Well, Eric, I've created a workbranch, maybe I need to do the rebase operation.
I thought that's just ok to follow the steps where
http://libvirt.org/hacking.html
says:
git checkout master
git pull
git checkout -t origin -b workbranch
...modify on workbranch...
git pull --rebase
./autogen.sh
./configure --enable-werror
make check
make syntax-check
make -C tests valgrind
git pull --rebase
git send-email ...
Maybe I need to do a "git rebase -i orgin" before send-email, Right?
So What should I do now? Modify the commit message and send again?
Thanks.
On 2013-09-17 23:04 , Eric Blake wrote:
On 09/17/2013 08:57 AM, hzguanqiang(a)corp.netease.com wrote:
Please ignore the patchs [1-3].
I followed the contributer guidelines, before I push the patches I did a "git pull
--rebase" operation,
Then the newest three patches are included into my patches. Are there anything I
missed?
That generally means you applied some patches locally without creating a
new branch. If you want to discard non-upstream patches that are
unrelated to what you are working on, you can do 'git rebase -i' (if
your git version is too old, you might have to spell it 'git rebase -i
origin'), and delete the lines for the patches you are no longer
interested in.
--
Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266
Libvirt virtualization library
http://libvirt.org
------------------
Best regards!
GuanQiang
23:06:36