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I accidentally ran git merge some_other_branch on my local master branch. I haven't pushed the changes to origin master. How do I undo the merge?


After merging, git status says:

# On branch master
# Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 5 commits.

How do I undo all these commits?

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35 Answers 35

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If you committed the merge:

git reset HEAD~1
# Make sure what you are reverting is in fact the merge files
git add .
git reset --hard
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  1. git stash

  2. git branch -d the_local_branch

  3. git checkout -t <name of remote>

  4. git stash apply

This worked for me..!!

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If you notice that you need to revert immediately after the merge and you haven't done anything else after the merge attempt, you can just issue this command: git reset --hard HEAD@{1}.

Essentially, your merge sha will be pointing to HEAD@{0} if nothing else was committed after the merge and so HEAD@{1} will be the previous point before the merge.

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In this case, you will want to reset your branch with git reset --hard <branch_name>. If you want to save your changes before reseting them be sure to create a new branch and git checkout <branch_name>.

You can reset the state to a specific commit with git reset --hard <commit_id> as well.

If the changes have been pushed you can use git revert <branch_name> instead. Be sure to check out how to use git revert and git checkout in other scenarios as well.

-13

You can use the git-reset command.

git-reset - Reset current HEAD to the

specified state. git reset [--mixed |

--soft | --hard | --merge] [-q] [] git reset [-q] []

[--] … git reset --patch

[] [--] […]

GIT-Reset

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    I tried git reset, git reset --merge, and git reset --hard, but I still end up with the same message about being 5 commits ahead of origin/master. Mar 5, 2010 at 19:30
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