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I have a git repo with multiple submodules. One of those submodules has multiple submodules of it's own. All I'm looking to do is check out an old commit on the master repo and have it checkout the appropriate commits from all submodules to get the correct state of the code at that time.

I know that git contains the information necessary as the ls-tree command can tell me which commit each submodule was on. However, I have to manually check out each one, which is painfully time consuming.

I'm looking for something like git checkout --recursive but such a command doesn't seem to exist.

Is there anyway to do this?

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  • 4
    Note: git checkout --recurse-submodules actually exists nowadays (2017). But only the upcoming Git 2.14 will make it work properly. See my answer below.
    – VonC
    May 29, 2017 at 19:52

3 Answers 3

66

You need two commands to achieve this:

git checkout *oldcommit*
git submodule update --recursive

Update: This answer is outdated as of 2018 – see VonC's answer below for more current information.

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  • 2
    Thanks so much! Of course it turned out to be something simple.
    – Ben Baron
    Feb 27, 2013 at 23:34
  • 1
    Can anyone clarify the difference between checkout --recurse-submodules and submodule update --recursive?
    – Lii
    Mar 21, 2019 at 10:36
  • Is there a one line equivalent of this? Sep 6, 2019 at 11:17
  • I found with von c's answer it did not correctly checkout all the submodules, git status showed modifications. With yours it did update the whole tree properly. git v2.24.3 Mar 19, 2021 at 23:57
57

Note: if you have multiple submodules (and submodules inside submodules), Git 2.14 (Q3 2017) will help (more recent that the OP from 2013)

git checkout --recurse-submodules

Using --recurse-submodules will update the content of all initialized submodules according to the commit recorded in the superproject.
If local modifications in a submodule would be overwritten the checkout will fail unless -f is used.

"git checkout --recurse-submodules" did not quite work with a submodule that itself has submodules. It will with Git 2.14.


Note: with Git 2.19 (Q3 2018), git checkout --recurse-submodules another-branch is more robust.
Before, it did not report in which submodule it failed to update the working tree, which resulted in an unhelpful error message.

See commit ba95d4e (20 Jun 2018) by Stefan Beller (stefanbeller).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster -- in commit 392b3dd, 24 Jul 2018)

submodule.c: report the submodule that an error occurs in

When an error occurs in updating the working tree of a submodule in submodule_move_head, tell the user which submodule the error occurred in.

The call to read-tree contains a super-prefix, such that the read-tree will correctly report any path related issues, but some error messages do not contain a path, for example:

~/gerrit$ git checkout --recurse-submodules origin/master
~/gerrit$ fatal: failed to unpack tree object 07672f31880ba80300b38492df9d0acfcd6ee00a

Give the hint which submodule has a problem.

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  • I don't understand why -f is always necessary. Without -f it does not update the submodules.
    – linquize
    Aug 6, 2017 at 5:31
  • @linquize -f should be necessary only if you have any local modification in the submodule.
    – VonC
    Aug 6, 2017 at 5:38
  • Can anyone clarify the difference between checkout --recurse-submodules and submodule update --recursive?
    – Lii
    Mar 21, 2019 at 10:36
  • @Lii The sumodule update part (git-scm.com/docs/git-submodule#Documentation/…) will use the config submodule.<name>.update (git-scm.com/docs/git-config#Documentation/…). git checkout --recurse-submodule will not.
    – VonC
    Mar 21, 2019 at 11:11
  • @Lii The other difference is: checkout --recurse-submodule will update your parent repo and the submodules, while submodule update --recursive will only impact the submodule working trees, and not update the parent working tree.
    – VonC
    Mar 21, 2019 at 11:14
18

Depending on whether or not there are more submodules in the old checkout, you might have to do the following to initialize submodules that are not there any more in new commits:

git checkout *oldcommit*
git submodule init
git submodule update --recursive
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