913

I make new branch from master with:

git checkout -b testbranch

I make 20 commits into it.

Now I want to squash those 20 commits. I do that with:

git rebase -i HEAD~20

What about if I don't know how many commits? Is there any way to do something like:

git rebase -i all on this branch
3
  • 24
    You can do git rebase -i 58333012713fc168bd70ad00d191b3bdc601fa2d wich will do an interactive rebase where the commitnumber is the last commit that stays unchanged
    – denns
    Apr 3, 2017 at 16:49
  • 2
    @denns Using this method with the last commit in the branch you are rebasing from worked fantastic. Thanks so much! Apr 16, 2020 at 17:44
  • 7
    If someone was looking for how to squash the master/main branch: git rebase -i --root master
    – schmijos
    Jan 26, 2022 at 8:51

23 Answers 23

1110

Another way to squash all your commits is to reset the index to master:


Note: Git's default branch name is still master with Git version 2.41 (Q3 2023), as seen in git init man page.
Git version 2.28 (Q3 2020) introduced configurable default branch names, which means your remote repository may optionally use another default branch name such as main. In order to provide the most universally applicable examples, as well as avoid confusion, this answer shall assume Git's default configuration.

If you need the following commands to work for any default branch, replace master with ${defaultBranch}.
And define defaultBranch=$(git config --get init.defaultBranch || echo main).


Back to the solution: (to squash all your commit) reset the index to master:

git checkout yourBranch
git reset $(git merge-base master $(git branch --show-current))
git add -A
git commit -m "one commit on yourBranch"

This isn't perfect as it implies you know from which branch "yourBranch" is coming from.
Note: finding that origin branch isn't easy/possible with Git (the visual way is often the easiest, as seen here).

Note: git branch --show-current has been introduced with Git 2.22 (Q2 2019).


Or, as noted by Hiroki Osame in the comments:

git switch yourBranch
git reset --soft $(git merge-base master HEAD)
git commit -m "one commit on yourBranch"
  • no need for git branch --show-current since HEAD is already a reference to that branch.
  • no need for git add -A, since git reset --soft only moves HEAD, and leaves the index untouched (in other words, the files are already "added").

EDIT: you will need to use git push --force (or git push --force-with-lease)
See "git push --force-with-lease vs. --force"


Karlotcha Hoa adds in the comments:

For the reset, you can do

git reset $(git merge-base master $(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)) 

[That] automatically uses the branch you are currently on.
And if you use that, you can also use an alias, as the command doesn't rely on the branch name.

33
  • 4
    Better to checkout to commit where YourBranch currently is. This will keep YourBranch intact when you do reset Apr 3, 2018 at 10:40
  • 1
    @Abdurrahim Or open a git bash, and yo can copy-paste thos commands!
    – VonC
    Jun 26, 2018 at 12:01
  • 12
    For the reset, you can do git reset $(git merge-base master $(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)) to automatically use the branch you are currently on. And if you use that, you can also use an alias, as the command doesn't rely on the branch name. Aug 3, 2018 at 20:53
  • 1
    @Druska For simlpe branching cases, no, it should work fine.
    – VonC
    Sep 21, 2018 at 14:57
  • 1
    @Shimmy yes, provided you force push after the reset: git push --force (and warn your colleagues if you are several people working on that branch)
    – VonC
    Apr 28, 2020 at 7:41
643

Checkout the branch for which you would like to squash all the commits into one commit. Let's say it's called feature_branch.

git checkout feature_branch

Step 1:

Do a soft reset of your origin/feature_branch with your local main branch (depending on your needs, you can reset with origin/main as well). This will reset all the extra commits in your feature_branch, but without changing any of your file changes locally.

git reset --soft main

Step 2:

Add all of the changes in your git repo directory, to the new commit that is going to be created. And commit the same with a message.

# Add files for the commit.
git add ...
git commit -m "commit message goes here"
14
  • 51
    This was the most reliable solution for me - not causing any rebase errors nor merge conflicts.
    – ANTARA
    Jul 27, 2018 at 12:45
  • 14
    Warning: the git add -A add EVERYTHING you have in the local folder - to the branch.
    – David H
    Aug 24, 2018 at 15:27
  • 7
    Best solution for a noob - non destructive and only oops moment may be checking in too much such as app secrets etc, which shouldn't matter if you have a proper gitignore file May 31, 2019 at 6:41
  • 10
    @BhimashankarMantur you can make it work if you push with "--force" to existing branch - because this "git reset --soft" is rewriting history. But of course you should push with "--force" only to branches which are used only by you - not shared ones - unless you notify all people which are using such branch about your force push (so they can retrieve those changes corerctly for example using: "git pull --rebase origin my-branch-name" )
    – domis86
    Apr 23, 2020 at 11:49
  • 2
    Really nice solution. As i have already uploaded my changes, i need to force push git push -f, but worked like a charme. Thanks for sharing.
    – SAM
    Mar 7, 2022 at 13:30
207

What you're doing is pretty error-prone. Just do:

git rebase -i master

which will automatically rebase only your branch's commits onto the current latest master.

8
  • 22
    Agreed this is your best solution. but follow this link as it better explains what you need to do.
    – Christo
    Aug 14, 2016 at 18:22
  • 5
    Instead of squashing commits, you could merge the branch to master and do a git reset to origin/master to unstage all commits. That would let you commit your existing unstaged code with commit -am "the whole thing!"
    – nurettin
    Sep 12, 2017 at 10:37
  • @Brian that's what I started doing afterwards.
    – nurettin
    Dec 13, 2017 at 11:43
  • 1
    This solution did not work for me. It basically broke my branch. I got a bunch of errors. error: could not apply 271a11a... Jun 16, 2022 at 14:56
  • 1
    This does not squash and also does not work in the most common use case where my current master is different than the master that the branch is from. I usually want to squash a branch so I only have to rebase one commit instead of going through conflict resolution many times. stackoverflow.com/questions/25356810/… is IMHO much more robust. Dec 6, 2023 at 18:55
183

Another simple way to do this: go on the origin branch and do a merge --squash. This command doesn't do the "squashed" commit. when you do it, all commit messages of yourBranch will be gathered.

$ git checkout master
$ git merge --squash yourBranch
$ git commit # all commit messages of yourBranch in one, really useful
 > [status 5007e77] Squashed commit of the following: ...
4
  • 4
    True. I mentioned the difference between merge --squash and rebase -i in stackoverflow.com/a/2427520/6309
    – VonC
    Sep 21, 2016 at 14:42
  • 7
    This works if you don't wanna squash into the parent branch, just create and switch to a new branch based off the parent branch and do the squash merge into that.
    – Belladonna
    Sep 22, 2016 at 16:47
  • 7
    nice! i create a "temp" branch off "master" first to squash "yourBranch" into, then merge "temp" into "master".
    – lazieburd
    Sep 25, 2019 at 16:43
  • 1
    How this is not the most voted answer. This exactly answers the question and more. First no mater what is the parent branch. Second it does what OP asked. Third It uses merge so no matter how many commits could be done on the destination branch (you wont pick a commit to rebase !). Nice tip.
    – Anddo
    Jan 17, 2023 at 22:11
73

Assuming you were branching from the master, you don't need to enter yourBranch into the reset step all the time:

git checkout yourBranch
git reset --soft HEAD~$(git rev-list --count HEAD ^master)
git add -A
git commit -m "one commit on yourBranch"

Explanation:

  • git rev-list --count HEAD ^master counts the commits since you made your feature branch from the master, f.ex. 20.
  • git reset --soft HEAD~20 will make a soft reset of the last 20 commits. This leaves your changes in the files, but removes the commits.

Usage:

In my .bash_profile I have added an alias for gisquash to do this with one command:

# squash all commits into one
alias gisquash='git reset --soft HEAD~$(git rev-list --count HEAD ^master)'

After reseting and committing you need to do a git push --force.

Hint:

If you're using Gitlab >= 11.0 you don't need to do this anymore as it has a squashing option when merging branches. Gitlab Squashing option

0
37

Solution - 1

A. Pull master into your feature branch (Make sure to update your Master)

git pull origin master  

B. Do soft reset to master

git reset --soft master

C. Commit your changes

git commit -m “commit message"

D. Do git push

git push --force  

Solution - 2

Squashing Commit using git rebase

A.

$git rebase -i HEAD~3  (HEAD~<no. of commits you want to squash>)

B. You will get one interactive prompt where you need to Pick the top commit and insert squash or s in front of those which you want to combine/squash.

Note: Make sure do changes in insert mode and save the file ; (wq in VI Editor)

C. Now you will get another interactive prompt where you need to put # in front of commits message that you don't want, and or add your own message. Again save the file and your commits will successfully rebase.

Cheers!

2
  • 1
    Solution #1 worked for me when interactive rebasing was too brutal - e.g. a really old branch with 122 commits on it. Interactive rebase was nasty, stepping through commit-by-commit on terribly old files with more conflicts than not. I wanted to just squash all the changes, rebase and then review the changes manually to see what was worth keeping, what needed to be discarded and what needed to be updated. Thanks! Dec 15, 2021 at 21:13
  • That's true. Solution 2 is handy if you have less no. of commits in the branch. May 31, 2022 at 17:42
30

Since I had some trouble with the solutions proposed here, I want to share a really simple solution (which really works regardless):

git merge origin/master && git reset --soft origin/master

The preceding merge cmd ensures, that no recent changes from master will go on your head (inverted) when committing! After that, just commit the changes and do git push -f

6
  • This approach makes a lot of sense! Merge + reset = diff then commit + push -f to change history. Love it
    – Caveman
    Jan 25, 2021 at 12:55
  • This is really simple and clear. Great job on finding this! This helped me without creating extra commits or steps like the other answers.
    – jojo
    Feb 15, 2021 at 20:02
  • which branch am I supposed to make this call from? the main branch or the feature branch?
    – salyela
    Apr 26, 2021 at 18:47
  • depending on where you want to squash your commits (usually on the feature branch)
    – seebi
    Apr 29, 2021 at 7:41
  • simple and effective without any complications
    – Tim Chosen
    Apr 19, 2022 at 9:33
25

Based on reading several Stackoverflow questions and answers on squashing, I think this is a good one liner to squash all commits on a branch:

git reset --soft $(git merge-base master YOUR_BRANCH) && git commit -am "YOUR COMMIT MESSAGE" && git rebase -i master

This is assuming master is the base branch.

1
  • 2
    Thanks a lot, company has a lot of restrictions in place and could not rebase the usual way with an editor as was not aloud to save. Also could not use squash and merge feature in git as this branch goes to Lead dev for merging and he does not like it. This 1 liner worked and saved headaches. Awesome job.
    – L1ghtk3ira
    Oct 24, 2017 at 15:25
19

How

You need to get the merge base of your branch

git merge-base master your-branch
# 566f8438e0cd0e331ceb49a9cb0920143dfb065c

Then you can rebase to it

git rebase -i 566f8438e0cd0e331ceb49a9cb0920143dfb065c
# then squash/pick/do commit messages

or just do a soft-reset and commit everything

git reset --soft 566f8438e0cd0e331ceb49a9cb0920143dfb065c
git add .
git commit -m "The only commit"

Automate

If you do this often you can automate it by putting these in your .bashrc using.

g-rebase-branch() {
  git branch --show-current | xargs git merge-base master | xargs git rebase -i
}

g-one-commit() {
  local last_commit_message=`git show -s --format=%s`
  git branch --show-current | xargs git merge-base master | xargs git reset --soft
  git add -A
  git commit -m "$last_commit_message"
  git commit --amend
}

and then do these directly in the terminal.

g-one-commit

but if you're merging against a different branch than master then you can replace master with "$1" to do this

g-one-commit staging
3
  • 1
    And don't forget to push with lease: git push --force-with-lease, or your next git pull may undo everything... Mar 28, 2023 at 17:27
  • 1
    That second solution was the best here. Thanks
    – lwdthe1
    Apr 3, 2023 at 18:41
  • For sure, it's way simpler but loses the intermediate commit messages.
    – Caveman
    Apr 4, 2023 at 8:51
12

To refine Caveman's answer a bit, use git reset --soft <commit>. From the documentation, this command:

Does not touch the index file or the working tree at all (but resets the head to <commit>, just like all modes do). This leaves all your changed files "Changes to be committed", as git status would put it.

In other words, it undoes all of your commits up to <commit>. But it does not change the working directory. You end up with all of the changes, unstaged and uncommitted. It's as if those intervening commits never happened.

Example:

# on master
git checkout -b testbranch
# make many commits
git reset --soft master
git add .
git commit -m 'The only commit.'

At this point, you're still on testbranch, which has a single commit. Merge into master as you would ordinarily do.

The first part of Caveman's answer (git rebase -i) did not in my hands squash commits.

12

In previous answers, I have not seen any information on how to deal with "messy branches" and "self conflicts". E.g. I often end up having master commits on my feature branch (call it feature) that cause conflicts against themselves. This I found to be one of the most annoying issues to deal with.

How to squash messy branches? Use a temporary branch!

I found Felix Rieseberg's solution to be the best. This is my slightly shorter transcription of his advice:

  1. Create a local tmp branch of off master
    • git checkout master && git pull && git checkout -b tmp
  2. Merge all feature changes into tmp (without any commits, only staged file changes).
    • git merge --squash $feature
  3. Manually solve all remaining "real conflicts"
    • (This is the only step you cannot have a script do for you)
  4. Commit. tmp is now master + 1 commit (containing all changes).
    • git commit ...
  5. Checkout feature and git reset --hard tmp (feature's original contents are gone, and it is now basically tmp, but renamed)
    • git checkout $feature && git reset --hard tmp
  6. Ignore and override origin/feature (then clean up)
    • git push -f && git branch -D tmp

Felix points out that this is going to produce the cleanest possible merge, without any weird self-conflicts coming from a messy/complicated relationship between master and feature:

you might be getting a smaller number of unavoidable merge conflicts. Have faith that this is the smallest possible number of conflicts as you're skipping the many in-between commits you've originally created.

2
  • You use the variable called $feature. Where did you get it from?
    – Albert
    Mar 31, 2023 at 6:19
  • @Albert its a variable representing the name of your feature branch. E.g. feature="my-branch"
    – Domi
    Mar 31, 2023 at 8:09
10

If you use JetBrains based IDE like IntelliJ Idea and prefare using GUI over command line:

  1. Go to Version control window (Alt + 9/Command + 9) - "Log" tab.
  2. Choose a point in the tree from which you created your branch
  3. Right click on it -> Reset current branch to here -> Pick Soft (!!!) (it's important for not to lose your changes)
  4. Push the Reset button in the bottom of the dialog window.

That's it. You uncommited all your changes. Now if you'll make a new commit it will be squashed

3
  • 2
    best answer if you use Android Studio, PS the branch to right click and reset is your local branch, also when recommitting again, check the "amend commit" checkbox beside the commit button, to ensure you don't have multiple commits. Jun 9, 2021 at 13:42
  • 1
    Please mention: git push --force Nov 11, 2021 at 3:11
  • After making the above comment, I forgot the most important step myself Dec 2, 2021 at 5:51
8

You can do this with subcommands ie

$ git rebase -i HEAD~$(git rev-list --count HEAD ^master)

This will run first count the commits since you diverged from master and then rebase back to that exact length.

6

Assuming you are on feature branch:

  1. Find the first commit in the feature branch. You can view it in the branch directly if you are using gitlab or github and copy the hash from there or you can use following command:

git log <source_branch>..<feature_branch> --pretty=format:%h

  1. Execute following commands:
git reset --soft <base_commit_hash>

git commit --amend --no-edit

Now at this stage, on your local, you have 1 commit which includes changes done in all the previous commits.

Review it and you need to force push it. After force push, all the changes will be combined in one commit and your branch will have only 1 commit.

  1. Force push in the feature branch
git push --force 
4
git checkout -b temp
git checkout yourbranch
git fetch
git reset --hard origin/master
git merge --squash temp
git commit -m "new message" 

most easiest way to do.

This creates a new branch , then reset your branch to base branch and then we squash the changes and creates a new commit before merging back temp branch to our branch

2

All this git reset, hard, soft, and everything else mentioned here is probably working (it didn't for me) if you do the steps correctly and some sort of a genie.
If you are the average Joe smo, try this:
How to use git merge --squash?


Saved my life, and will be my go to squash, been using this 4 times since I found out about it. Simple, clean and basically 1 comamnd. In short:


If you are on a branch lets call it "my_new_feature" off develop and your pull request has 35 commits (or however many) and you want it to be 1.

A. Make sure your branch is up to date, Go on develop, get latest and merge and resolve any conflicts with "my_new_feature"
(this step really you should take as soon as you can all the time anyway)

B. Get latest of develop and branch out to a new branch call it "my_new_feature_squashed"

C. magic is here.
You want to take your work from "my_new_feature" to "my_new_feature_squashed"
So just do (while on your new branch we created off develop):
git merge --squash my_new_feature

All your changes will now be on your new branch, feel free to test it, then just do your 1 single commit, push, new PR of that branch - and wait for repeat the next day.
Don't you love coding? :)

2

You can use tool I've created specifically for this task:

https://github.com/sheerun/git-squash

Basically you need to call git squash master and you're done

2

The shortest way to squash commits done since master on the current branch is:

git rebase -i master

If you want to squash1 all commits into one and your Git editor is Vim2, then issue this Vim command:

:2,$s/pick/fixup/

Then save and quit (:wq) Vim.


1 fixup means to discard additional commit messages of squashed commits. To be able to further process commit messages of squashed commits, replace it with squash.

2 You can switch your editor just for the single command by setting the EDITOR environment variable:

EDITOR=vim git rebase -i master
1
  • Neat Vim/Ex solution. May 31, 2023 at 10:50
1

Another solution would be to save all commit logs to a file

git log > branch.log

Now branch.log will have all commit ids since beginning.. scroll down and take the first commit (this will be difficult in terminal) using the first commit

git reset --soft

all commits will be squashed

1

I know this question is already answered but I went and wrote a bash function around the accepted answer to allow you to do it in one command. It starts by creating a backup branch in case the squash fails for some reason. Then squashes and commits.

# Squashes every commit starting after the given head of the given branch.
# When the squash is done, it will prompt you to commit the squash.
# The head of the given parent branch must be a commit that actually exists
# in the current branch.
#
# This will create a backup of the current branch before it performs the squash.
# The name of the backup is the second argument to this function.
#
# Example: $ git-squash master my-current-branch-backup
git-squash() {
  PARENT_BRANCH=$1
  BACKUP_BRANCH=$2

  CURRENT_BRANCH=$(git branch --show-current)

  git branch $BACKUP_BRANCH
  BACKUP_SUCCESS=$?

  if [ $BACKUP_SUCCESS -eq 0 ]; then
    git reset $(git merge-base $PARENT_BRANCH $CURRENT_BRANCH)
    git add -A
    git commit
    echo "Squashed $CURRENT_BRANCH. Backup of original created at $BACKUP_BRANCH$"
  else
    echo "Could not create backup branch. Aborting squash"
  fi
}
0

Git reset, as mentioned in many answers before, is by far the best and simplest way to achieve what you want. I use it in the following workflow:

(on development branch)

git fetch
git merge origin/master  #so development branch has all current changes from master
git reset origin/master  #will show all changes from development branch to master as unstaged
git gui # do a final review, stage all changes you really want
git commit # all changes in a single commit
git branch -f master #update local master branch
git push origin master #push it
0

The only generic solution I found so far.

git reset $(git reflog show --no-abbrev $(git branch --show-current) | grep "branch: Created from" | awk '{print $1;}')
git add .
git commit -m "Squashed commit"
-1

In case you are okay with an answer involving another branch, try git checkout --orphan <new_branch> It allowed me to simply commit ALL files from previous branch as one commit.

This is something like a git merge squash but not quite the same.

2
  • This seems to squash the entire repository rather than just the current branch.
    – yohosuff
    Mar 1, 2022 at 23:21
  • This is the most ingenious solution. Don't take me wrong, it is so dumb but it is also so genial!!! It has to be rebased onto the branch you want to merge afterward. Nevertheless, it is just the simplest of all solutions. Kudos!!! Aug 30, 2023 at 18:40

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