I usually submit a list of commits for review. If I have:
HEADCommit3Commit2Commit1
I know that I can modify head commit with git commit --amend, but how can I modify Commit1, given that it is not the HEAD commit?
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I usually submit a list of commits for review. If I have:
I know that I can modify head commit with |
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You can use git rebase, for example, if you want to modify back to commit
In the default editor, modify
to modify the commit, and after that
to return back to the previous head commit. WARNING: Note that this will change the SHA-1 of that commit as well as all children -- in other words, this rewrites the history from that point forward. You can break repos doing this if you push using the command |
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I solved this, 1) by creating new commit with changes i want..
2) i know which commit i need to merge with it. which is commit 3. so, 3) in interactive rebase recent commit will located at bottom. it will looks alike,
4) here we need to rearrange commit if you want to merge with specific one. it should be like,
after rearrange you need to replace and then save your tree. now merge done with existing commit.
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For me it was for removing some credentials from a repo. I tried rebasing and ran into a ton of seemingly unrelated conflicts along the way when trying to rebase --continue. Don't bother attempting to rebase yourself, use the tool called BFG (brew install bfg) on mac. |
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Run:
each Using Vim you change the words Each commit message you have to save and quit( If you want to exit without applying the changes, press EDIT: to navigate in UPDATE: Here's a great link from github listing How to undo (almost) anything with git |
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If for some reason you don't like interactive editors, you can use Say you want to modify
Second, grab
Now, amend your changes, creating
And finally, after having stashed any other changes, transplant the rest of your commits up to
Read: "rebase, onto the branch Remember to clean up your branches!
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Came to this approach (and it is probably exactly the same as using interactive rebase) but for me it's kind of straightforward. Note: I present this approach for the sake of illustration of what you can do rather than an everyday alternative. Since it has many steps (and possibly some caveats.) Say you want to change commit
Checkout to this commit and create a
You will now have something like this:
Stage changes, stash everything else.
Commit changes and checkout back to
You will now have something like this:
Rebase
And you end up with:
Git will not duplicate (although I can't really say to what extent) the 0 commit when rebasing. Note: all commit hashes are changed starting from the commit we originally intended to change. |
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Use the awesome interactive rebase:
Find the commit you want, change
The latter is useful for doing more complex stuff like splitting into multiple commits. Then, run Note: Read more about rewriting history in the Git docs. Don't be afraid to rebaseProTip™: Don't be afraid to experiment with "dangerous" commands that rewrite history* — Git doesn't delete your commits for 90 days by default; you can find them in the reflog:
* Watch out for options like On many systems, |
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Interactive rebase with From the documentation:
Assume you have a history that looks like this:
and you have changes that you want to amend to Commit2 then commit your changes using
alternatively you can use the commit-sha instead of the commit message, so Then initiate an interactive rebase on the commit before
your editor will open with the commits already correctly ordered
all you need to do is save and exit |
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