I believe this SO question may be of use: How to list all the files in a commit?
Basically, to get a listing of the files, you can use git diff-tree
:
git diff-tree --no-commit-id --name-only -r COMMIT_ID
Once you have that, you can feed it to git checkout:
git diff-tree --no-commit-id --name-only -r COMMIT_ID | \
xargs git checkout COMMIT_ID --
So, the git diff-tree
will help get the list of files, and the xargs git checkout COMMIT_ID --
will help reset the affected files back to the state they were in at that commit (you're only rolling back those particular files).
You probably need to do this at the top of your working tree. Also, I didn't try seeing what would happen if there's a rename involved, so there is likely another edge case you might need to consider. Spaces in path names could be a problem here too, but I didn't see a way to get the paths in a null-terminated format with git diff-tree
. Perhaps git diff
would be better in that case:
git diff --name-only -z COMMIT_ID^ COMMIT_ID | \
xargs -0 git checkout COMMIT_ID --
Also, if you really want to go back in that way and there's really only one commit that's the issue, perhaps git revert
would be a better way to go about it.