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I'd like to rollback a change I made recently in TFS. In Subversion, this was pretty straightforward. However, it seems to be an incredible headache in TFS:

Option 1: Get Prior Version

  1. Manually get prior version of each file
  2. Check out for edit
  3. Fail - the checkout (in VS2008) forces me to get the latest version

Option 2: Get TFS Power Tools

  1. Download Team Foundation Power Tools
  2. Issue rollback command from cmd line
  3. Fail - it won't work if there are any other pending changes

Option 3: Manually Undo Changes

  1. manually undo my changes, then commit a new changeset

Question

How do I rollback to a previous changeset in TFS?

5
  • 3
    VSS does not have rollback. They do have another feature that happens to be named "rollback" but in TFS terms it's really a Destroy. (a) you can only do it from the tip; it won't work if any additional changes have been checked in subsequent to the one you want to roll back (b) it PERMANENTLY REMOVES the changes from the database Sep 4, 2009 at 3:49
  • 2
    Oh how I long for the ease of VSS rollback.
    – Greg
    Jul 14, 2010 at 19:48
  • 3
    I stumbled upon this issue recently - why the heck is it so difficult to roll back in TFS. Roll-back it's one of the basic functions of source control
    – JohnIdol
    Jul 24, 2010 at 16:44
  • 3
    This is way too painful in TFS!
    – Jon Kragh
    Oct 14, 2010 at 16:30
  • 2
    Switch to Mercurial! I changed jobs and roped myself into TFS. I have been writing PowerShell scripts to make it seem like Hg from the command line ever since.
    – Sumo
    Aug 10, 2012 at 3:20

17 Answers 17

64
  1. Download and install Team Foundation Power Tools.
  2. Open up the Visual Studio command prompt
  3. Navigate to the directory on the file system that TFS is mapped to. If you don't do this you'll get an "Unable to determine the workspace" error when you try to roll back
  4. Make sure everything else is checked in or shelved
  5. run tfpt rollback to bring up the interface.
  6. Choose the changesets you want to rollback
  7. Check in the new versions of the files you rolled back

The big disadvantage of the tool is that it will want to refresh everything in your workspace before you can merge. I got around this issue by creating a new workspace just for the rollback which mapped directly to the place in the source tree where the affected files were.

If you need help to figure out which changesets to roll back, I find the code review tool in the free Team Foundation Side Kicks add-in very helpful.

8
  • 1
    You can try this way, but be warned, the tools are not well documented, and even if you can get past all the errors, you may or may not be able to really rollback. (I just tried for 2hrs)
    – alchemical
    Feb 17, 2010 at 17:06
  • 2
    This technique worked for me. The workspace suggestion was very good (and is important if you're dealing with a large code base).
    – cloggins
    Dec 14, 2010 at 19:09
  • 2
    Warning... there is a catch 22 if you are using mismatched versions of TFS and Visual Studio. I am using VS2010 with TFS2008 (a classic case of IT not catching up with dev) and TF.EXE with VS2010 now has rollback... but it doesn't work against TFS2008. And tfpt 2010 has rollback removed, so I can't do it the old way. Jul 12, 2011 at 20:50
  • 8
    the 'rollback' command was moved out of Power Tools for VS2010, so now you just need to type 'tf rollback' : social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en/tfspowertools/thread/…
    – Dan
    Jul 13, 2011 at 9:48
  • 1
    Starting with version August 2011 of TFS Power Tools, to rollback, you don't need to use the command line anymore.
    – joerage
    Sep 4, 2011 at 12:26
26

Your solution #1 will work: 1. manually get prior version of each file

  1. check out for edit

  2. Checkin the file and Ignore server changes when prompted.

The reason why it failed for you is because you must have the "Get latest version of item on check out" option turned on. Turn this option off by going to Tools...Options...Source Control...Visual Studio Tema Foundation Server and unchecking "Get latest version of item on check out"

Cheers

4
  • 3
    Just did it this way after struggling 2 hrs w Power Tools and not getting anywhere...wtf is with TFS not supporting this basic functionality...
    – alchemical
    Feb 17, 2010 at 17:05
  • 1
    The functionality is added in to TFS 2010 / Visual Studio 2010.
    – Robaticus
    Jul 14, 2010 at 19:50
  • 3
    To be clear this isn't a true rollback. It's getting an older version. Not the same thing. Mar 18, 2011 at 20:53
  • 1
    +1 for pointing out the issue with the Get latest version of item on check out setting! May 20, 2013 at 13:35
19

Rollback has been moved from tfpt.exe to tf.exe, the Team Foundation Version Control Tool.

TF - Team Foundation Version Control Tool, Version 10.0.30319.1
Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation.  All rights reserved.

Rolls back the changes in a single or a range of changesets:
tf rollback /changeset:changesetfrom~changesetto [itemspec] [/recursive]
            [/lock:none|checkin|checkout] [/version:versionspec]
            [/keepmergehistory] [/noprompt] [/login:username,[password]]

tf rollback /toversion:versionspec itemspec [/recursive]
            [/lock:none|checkin|checkout] [/version:versionspec]
            [/keepmergehistory] [/noprompt] [/login:username,[password]]
1
  • 1
    Is there a way to do this from Visual Studio directly? Sep 19, 2017 at 21:18
15

You have two options for rolling back (reverting) a changeset in TFS 2010 Version Control. First option is using the User Interface (if you have the latest version of the TFS 2010 Power Tools installed).

Rollback Changeset in UI for TFS 2010

The other option is using the TFS 2010 version control command-line application:

tf.exe rollback

I have information about both approaches on my blog post available here: http://www.edsquared.com/2010/02/02/Rollback+Or+Undo+A+Changeset+In+TFS+2010+Version+Control.aspx

15

Another way to make your option 1 work is to reverse the order of the steps:

  1. Check Out the items
  2. Get Specific Version to the old version
  3. Check in (ignoring the "warning server version is newer" dialog) OR on the conflicts section of the Pending Changes dialog resolve the conflicts by keeping the local version.

This will work even if you have Get Latest On Checkout set.

1
  • 2
    Did not work for me. But that must be because some pinhead set up the TFS with silly policies.
    – SHODAN
    Jun 16, 2010 at 6:45
6

For reference, if you're using TFS 2010, here's the link to Rollback Command (Team Foundation Version Control) manual.

To rollback a particular changeset, go to Visual Studio Command Prompt (2010), navigate to your TFS workspace directory, and type in command:

tf rollback /changeset:C12345

where 12345 is your changeset number. After this, it will show you the log of what it did and you'll have to sort out merge conflicts.

5

Ahh, just found this CodePlex Article on using TFPT.exe (power tool) to rollback a changeset.

Hope this helps you out.

5

Not having a rollback option is actually feature of TFS ;)

To rollback changes:

  1. Check out whatever specific version of changes you want
  2. Edit->Select All->Copy the text in the file
  3. Checkout whatever version of the file is on the server
  4. Paste over the file and check in.

And now all your intermediate changesets before the rollback are saved as well! What a great feature!

3
  • 1
    At first i thought this was sarcastic, but this solution may actually work for those of us who aren't lucky enough to have been granted rollback permission.
    – EBarr
    Dec 8, 2010 at 18:31
  • 1
    Unless changes were later made to the same files that you actually want to keep. Dec 20, 2010 at 8:26
  • 1
    Crude but this has been the only way I can perform this in TFS. If I do a checkout then retrieve the old version TFS will AutoMerge to the last version whenever I attempt to check it back in.
    – Steve
    Feb 16, 2014 at 9:00
2

If you did 1 check-in and you just want to undo it, that has a changeset # associated with it. Do a history on the folder in question to see the bad changeset. Open it up to see the details (all files changed, etc).

I believe that you can restore or undo a changeset from that screen, but my Visual Studio just crashed when I tried to do this. /sigh -- I definitely share your pain.

Where do I downmod TFS on this site?

1
  • Nope, rollback from the History UI was only added in TFS 2010. Sep 4, 2009 at 3:45
2

I think that the Team Foundation Power Tools is the way to go. If there are pending changes you can move them to a shelveset then undo or check in all pending changes before running the rollback command. See http://www.codeplex.com/VSTSGuidance/Wiki/View.aspx?title=How%20to%20undo%20a%20check-in&referringTitle=Source%20Control%20Practices%20at%20a%20Glance for more information.

2

Ben Scheirman - the Changeset Details dialog does not have rollback functionality.

2

Another option is TFSPlus. This Visual Studio Addin adds (among others) Get This Version command to the history window. If you have the file checked out it will replace it with that version. If you do a check in afterwards you will effectively do a rollback to that version.

It works on individual files instead of complete changesets, though.

2

using TFS powertools is the best way http://rajputyh.blogspot.com/2008/08/change-set-rollback-using-tfs-power.html

2

Get Specific Version

In Version Type drop down select Type as Changeset

Use Changeset ... button to find your Changeset or just type in, if you know this number.

After you have the specific Changeset.

Check Out

Check In

1

None of these solutions quite worked for me Dave Roberts solution was the closest to what I actually got working. I do not have Get latest version of item on check out enabled, however it seems to be a server policy.

My solution to this is to check the file out for edit, get specific version, then when the conflict is detected use the merge tool (and manually merge none of the changes) so that the file is in the condition it was.

I was going to go with compare with the specific version and copy the entire file then just paste it over the top of the old one.

Still there should be an easier way to do this!

1
1

The solution above is for TFS2008. TFS2010 has built-in rollback feature. see this article for details.

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  • 1
    Except that VS2010 (tf) doesn't work against TFS2008 and since TFPT 2010 has no rollback anymore, you are hosed. Jul 12, 2011 at 20:52
1

Install the latest version of the TFS Power Tools (August 2011), and you can just right-click on a change set and select "Rollback Entire Changeset". It doesn't get much easier than that.

It's available here: http://visualstudiogallery.msdn.microsoft.com/c255a1e4-04ba-4f68-8f4e-cd473d6b971f

It's hinted at under Team Explorer Enhancements on the above page:

New in this release is the ability to [..] easily rollback changes in version control.

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