194

This is what happened:

I have a branch A. On branch A I committed a bunch of changes. I was not happy with the code, so I checked out the previous commit in branch A. I then made a bunch more changes and committed them on branch A. Now I can not find this commit anywhere. Did I lose this code?

5
  • When you say "I checked out the previous commit in branch A", do you mean "I reset branch A to the previous commit"? i.e. did you actually git reset rather than git checkout?
    – CB Bailey
    Apr 2, 2012 at 21:43
  • No, i used checkout. reflog worked.
    – Mausimo
    Apr 2, 2012 at 21:50
  • If you used checkout then you will have been on a detached HEAD and branch A would have stayed on the previous commit. Exactly what commands did you run?
    – CB Bailey
    Apr 2, 2012 at 22:13
  • 1
    I was using the SourceTree GIT GUI on OSX Lion. I Was on branch A and ran a checkout of the previous commit on Branch A. I then did a bunch of code changes and committed (Branch A). I believe I had a detached HEAD.
    – Mausimo
    Apr 2, 2012 at 22:16
  • OK, I think I was confused when you said that you committed a bunch more changes on branch A.
    – CB Bailey
    Apr 2, 2012 at 22:23

7 Answers 7

275

The old commit is still in the reflog.

git reflog

This will show a list of commits, and the "lost" commit should be in there. You can make it into a new branch. For example, if the SHA-1 is ba5a739, then you can make a new branch named "new-branch" at the old commit with:

git branch new-branch ba5a739

Note that "lost" commits will get deleted when the database is pruned.

7
  • 40
    Use git cherry-pick [SHA] to move the commit onto an existing branch in case you accidentally committed while in detached head state Aug 20, 2014 at 12:56
  • 3
    Alternatively you can switch to an existing branch and do "git merge HEAD@{n}" n corresponding to the "lost" commit listed in reflog.
    – eaykin
    Jun 28, 2016 at 14:35
  • Do you know if the prune would delete also detached commits that are being referenced in commit messages? Or that makes them reachable? Jul 24, 2018 at 8:42
  • 1
    @Kamafeather: I don't think that makes them reachable. Jul 24, 2018 at 14:10
  • I thought so. Meh... it would have been a nice feature in order to reference rewritten/lost trees (for reviewed pull requests, in my case) [Maybe I should open a feature request!]. Anyway, thank you. Jul 24, 2018 at 15:01
101

Your commits are still available in the reflog, as pointed out already. In addition to the other answers, here is a way to take over the detached HEAD commits into your current branch directly, without creating and merging a new branch:

  1. Look up the SHA-1 hashes of the commits you made in detached HEAD state with

     git reflog
    
  2. Then execute, with all the commit hashes ordered from oldest to most recent:

     git cherry-pick <hash1> <hash2> <hash3> ...
    

    For example if I had only one, given in the "first 7 characters" short hash format:

     git cherry-pick a21d053
    

This will add new commits to your current branch, one commit per detached-HEAD commit that you mention in the command. It also takes over the original commit messages.

4
  • It's even easier to cherry-pick if you still have the hash, for instance it's still on your screen. So before you return from a detached HEAD, simply save the latest commit(s) you had, e.g., to a notepad. Sep 2, 2022 at 13:59
  • This answer just saved my 3hrs of work.
    – Aman Desai
    Sep 11, 2023 at 19:03
  • Somehow ended up in detached head after "rollback..." in intellij followed by a checkout of the last commit. I made changes and committed. Got a detached head warning. Switching back to the main branch and cherry picking the commit has allowed me to move main to the new commit. Since rollback seems to have created this, what is the correct way to scrap changes?
    – John Glen
    Jan 28 at 17:14
  • Also, this answer is simpler than creating a new branch and merging in such a case.
    – John Glen
    Jan 28 at 17:15
17

You may find lost (dangling) commits with the following command:

git fsck --lost-found

Note, if your current head is dangling commit, it is not listed as lost.

You may find more info at git-fsck(1) Manual Page

Then you may create branch on that lost commit:

git branch new-branch ba5a739
1
  • I first used the command "git reflog" then "git branch new-branch ba5a739" for a submodule, it worked.
    – ondermerol
    Jul 20, 2016 at 21:11
11

Git parlance for the state of your working directory is a “detached HEAD.” Here is another place that git reflog makes the save.

$ git reflog
0b40dd6 HEAD@{0}: commit: my commit on detached HEAD
...

If I try to checkout a different branch, git-1.7.5.1 gives a helpful suggestion.

$ git checkout master
Warning: you are leaving 1 commit behind, not connected to
any of your branches:

  0b40dd6 my commit on detached HEAD

If you want to keep them by creating a new branch, this may be a good time
to do so with:

 git branch new_branch_name 0b40dd65c06bb215327863c2ca10fdb4f904215b

Switched to branch 'master'
0
9

You did not lose it, Git still keeps a copy (but it is currently unreachable by any branch head). You can find your missing commit using the git reflog command. The reflog keeps track of the historical positions of a branch head, and you can use it to find things that the branch head was pointing at previously.

9

Follow these steps to link your detached head back to git repo

  1. git checkout "your branch with path but without remote name"

e.g. if remote name is origin and branch name is bugfix/somebranch then use git checkout bugfix/somebranch

  1. git reflog get the commit SHA's listed from your commit list of detached branch.

  2. git cherry-pick "commit hash1" "commit hash2" "commit hash3"

  3. git push

ALL SET!!

3

In Sourcetree, I found that git reflog didn't work, so I figured out how to do this using the GUI.

First, try to find the "lost" commit by looking for a message in the Command History (view:Show Command Output). It'll hopefully be in the command "Switching Branch" after the commit that you lost and you'll see the commit comment with a 1234567 commit ID.

Take that Commit ID to next step.

Hit the "Branch" button in the top toolbar and you should get a dialog "New Branch" where you can specify a certain commit. Put that Commit ID in there, specify a new branch name, hit Create Branch and you should get a new branch with your lost commit!

This brought back some lost work for me!

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.