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I accidentally committed too many files to an SVN repository and changed some things I didn't mean to. (Sigh.) In order to revert them to their prior state, the best I could come up with was

svn rm l3toks.dtx
svn copy -r 854 svn+ssh://<repository URL>/l3toks.dtx ./l3toks.dtx

Jeez! Is there no better way? Why can't I just write something like this:

svn revert -r 854 l3toks.dtx

Okay, I'm only using v1.4.4, but I skimmed over the changes list for the 1.5 branch and I couldn't see anything directly related to this. Did I miss anything?


Edit: I guess I wasn't clear enough. I don't think I want to reverse merge, because then I'll lose the changes that I did want to make! Say that fileA and fileB were both modified but I only wanted to commit fileA; accidentally typing

svn commit -m "small change"

commits both files, and now I want to roll back fileB. Reverse merging makes this task no easier (as far as I can tell) than the steps I outlined above.

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5 Answers

up vote 87 down vote accepted
svn merge -r 854:853 l3toks.dtx

or

svn merge -c -854 l3toks.dtx
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Ah, finally I see the relevant part in svn help merge (usage #3). Thanks! – Will Robertson Dec 6 '08 at 15:39
Thanks for this, just wanted to state something - say, I'm at revision 855, I want to revert a file to revision 854. If I do svn merge -c -854 my.file, and then do svn diff, it seems to show one revision before 854 (that is, 853); only when I do svm merge -c 854 myfile (without the -), it looks like myfile is reverted to rev 854. Thanks again, cheers! – sdaau Nov 7 '10 at 14:09
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Is there a reason why the first option above worked like a charm for me while the second one didn't work AT ALL? – skybondsor Mar 15 '11 at 15:38
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Don't forget to commit after reverse merging, though. I often forget :) – Vineeth Dec 15 '11 at 12:25
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Check out "undoing changes" section of the svn book

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svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.5/… You could at least provide a direct link... – derobert Dec 6 '08 at 6:39
added your direct link – Simucal Dec 6 '08 at 7:35
Yes, derobert, you are right - it would have been better to include direct link. Thanks. I was using the pdf version off line. – luapyad Dec 6 '08 at 7:44
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What you're looking for is called a "reverse merge". You should consult the docs regarding the merge function in the SVN book (as luapyad, or more precisely the first commenter on that post, points out). If you're using Tortoise, you can also just go into the log view and right-click and choose "revert changes from this revision" on the one where you made the mistake.

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Reverse merge is exactly what you want (see luapyad's answer). Just apply the merge to the erroneously-commited file instead of the entire directory.

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sorry to use up some space on just a reiteration of the previously given answer - but this is something I always end up in trouble with.

Let's say I've updated the local files to the latest revision, which is 854. Then, I'd want to get an older revision - the version of the file from few revision earlier, say revision 851.

Copy would work:

svn copy -r 851 svn+ssh://<repository URL>/l3toks.dtx ./l3toks.dtx

.. however, I can't be bothered grepping for the repo URL :)

Update seemingly might work:

svn up -r 851 ./l3toks.dtx

... however, it also marks the local copy as "freshly checked out", or rather "same as online revision" (i.e. in Tortoise/RabbitVCS you get a green OK checkmark) - which means you cannot do svn ci -m "rolled back to r 851": simply because the local subversion executable won't notice any local changes, and won't be bothered to upload anything to the online repository.

And, as already answered, reverse merge works - but in this case, one shouldn't rely on shortcut syntax; but specifically state:

svn merge -r HEAD:851 l3toks.dtx
--- Reverse-merging r854 through r852 into 'l3toks.dtx':
U    l3toks.dtx

I must admit - I would never understand the sentence "Reverse-merging r854 through r852 into file" to mean "Just got r851 of your file, and overwritten whatever you had previously locally - and it is marked as different from latest online revision, so you can check it back in online as a new 'rollback' revision", but I guess (and hope :) ) that is what it does :)

After this, one can use svn diff for a quick make-sure if we got the right revision back locally; and also, the file will be marked with a red exclamation mark in Tortoise/RabbitVCS (that is, different from latest committed version), and so svn ci -m "rolled back to r 851" can run this time.

Also, note that if you, finally, change your mind after reverse merging (i.e. you anyways want to keep working on the latest, HEAD revision, here 854 - after you have rolled back to 851 locally, but haven't yet committed the rollback), you shouldn't use svn up, because it will simply say that it is already "At revision 854"; use instead svn revert --recursive . or similar...

Cheers!

Ref: How to Roll Back Changes using Subversion - Jacob Wright – Flex, AIR, PHP, etc.

EDIT: ... and apparently, the exactly same effect as svn merge -r HEAD:851 l3toks.dtx, can be achieved with:

svn export -r 851 l3toks.dtx
A    l3toks.dtx
Export complete.
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