I've accidentally run the command against the wrong branch in my repository - is there a way to undo this change?
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3After reading the documentation for reset based on the advice below, git reset --hard head~1 solved it for me. – blueberryfields Sep 7 '10 at 20:47
git revert
just creates a new commit -- you can "remove" it with git reset --hard HEAD^
(be more careful with it, though!)
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2Be careful with
git reset --hard HEAD^
as it will remove any uncommited changes. – Jeremen Feb 7 '16 at 3:28 -
1If you do a
git stash
beforegit reset --hard HEAD^
you can "save" your uncommited changes. After thegit reset --hard HEAD^
do agit stash pop
to reload the uncommited changes into the current branch. – kukko Nov 28 '16 at 9:31
The command git revert
just creates a commit that undoes another. You should be able to run git revert HEAD
again and it'll undo your previous undo and add another commit for that. Or you could do git reset --hard HEAD~
. But be careful with that last one as it erases data.
HEAD~
means the commit before the current HEAD
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5No, it does not erase data. It just moves your branch pointer. The previous commit still exists, and you can see its ID by looking at
git reflog
(f.ex.). It will get garbage-collected in two months (default configuration), but you can turn off automatic garbage collection, and then every single commit you ever made will exist forever in that repository. They just aren't reachable via branches. But you can always find them usinggit fsck
, and I’ve posted a recipe for browsing all commits that uses that. – Aristotle Pagaltzis Sep 8 '10 at 6:31
How about reverting the revert?
View git log and get the hash tag of the bad revert:
git log -5
Then do reverse the revert itself:
git revert
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5
If you were prescient enough to have done this: revert --no-commit master
, you can abort that with: git revert --abort
per the git status
advice:
$ git status
On branch master
Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/master'.
You are currently reverting commit dcc7c46.
(all conflicts fixed: run "git revert --continue")
(use "git revert --abort" to cancel the revert operation)