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Frequently I'll have a workflow like the following:

  1. Commit changes to a group of files
  2. Commit changes to a different group of files
  3. Realize I missed some changes that belong in the first commit
  4. Curse

I can't make use of git commit --amend because it's not the most recent commit that I need to change. What's the best way to add changes to the first commit without touching the second one?

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1 Answer 1

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You can use git rebase to solve this. Run git rebase -i sha1~1 where sha1 is the commit hash of the one you want to change. Find the commit you want to change, and replace "pick" with "edit" as described in the comments of the rebase editor. When you continue from there, you can edit that commit.

Note that this will change the sha1 of that commit as well as all children -- in other words, this rewrites the history from that point forward. You can break repositories doing this, but if you haven't pushed, it's not as much of a big deal.

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  • 31
    @rspeicher: Instead of 'sha1' you might also want to check 'HEAD~N', where N is the number of commits before 'HEAD' where you want to begin your rebase. Oct 13, 2010 at 18:46
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    Have I misunderstood? It seems you actually have to select a commit before the one you want to change. If sha1 is the hash of the commit you want to change, you'd specify sha1^ on the rebase command. Otherwise, the commit to change doesn't appear in the list. Nov 9, 2013 at 0:12
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    At the end, when done amending the commit, one must run git rebase --continue to re-apply the commits that followed.
    – Artyom
    Jul 2, 2014 at 12:12
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    if you have only one file with unstaged changes that you want to commit to an old commit, the easiest way I've found is to 1) copy your file to the desktop or something 2) git stash 3) git rebase -i sha1^ 4) change pick to edit on the old commit you want to change 5) now that your workspace looks like it did during the old commit, replace the (old) file with the copy you made of the new file 6) git add path/to/file to add that file to the commit 7) git commit --amend 8) git rebase --continue to exit rebase 8) git stash pop
    – woojoo666
    Sep 11, 2014 at 22:23
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    Worked like a charm. git stash; git rebase -i sha1~1; git stash apply; git commit --amend; git rebase --continue; git push --force
    – snlehton
    May 20, 2015 at 19:44

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