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I was accidentally working on a branch I shouldn't have been for a while, so I branched off of it giving it the appropriate name. Now I want to overwrite the branch I shouldn't have been on to the version from origin (github). Is there an easy way to do this? I tried deleting the branch and then resetting up the tracking branch, but it just gives me the version I was working on again.

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5 Answers 5

1373

If you haven't pushed to origin yet, you can reset your branch to the upstream branch with:

git checkout mybranch
git reset --hard origin/mybranch

(Make sure that you reference your latest commit in a separate branch, like you mention in your question)

Note that just after the reset, mybranch@{1} refers to the old commit, before reset.

But if you had already pushed, see "Create git branch, and revert original to upstream state" for other options.


With Git 2.23 (August 2019), that would be one command: git switch.
Namely: git switch -C mybranch origin/mybranch

Example

C:\Users\vonc\git\git>git switch -C master origin/master
Reset branch 'master'
Branch 'master' set up to track remote branch 'master' from 'origin'.
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.

That restores the index and working tree, like a git reset --hard would.


As commented by Brad Herman, a reset --hard would remove any new file or reset modified file to HEAD.

Actually, to be sure you start from a "clean slate", a git clean -f -d after the reset would ensure a working tree exactly identical to the branch you just reset to.


This blog post suggests those aliases (for master branch only, but you can adapt/extend those):

[alias]
   resetorigin = !git fetch origin && git reset --hard origin/master && git clean -f -d
   resetupstream = !git fetch upstream && git reset --hard upstream/master && git clean -f -d

Then you can type:

git resetupstream

or

git resetorigin
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  • 37
    this will DELETE UNSTAGED/STAGED changes (from the --hard) Commented Aug 30, 2012 at 22:02
  • 8
    I have used the git reset --hard origin/mybranch command several times when I didn't care about any local changes and just wanted a clean copy that matched the origin. However, today, this didn't work -- I still had a handful of new, unstaged files, and git kept promising me that it was at HEAD. The note about git clean -f -d fixed that by wiping up all the new files that I didn't want. Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 21:21
  • @MatthewClark That is expected: see comment on stackoverflow.com/q/4327708/6309
    – VonC
    Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 21:35
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    Great! Also many times i have used git reset --hard HEAD to revert to a previous commit, ignoring any changes
    – daronwolff
    Commented Dec 23, 2016 at 16:03
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    @Lonzak Yes: community.atlassian.com/t5/SourceTree-questions/…. Don't select the soft option. See also community.atlassian.com/t5/Questions/… for an illustration.
    – VonC
    Commented Jun 13, 2017 at 10:12
135

There is a slightly easier way to do this:

git reset --hard @{u}

@{u} is a shortcut for whatever your tracking branch is, so if you're on master and that tracks origin/master, @{u} points to origin/master.

The advantage of using this is that you don't have to remember (or type out) the full name of your tracking branch. You can also make an alias:

git-reset-origin="git reset --hard @{u}"

which will work regardless of the branch you're currently on.

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    Note, in powershell you need to escape {u} so the full command will be something like git reset --hard "@{u}"
    – sommmen
    Commented Dec 15, 2020 at 10:19
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    Thanks for this! Now that I learned it exists, I found it is documented in git-scm.com/docs/gitrevisions Commented Aug 27, 2021 at 16:28
  • It is a piece of cake, saved by time today, thanks @andy lei
    – Sivaraj-v
    Commented Jun 7, 2023 at 4:16
  • This ought to be marked as the solution. So much simpler.
    – Dan Nolan
    Commented Jul 20, 2023 at 4:30
  • Exactly what I needed. BTW @{u} is a shorthand for @{upstream}
    – Yair
    Commented Feb 29 at 12:01
37

Assuming this is what happened:

# on branch master
vi buggy.py                 # you edit file
git add buggy.py            # stage file
git commit -m "Fix the bug" # commit
vi tests.py                 # edit another file but do not commit yet

Then you realise you make changes on the wrong branch.

git checkout -b mybranch    # you create the correct branch and switch to it

But master still points to your commit. You want it to point where it pointed before.

Solution

The easiest way is:

git branch --force master origin/master

Another way is:

git checkout master
git reset --soft origin/master
git checkout mybranch

Note that using reset --hard will cause your uncommitted changes to be lost (tests.py in my example).

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20

I tried this and it didn't reset my current branch to my remote github latest. I googled and found https://itsyndicate.org/blog/how-to-use-git-force-pull-properly/

which suggested

git fetch origin master
git reset --hard origin/master

I wanted to reset my v8 branch so I did

git fetch origin v8
git reset --hard origin/v8

and it worked

0
11

I have a private repo on a server and regularly rebase/force-push to it, which makes it necessary to reset the local branch on my other computer often. I therefore created the following alias "catchup", which allows doing this for the current branch. Unlike the other answer there is no hardcoded branch name in this alias.

Hold on tight.

[alias]
  catchup = "!f(){ echo -n \"reset \\033[0;33m$(git symbolic-ref -q --short HEAD)\\033[0m to \\033[0;33m$(git for-each-ref --format='%(upstream:short)' $(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD))\\033[0m? (Y/n) \"; read -r ans; if [ \"$ans\" = \"y\" -o \"$ans\" = \"Y\" -o -z \"$ans\" ]; then git reset --hard $(git for-each-ref --format='%(upstream:short)' $(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD)); else echo \"catchup aborted\"; fi }; f"

Properly formatted (won't work with the newlines in .gitconfig) it looks like this:

"
!f(){
  echo -n \"reset \\033[0;33m$(git symbolic-ref -q --short HEAD)\\033[0m to \\033[0;33m$(git for-each-ref --format='%(upstream:short)' $(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD))\\033[0m? (Y/n) \";
  read -r ans;
  if [ \"$ans\" = \"y\" -o \"$ans\" = \"Y\" -o -z \"$ans\" ]; then
    git reset --hard $(git for-each-ref --format='%(upstream:short)' $(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD));
  else
    echo \"catchup aborted\";
  fi
}; f
"
  • The \\033[0;33m and \\033[0m is for emphasizing the current branch and upstream with color.
  • $(git symbolic-ref -q --short HEAD) is the current branch name
  • $(git for-each-ref --format='%(upstream:short)' $(git symbolic-ref -q HEAD)) is the upstream of the current branch.

Since reset is a potentially dangerous call (especially with the --hard option, you will lose any uncommitted changes), it first tells you what it's about to do. For example if you're on branch dev-container with remote called qcpp/dev-container and you enter git catchup, you'll be prompted:

reset dev-container to qcpp/dev-container? (Y/n)

If you then type y or just hit return, it will perform the reset. If you enter anything else the reset will not be carried out.

If you want to be super safe and programmatically prevent losing unstaged/uncommitted changes, you can pimp the above alias further with according checks for diff-index.

The obligatory word of warning: If you are working on a public repository other people have based work on, and you need this alias, you are doing it wrong™.

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