I have two branches. Commit a is the head of one, while the other has b, c, d, e and f on top of a. I want to move c, d, e and f to first branch without commit b. Using cherry pick it is easy: checkout first branch cherry-pick one by one c to f and rebase second branch onto first. But is there any way to cherry-pick all c-f in one command?
Here is a visual description of the scenario (thanks JJD):

Git 1.7.2 introduced the ability to cherry pick a range of commits. From the release notes:
git cherry-pick learned to pick a range of commits
(e.g. cherry-pick A..B and cherry-pick --stdin), so did git revert; these do not support the nicer sequencing control rebase [-i] has, though.
To cherry-pick all the commits from commit A to commit B (where A is older than B), run:
git cherry-pick A^..B
If you want to ignore A itself, run:
git cherry-pick A..B
Notes from comments:
A should be older than B, or A should be from another branch.- On Windows, it should be
A^^..B as the caret needs to be escaped, or it should be "A^..B" (double quotes). - In
zsh shell, it should be 'A^..B' (single quotes) as the caret is a special character. - For an exposition, see the answer by Gabriel Staples.
(Credits to damian, J. B. Rainsberger, sschaef, Neptilo, Pete and TMin in the comments.)