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I did a git stash pop and now I have a ton of conflicts. I had committed all my recent code before the git stash pop, so is there a way to go back to the last commit and get rid of all the conflicts and code the git stash pop injected?

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  • 1
    Do you still want the popped work saved, or do you never want to see it again?
    – jscs
    Nov 18, 2013 at 0:27
  • 2
    No I don't want the Popped work. I did the stash like 4 months ago and not sure what is even in there?
    – jdog
    Nov 18, 2013 at 0:28
  • 2
    Do you care about things that were uncommitted before stashing? Nov 18, 2013 at 0:37
  • The ones 4 months ago or the ones today? I want what I had a hour ago.
    – jdog
    Nov 18, 2013 at 0:39
  • 7
    If there are conflicts when you git stash then git will not drop the stash from the list. So git reset --hard HEAD does not destroy the popped work.
    – jwadsack
    Apr 22, 2014 at 4:27

3 Answers 3

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This has already been asked and answered on stackoverflow (see How to revert Git repository to a previous commit?), but the simple answer is:

git reset --hard HEAD

This should take care of your problem. Note that this removes all uncommitted changes from the repository.

Note that if there are conflicts, the stash is preserved. From the stash docs:

Applying the state can fail with conflicts; in this case, it is not removed from the stash list. You need to resolve the conflicts by hand and call git stash drop manually afterwards.

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    This will revert your local repo to the last commit. You should be able to push all of your commits (since the last push) without issue. If it does not work, then post the results back to your previous question). Good luck. Nov 18, 2013 at 0:41
  • 31
    But this will get your stash lost
    – K. Weber
    Feb 23, 2015 at 11:12
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    @K.Weber if git stash pop resulting in conflict, the stash won't be deleted from stash list.
    – Daiwei
    Jan 21, 2016 at 22:09
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    I'm not sure who's upvoting the 'actually you won't lose your stash', I just lost mine
    – Anthony
    Jan 17, 2017 at 18:58
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    Not much of a solution imho, since it points out that you will lose uncommited changes.
    – Ivan P
    Apr 5, 2017 at 17:05
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Reset can also be called on specific files :

git reset HEAD <filename>...

You can't hard reset a file though. But you can revert the changes with checkout afterwards :

git checkout -- <filename>...

You stash will be preserved, as pointed out by Luke in MichaelMilom answer.

This is useful when you don't want to lose your un-committed local changes.

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If you never want to see the work in the popped stash again, this is as simple as a hard reset:

git reset --hard HEAD

This tells git to ignore the fact that you have uncommitted changes in your working directory, and sets the working directory, the staging area, and head to the commit you specify -- in this case, the existing HEAD, that contains all the work you've just committed.

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