.  In the picture below, I want to rebase the tree starting with 
>> `E` to
>> be rebased onto master (my actually cascade is 4 branches deep).
>>
>> A--B--C--D (master)
>>    \
>>     E--F (topic1)
>>        \
>>         G--H (topic2)
>>
>> After running `git rebase --onto master master topic1`, I end up with
>>
>> A--B--C--D (master)
>>    |     \
>>    \      E'--F' (topic1)
>>     E--F
>>        \
>>         G--H (topic2)
>>
>> I then need to also run `git rebase --onto topic1 F topic2` to arrive at the
>> desired
>>
>> A--B--C--D (master)
>>    |     \
>>    \      E'--F' (topic1)
>>     E--F      \
>>        |       G'--H' (topic2)
>>        \
>>         G--H
>>
>> Problem here is that I don't have a nice symbolic name for `F` anymore after 
>> the
>> first rebase. Rebasing `topic2` first is not really possible, because I do 
>> not
>> have a new graft-point yet.  I currently write down `F` ahead of time (or use
>> `reflog` if I forgot) `F`, but I wonder if there is a better solution.
>
> Doesn't topic1@{1} point at "F" after the rebase of the topic1
> finishes?
>

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