Am 11/6/2012 1:58, schrieb Eric Miao:
> On Mon, Nov 5, 2012 at 10:40 PM, Michael J Gruber
> <g...@drmicha.warpmail.net> wrote:
>> Eric Miao venit, vidit, dixit 05.11.2012 15:12:
>>> The problem is, most cases we have no idea of the base rev1, and commit rev2
>>> which it's leading up to. E.g. for a single patch which is between
>>> commit rev1..rev2,
>>> how do we find out rev1 and rev2.
> 
> E.g. when we merged a series of patches:
> 
>   [PATCH 00/08]
>   [PATCH 01/08]
>   ...
>   [PATCH 08/08]
> 
> How do we know this whole series after merged when only one of these
> commits are known?

You can use git name-rev. For example:

$ git name-rev 9284bdae3
9284bdae3 remotes/origin/pu~2^2~7

This tell you that the series was merged two commits before origin/pu, and
then it is the 7th from the tip of the series. Now you can

$ git log origin/pu~2^..origin/pu~2^2

to see the whole series.

-- Hannes
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