I ran into a situation where git cherry-pick X
would have some conflicts, but also created extra inserts (when verified with git diff
).
I then re-ran git show X > my.patch
, and then did patch -p1 < my.patch
on my tree.
I got better results, some conflicts, but a much cleaner result.
What does git does special with cherry-picks? I use git 1.7.0.4.
Edited:
By cleaner results, I mean the resulting tree matched a lot more the results of git show X
, whereas the git cherry-pick
included a lot more code.
When you cherry-pick a commit, it commits the result using all the metadata of the commit, not just the diff it represents - you'll get the original commit message and author. Your patch pipeline will get you the working tree contents that you want, but then you'll have to commit it yourself, hopefully with git commit -c <original-commit>
to copy the metadata like cherry-pick would have. Cherry-pick also has some additional options that could be helpful, and can accept multiple commits (perhaps specified as a rev-list range). patch
obviously doesn't support any of that.
I'm not sure about your assertion that the result was "cleaner". Are you suggesting that git applied the diff differently than patch
did?