Shaun Jackman <sjack...@gmail.com> writes: > I'd like to insert a commit between two commits without changing the > committer date or author date of that commit or the subsequent commits. I'd > planned on using `git rebase -i` to insert the commit. I believe it retains > the author date, but changes the committer date to the current time. I've > seen the options `--committer-date-is-author-date` and `--ignore-date`, but I > don't believe either of those options does what I want. If no such option > currently exists to leave the committer and author date unchanged, is there > any chance that this functionality could please be implemented?
The easiest way to implement that is to add a graft to redirect the parent of the second commit to the inserted commit, then use git filter-branch to make the graft permanent. Andreas. -- Andreas Schwab, sch...@linux-m68k.org GPG Key fingerprint = 58CA 54C7 6D53 942B 1756 01D3 44D5 214B 8276 4ED5 "And now for something completely different." -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html