How to delete all changes from working directory including new untracked files. I know that git checkout -f
does that, but it doesn't delete new untracked files created since last commit.
Does anybody have an idea how to do that?
git reset --hard # removes staged and working directory changes
## !! be very careful with these !!
## you may end up deleting what you don't want to
## read comments and manual.
git clean -f -d # remove untracked
git clean -f -x -d # CAUTION: as above but removes ignored files like config.
git clean -fxd :/ # CAUTION: as above, but cleans untracked and ignored files through the entire repo (without :/, the operation affects only the current directory)
To see what will be deleted before-hand, without actually deleting it, use the -n
flag (this is basically a test-run). When you are ready to actually delete, then remove the -n
flag:
git clean -nfd
git clean -fxd
can actually be REALLY dangerous if you don't know what you're doing. You may end up permanently deleting some very important untracked files, such as your database, etc. Use caution.
Aug 18, 2011 at 1:22
git clean -f -d
will delete files from ignored folders too. So all you local logs and things like that will be gone. Usually it's not a big problem, but it's better to know.
Safest method, which I use frequently:
git clean -fd
Syntax explanation as per /docs/git-clean
page:
-f
(alias: --force
). If the Git configuration variable clean.requireForce is not set to false, git clean will refuse to delete files or directories unless given -f, -n or -i. Git will refuse to delete directories with .git sub directory or file unless a second -f is given.-d
. Remove untracked directories in addition to untracked files. If an untracked directory is managed by a different Git repository, it is not removed by default. Use -f option twice if you really want to remove such a directory.As mentioned in the comments, it might be preferable to do a git clean -nd
which does a dry run and tells you what would be deleted before actually deleting it.
Link to git clean
doc page:
https://git-scm.com/docs/git-clean
git clean -nd .
before actually deleting files using git clean -fd .
add -A
+ commit -a
+ revert head
first before git clean
. Reviewing each and every delete simply doesn't scale for major scenarios. Also, dry running is not a silver bullet: what if you missed something or made a mistake during the review?
For all tracked unstaged files use:
git checkout -- .
The .
at the end is important.
You can replace .
with a sub-directory name to clear only a specific sub-directory of your project. The problem is addressed specifically here.
git checkout file
or git checkout .
can revert all the changes made to a certain file(in the former one) or changes made to all files(in the latter one), but usually they're not used like that and a double dash precedes them in order to make it completely explicit that it's NOT going to be a "branch checkout". So even if a branch name and a file name are the same, there won't be any name conflict issues.
git checkout -- .
does nothing.
Dec 19, 2021 at 7:25
You can do this in two steps:
git checkout -f
git clean -fd
Have a look at the git clean
command.
git-clean - Remove untracked files from the working tree
Cleans the working tree by recursively removing files that are not under version control, starting from the current directory.
Normally, only files unknown to git are removed, but if the -x option is specified, ignored files are also removed. This can, for example, be useful to remove all build products.
git clean -i
and chosen "clean" from menu - this finally removed new files.
The following works:
git add -A .
git stash
git stash drop stash@{0}
Please note that this will discard both your unstaged and staged local changes. So you should commit anything you want to keep, before you run these commands.
A typical use case: You moved a lot of files or directories around, and then want to get back to the original state.
git add -A .
). I have lost 30m becase there was no file match. Thanks!
Aug 1, 2015 at 19:32
I thought it was (warning: following will wipe out everything)
$ git reset --hard HEAD
$ git clean -fd
The reset
to undo changes. The clean
to remove any untracked files and directories.
git pull
afterwards: CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in...
I only solved this by a git pull --strategy=ours
If you have pushed your changes to a remote branch and both branches point to the same HEAD, you can use:
git reset --hard origin/{branchName}
It will delete all untracked files.
Otherwise please look at other answers.
git clean -i
will first show you the items to be deleted and proceed after your confirmation. I find this useful when dealing with important files that should not be deleted accidentally.
See git help clean
for more information, including some other useful options.
If you want to discard all changes, you can use any of the valid options in an alias in .gitconfig
. For instance:
[alias]
discard = "!f() { git add . && git stash && git stash drop stash@{0}; }; f"
Usage: git discard
An alternative solution is to commit the changes, and then get rid of those commits. This does not have an immediate benefit at first, but it opens up the possibility to commit in chunks, and to create a git tag for backup.
You can do it on the current branch, like this:
git add (-A) .
git commit -m"DISCARD: Temporary local changes"
git tag archive/local-changes-2015-08-01 # optional
git revert HEAD
git reset HEAD^^
Or you can do it on detached HEAD. (assuming you start on BRANCHNAME branch):
git checkout --detach HEAD
git add (-A) .
git commit -m"DISCARD: Temporary local changes"
git tag archive/local-changes-2015-08-01 # optional
git checkout BRANCHNAME
However, what I usually do is to commit in chunks, then name some or all commits as "DISCARD: ...". Then use interactive rebase to remove the bad commits and keep the good ones.
git add -p # Add changes in chunks.
git commit -m"DISCARD: Some temporary changes for debugging"
git add -p # Add more stuff.
git commit -m"Docblock improvements"
git tag archive/local-changes-2015-08-01
git rebase -i (commit id) # rebase on the commit id before the changes.
# Remove the commits that say "DISCARD".
This is more verbose, but it allows to review exactly which changes you want to discard.
The git lol
and git lola
shortcuts have been very helpful with this workflow.
For a specific folder I used:
git checkout -- FolderToClean/*
I think the safest and yet quick approach is with:
git stash -u
git stash drop
The -u flag includes untracked files as questioner asked.
You can always check that with git status
.
There is no need to add them to the staging area first.
Command git stash drop
is equal to git stash drop stash@{0}
.
Both only delete the last added changes on a stash list. You can verify that by git stash list
.
At least in git version 2.35.1. More on git stash
here.
Also, I believe that comments are for clarification of the question only, not for the answers @tiago-martins-peres, @SHernandez.
This is probably a noob answer, but: I use TortoiseGit for windows and it has a nice feature called REVERT. So what you do to revert your local nonstaged nonpushed changes is:
git help reset
andgit help clean
git stash
(saves modified files on a stack) followed bygit stash drop
(deletes it).