Let's say I make a mistake in my first push to a remote Git repository. Can I somehow revert this so that the repository is back to it's initial state? I don't have access to the remote machine, so deleting .git directory is not possible.
The problem, as far as I can see is that you can't "unset" the head.
This is what I (or actually a colleague who asked about this) did (I do a local "remote" repo here so anyone can test this):
mkdir git-remote
cd git-remote
git init --bare
cd ..
mkdir git-local
cd git-local
git clone ../git-remote .
touch a
git add a
git commit -m "initial"
git push origin master
And at this point he realised he pushed the wrong stuff to the remote repository.
The only idea I had is the delete everything from his repo && git rm && git push which would still leave the faulty commit there, but the files wouldn't bother a second push.