33

I'm looking for exactly the same behavior as

git add -i -p

But instead of composing a commit from my working directory, I'd like to compose my working directory from (parts of) a commit. How can I do that ?

My use case is that I have several distinct features that are grouped together in a single commit and I'd like to test them one by one

Using cherry-pick -n is not really satisfactory, since it leaves me with the dirty job of removing all the unrequired code. I'd really just like to pick the selected changes I want to test.

2
  • 1
    Well, the real solution is to split commits, so you won't be stuck with 'all the unrequired code' to remove in the first place. My money is on cherry-pick, not git reset (always a bit dangerous)
    – sehe
    May 3, 2011 at 5:45
  • Of course I will split the commits, I just need to find out what to split (and what to discard)
    – krosenvold
    May 3, 2011 at 5:56

4 Answers 4

41

Using cherry-pick -n is not really satisfactory, since it leaves me with the dirty job of removing all the unrequired code. I'd really just like to pick the selected changes I want to test.

The job may have been a dirty one before, but with the advent of git checkout --patch, you can now selectively discard changes, similar to git add -p for adding.

2
  • Oh, that's a sweet one. Exactly what I needed. Note that it might be wise to rebase/cherry pick the commit on top of your target commit if your target is not an ancestor of the cherry
    – krosenvold
    May 3, 2011 at 19:52
  • Note: this doesn't really pick changes from a commit consistently, but pieces from a certain file state ! (possibly overriding / loosing other later changes)
    – kxr
    Jan 28, 2021 at 12:51
11

You could use git reset --mixed HEAD^1 to revert the index, then pick the hunks you want with git add -i.

The reset will roll back the index to the previous commit (essentially un-committing whatever was the HEAD), but it won't touch the working tree. You can now stage the hunks you want, commit them and throw away the rest with a git reset --hard HEAD.

1
  • 6
    +1 As a very small note, --mixed is the default for git reset, so you could just leave that option out. May 3, 2011 at 10:13
3

Building on the great answer from Cameron Skinner, I will expand this a bit to include the case when you have a branch with multiple commits, perhaps merge commits, perhaps a lot of "noise" and you want to cherry-pick only very specific hunks from it. (which was exactly what happened to me today)

Follow these steps:

git checkout source-branch
git checkout -b cherry-pick-branch # Gives you a new branch based on source-branch
git reset --mixed master

This will leave you with a branch where all changes are in the filesystem, but nothing has been commited/staged. Then use git add -p to selectively add which parts you want to stage, and then commit & push as normal.

0

dirty job of removing all the unrequired code

If this is not acceptable,

git cherry-pick -n ...         # Starting from clean status
git reset                      # unstage
git add -p / -i [<pathspec>…​]  # add hunks interactively
git restore .                  # wipe the rest (at root dir)

, for example if you want to merge into uncommited changes or don't want to spoil time stamps, then using git apply like this may be a cleaner option:

git show <commit> | tee _.patch
edit _.patch                    # strip unwanted hunks
git apply -3 _.patch

(As long as git cherry-pick and git apply do not support -p directly)

Note: Methods like git checkout / restore -p ... do not consistently revert hunks from a specific commit but pick parts from a certain file state - possibly loosing changes in other later commits.

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