I accidentally delete a file from my repo using git filter-branch:
git filter-branch -f --index-filter 'git rm --cached --ignore-unmatch images/thumb/a.JPG' HEAD
How can I undo this? Is it possible? i.e. is the file permanently deleted?
I accidentally delete a file from my repo using git filter-branch:
git filter-branch -f --index-filter 'git rm --cached --ignore-unmatch images/thumb/a.JPG' HEAD
How can I undo this? Is it possible? i.e. is the file permanently deleted?
When you use git filter-branch, a backup file is created in
refs/original/refs/heads/master
If you used the command in branch master. You can check if you have the backup in .git/refs directory. With this in mind, you can use this backup to recover your files with:
git reset --hard refs/original/refs/heads/master
fatal: Cannot do hard reset with paths., so instead I first did git reflog and found the line HEAD@{integer}: filter-branch: rewrite, then I noted down the integer and performed git reset --hard HEAD@{integer} and I was back.
git push -f after git reset --hard HEAD@{integer}
Commented
Jan 5, 2015 at 7:52
git filter-branch to remove a enormous amount of lines, from someone accidentally committing a library to our repo. So in the graph, it shows like 8000 lines of addition/deletion, I thought filter-branch was was gonna rewrite. And the graph would update, but it didn't. It doubled all the lines. Will doing this bring the line count to the old state? or double it again?!
Commented
Apr 23, 2015 at 16:31
Probably a more proper way than just doing hard reset to the original master would be to restore all refs rewritten by git filter-branch, and maybe even delete backup refs afterwards in order to be able to invoke git filter-branch again without --force:
for orig_ref in $(git for-each-ref --format="%(refname)" refs/original/); do
git update-ref "${orig_ref#refs/original/}" $orig_ref
git update-ref -d $orig_ref # to also remove backup refs
done
And after that:
git reset --hard master
Here's (arguably) a bit more git'ish way to perform the same without a shell for-loop:
git for-each-ref --format="update %(refname:lstrip=2) %(objectname)" refs/original/ | git update-ref --stdin
git for-each-ref --format="delete %(refname) %(objectname)" refs/original/ | git update-ref --stdin
git fetch . +refs/original/*:* ?
Commented
Jun 30, 2016 at 19:52
A much cleaner solution is given in this answer by @jthill.
git fetch . +refs/original/*:*
As noted in that answer you may need to detach the HEAD if the currently checked out branch is to be restored.
To delete the refs/original refs, issue:
git for-each-ref refs/original --format='delete %(refname) %(objectname)' | git update-ref --stdin