Documentation: describe how to "bisect skip" a range of commits

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
This commit is contained in:
Christian Couder 2008-12-02 14:53:51 +01:00 committed by Junio C Hamano
parent 1a66a489d0
commit 5413812f08
2 changed files with 21 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ on the subcommand:
git bisect start [<bad> [<good>...]] [--] [<paths>...]
git bisect bad [<rev>]
git bisect good [<rev>...]
git bisect skip [<rev>...]
git bisect skip [(<rev>|<range>)...]
git bisect reset [<branch>]
git bisect visualize
git bisect replay <logfile>
@ -164,6 +164,25 @@ But computing the commit to test may be slower afterwards and git may
eventually not be able to tell the first bad among a bad and one or
more "skip"ped commits.
You can even skip a range of commits, instead of just one commit,
using the "'<commit1>'..'<commit2>'" notation. For example:
------------
$ git bisect skip v2.5..v2.6
------------
would mean that no commit between `v2.5` excluded and `v2.6` included
can be tested.
Note that if you want to also skip the first commit of a range you can
use something like:
------------
$ git bisect skip v2.5 v2.5..v2.6
------------
and the commit pointed to by `v2.5` will be skipped too.
Cutting down bisection by giving more parameters to bisect start
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ git bisect bad [<rev>]
mark <rev> a known-bad revision.
git bisect good [<rev>...]
mark <rev>... known-good revisions.
git bisect skip [<rev>...]
git bisect skip [(<rev>|<range>)...]
mark <rev>... untestable revisions.
git bisect next
find next bisection to test and check it out.