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While working on Master branch, I forgot to create new branch. Made changes to files then inadvertently reverted to the master, loosing all updates. I didn't commit the updated files.

How can I retrieve them?

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  • In a comment below you mention being able to recover your work via the stash, as saved automatically via the GitHub GUI. I haven't seen the GUI in action, and have always been worried about losing stuff, wondering what warning messages look like etc. Can you edit your question to clarify what actually happened a bit more so we can all benefit?
    – nealmcb
    Mar 12, 2012 at 2:04
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    If you are using any JetBrains software, right click and go to "Local History > Show History". From here, you should see a list of local edit history separate from the Git history. You can choose any version to revert to.
    – sbrk
    Sep 8, 2021 at 23:28

10 Answers 10

118

If you had not commited, staged, or stashed the changes you made, there is no way you can recover those changes.

EDIT: Recovering lost changes. Adding this on Mark Longair's suggestion (in the comment). This also includes a couple of SO links from his answer below(*), that I found quite informative.

  • If you have ever committed some change and have lost that commit (like committing in a detached state), you can find that commit using reflog. See this SO question*.

  • If you have lost your last staged changes, you can also recover that. See this SO question*. (I have never used or tried it myself).

  • If you have stashed a change, you can also recover that using pop or apply. (I am not sure if the popped/dropped stashes are also recoverable that were not committed). You may find this Recover dropped stash in git useful.

If there are any other methods that anyone can suggest, I'd edit this answer further to add them.

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  • 5
    Your stash tip led me to find the right course of action. Many thanks indeed
    – Trist
    Aug 22, 2011 at 13:23
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    You might want to edit your answer to point out that you can also get back files if they'd only been staged, since they're still put into the object database by that operation. (See the second paragraph of my answer.) Aug 22, 2011 at 13:41
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    Some IDEs keep track of local file history, quite independently of source control. Nov 7, 2013 at 14:34
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    @KonradMorawski: I had forgotten about Android Studio's file history feature in my panic. You just saved my life, sir! Many, many thanks.
    – suomi35
    Mar 29, 2017 at 4:15
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    I had been on this very same situation. When I was about to lose all my hopes, I realized that I did have a compiled version of my recently modified project, because I runned it once to test the new feature. I then had the idea of decompiling my .exe file using ILSpy. It wasn't perfect, but I was able to fully recover all of my changes without having to restart coding everything from the beginning. Jan 16, 2019 at 18:20
61

Two longshots: Some IDEs, such as Delphi, keep an editor history. You may have some recourse there.
Next, if you had your local working directory located in the MyDocuments folder, it may have been automatically backed up by Windows Home Server, Carbonite, MozyPro, etc.. these are usually 'set it and forget it'. maybe you forgot it?

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  • 14
    Eclipse calls this feature "local history". You might be able to recover even files that have not been staged, stashed or committed. Nov 22, 2013 at 13:05
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    Thank you for putting the idea into my head!! I was able to recover "deleted" files in the Dropbox web interface! You saved my bacon. Recover deleted files in dropbox Mar 20, 2014 at 5:57
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    I did the same stupid mistake on Eclipse. I did right click->Restore from local history... on the changed file which showed no history. But when I do right click->replace with->local history... I see a list of changes. That saved me. Hope this helps someone. Aug 28, 2014 at 19:32
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    PHPStorm has a VCS -> Local History for individual files that are independent of Git. Jan 29, 2015 at 7:16
  • Command+Z on PyCharm saved my two days worth of work :) Feb 3, 2022 at 13:27
42

I was stuck in the same situation.

Had a list of the changed files in the terminal before the --hard reset, went into my editor (Sublime 2, doesn't matter though), opened each file and hit cmd+z (undo) once, this effectively undid the changes done by the hard reset and I got my uncommitted changes back :)

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  • 3
    The same worked for me in VS Code.
    – Monsignor
    Jun 5, 2019 at 6:41
  • I was using vim in vscode and hitting u for undo did nothing. So, I toggled vim and then hit ctrl+z to bring back everything. Sep 27, 2021 at 21:32
  • This can be done in IntelliJ as well. Mar 30, 2022 at 16:44
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The critical question here is what you did after making changes to the files. If you created a commit which contained the new state of the files, then you should be able to get them back by looking through the recent entries in git reflog, finding the SHA1sum of the commit and then creating a new branch from that with git branch recovered <SHA1sum>, or similar. There's an example of doing this in this answer.

If you did git add on any of the files to stage them, you should also be able to get them back, but this is rather more work - Jakub describes how to do this in this answer.

If you happened to do a git stash to give yourself a clean status, then of course you can get it back as you would any other stash.

Otherwise, I'm afraid that the news is not good.

I hope it's not infuriating to point this out post-hoc, but to just switch back to the master branch, you shouldn't have needed to use any command that might lose you data - git checkout master would have told you that you were already on the master branch, and show any uncommitted changes. (Arguably git reset --hard should have a "Yes, I really mean this" confirmation if there are uncommitted changes, given how often people^WI lose data this way.)

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  • bash command line didn't ask me anything when I did git reset --hard HEAD~1. All unstaged uncommitted changes were gone. No questions asked. Jan 26, 2017 at 21:16
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    @RobertKoritnik I think you might have misunderstood the last sentence of my answer - I was saying that an "are you sure?" confirmation when git reset --hard might lose data would be a good feature, not that that is what git does. Jan 31, 2017 at 15:31
4

Use the reflog. git reflog will show you a history of all the commits you have been on, in chronological order.

If you lost your changes by 'checking out master', then you were probably working headless. git status will tell you if you are working without a head. (As does git branch).

Working headless isn't that bad (I do it all the time, deliberately), but you will have a greater reliance on the reflog.

If you didn't commit your changes, in any way, however, then there is no way to retrieve those files. The only realistic way this could have happened is if you did a hard reset, or explicitly forced a checkout. Do not force changes unless you are sure that you are comfortable with losing data.

Usually, in git, 'forcing' is done by specifying -f.

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  • Thanks for quick reply, couldn't find ref in reflog, but more than likely I was doing it wrong. Used GitX and found a stash, popped that.
    – Trist
    Aug 22, 2011 at 13:06
2

I've done the same thing, more than once unfortunately. Without committing anything git has no idea what you wrote. Even if you did commit then when backward I'm not sure reflex would help.

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    Thanks for quick reply, I'd been trying out the GitHub GUI, silly thing to do on production stuff but there you go. It seems that it carried out a stash before I inflicted the damage.
    – Trist
    Aug 22, 2011 at 13:09
  • @Trist This is what did it for me. I was about to curse GitHub for making it so easy to switch branch without committing (and no visible stash function in the GUI) when I saw your comment. git stash apply saved the day.
    – John
    Aug 29, 2016 at 18:46
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Most IDEs have a "Local History" feature, including all JetBrains products. You could also try ctrl + Z in all the affected files.

As a last resort, you can check Time Machine backups / any other backup software that runs periodically

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In VS Code, use the command pallet to open "Local History: Find Entry to Restore" and search for the path of the file you want restored.

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If you're working in intellij, right click on your parent folder. In the menu, select Local history > show history. local history in intellij

Here you will find the versions you want to revert to.

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I recoverd files one by one due to Visual Studio Code 2022 timeline.

See Below snipts enter image description here

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