How to do a rebase with git gui?

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Solution 1

Add this to the .gitconfig file in your home directory to add rebase commands to the Tools menu:

[guitool "Rebase onto..."]
    cmd = git rebase $REVISION
    revprompt = yes
[guitool "Rebase/Continue"]
    cmd = git rebase --continue
[guitool "Rebase/Skip"]
    cmd = git rebase --skip
[guitool "Rebase/Abort"]
    cmd = git rebase --abort
[guitool "Pull with Rebase"]
    cmd = git pull --rebase

Solution 2

In git-gui:

  1. Go to Tools -> Add and then enter a custom command i.e. git rebase master.
  2. Select Add globally to have this option appear for all repositories. (It will write the configuration to your ~/.gitconfig for you, as @Ted-Percival mentioned in his answer).

Solution 3

You can do a full interactive rebase with git gui, complete with commit selection, rewording and conflict resolution! In addition to Ted Percival's answer, Add this to your ~/.gitconfig:

[guitool "Rebase interactive"]
    cmd = EDITOR=gvim git rebase -i $REVISION
    revprompt = yes

You must use a graphical editor -- plain old vim won't work, but gvim will. You may use any gui editor, I use nedit for example. A separate window of this editor will pop-up any time you need to input something: initially selecting commits, rewording commit messages (whether for reword or squash commits), etc.

Solution 4

git gui can be used to add files to the index when doing a rebase --interactive (as mention in thegit rebase man page, The GitHub rebase help page or in this git rebase interactive tip article), but not to perform the rebase itself.
(unless, as you saw, you define the command yourself in the Tools section)

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Leif Gruenwoldt
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Leif Gruenwoldt

Liker of simple things.

Updated on July 08, 2022

Comments

  • Leif Gruenwoldt
    Leif Gruenwoldt almost 2 years

    I know how to do a git rebase from the command line, but how do you do it with the official git-gui?