I have a modified file which I want to rever to whatever is in the latest commit but it's "stuck" there always being marked as modified.

$ git status
# On branch master
# Changed but not updated:
#   (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
#   (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
#
#       modified:   index.php
#
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")

I then try:

$git checkout -- index.php

But the output of git status is still the same. I then try:

$git reset --hard master
HEAD is now at 02c9613 test commit message

And the output of git status is STILL the same.

Any ideas on how I can get rid of the supposed changes on that file?

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What sort of modifications are there? – Jefromi Dec 15 '10 at 0:11
2  
What is the result of git diff. It smells like stackoverflow.com/search?q=[git]+autocrlf. – Rudi Dec 15 '10 at 8:47
The diff shows mainly end of line changes. Note that I haven't changed this file at all. This came from a new member of the team. I'll take a look at Rudi's link. – Julian Dec 15 '10 at 14:50
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3 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

You might be running into a whitespace issue try git config --global apply.whitespace nowarn for that.

If that doesn't work, I'd say you've run into a bug. Save the local clone for future reference (I hope it's not too big) and create a bug report. Especially the facts that:

  • you haven't modified the file yourself
  • other files don't show this problem

are signs that it might just not be you that made the mistake here. Wether you can reproduce the problem on a clean repo would be interesting information too.

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Cloned the repo again and it works fine. Can't seem to reproduce the error in the new repo, though. Unfortunately the code here is not open source so I can't really submit it in a bug report :( – Julian Dec 19 '10 at 23:07
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You have to remove index.php from the "index." Then can you checkout a different version.

git rm --cached index.php

Should do the trick. See:

http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-rm.html

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1  
Julian's git status output doesn't show anything as being added to the index. – jamessan Dec 14 '10 at 18:56
Mike, when I run the git rm command, git wants me to commit the changes which seems strange since I don't want anything to do with this file; I just want it to be exactly like it shows in github. – Julian Dec 15 '10 at 14:52
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Have you tried:

$ git checkout master -f -- index.php

or

$ git checkout master -f

?

I can't see why this would work if reset did not, but it's worth a try.

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Gauthier, the first command you mention had no effect. But the second did something very interesting. While it didn't do anything at first, I decided to modify some other file, and git status marked it as modified. After I ran your second suggestion, my modified file went back to its original state while the index.php still remained as modified! I'm very close to cloning the repo from the origin again. – Julian Dec 15 '10 at 14:58
I would suggest running git diff as suggested above. – Gauthier Dec 15 '10 at 16:22
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