It starts by searching the derived class. Since that doesn't declare an `f`, it searches the base classes individually, then merges together the results from those searches. If those differ, then the lookup is considered ambiguous, and the code is ill-formed. The exact text is at [class.member.lookup]/6:
Otherwise (i.e., C does not contain a declaration of f or the resulting declaration set is empty), S(f, C) is initially empty. If C has base classes, calculate the lookup set for f in each direct base class subobject Bi , and merge each such lookup set S(f, Bi ) in turn into S(f, C).