I want to get the latest file that's in the repository, and overwrite what I have locally. How can I do this with the git client?
7 Answers
If you want to overwrite only one file:
git fetch
git checkout origin/main <filepath>
If you want to overwrite all changed files:
git fetch
git reset --hard origin/main
(This assumes that you're working on main
locally and you want the changes on the origin's main
- if you're on a branch, or your project uses the old master
main branch name rather than main
, substitute that in instead.)
-
This did the opposite. It overwrote the repository with my local files erroneously.– C_RodCommented Dec 1, 2016 at 0:16
-
2
git fetch git reset --hard origin/master
or/<branch name>
Commented Jun 13, 2017 at 10:43 -
3Not sure what @C_Rod did, but this cannot possibly affect the repository Commented Jun 25, 2019 at 15:18
-
Simplest version, assuming you're working on the same branch that the file you want is on:
git checkout path/to/file
.
I do this so often that I've got an alias set to gc='git checkout'
.
-
5Simple, elegant, and does the job. Just remember to 'git fetch' before. Commented Jul 28, 2017 at 22:23
-
6
git checkout path/to/file
worked for me. Also, I found this diagram to be very useful to understand conceptually whatgit checkout
is doing. link Commented Aug 22, 2017 at 23:00 -
After using this solution, attempting
git pull
results inYour local changes to the following files would be overwritten by merge: path/to/file
and the merge does not occur. How to completegit pull
so that this threatened overwrite finally happens?– CephCommented Sep 21, 2022 at 12:16
This worked for me:
git reset HEAD <filename>
-
I saw quite a few different solutions but this one is the most effective one, thanks Commented Apr 22, 2020 at 15:16
-
1
-
Unstaged changes after reset: filename.txt. And nothing changed git status reports: Changes not staged for commit: filename.txt– GML-VSCommented Jul 1, 2022 at 12:56
I believe what you are looking for is "git restore".
The easiest way is to remove the file locally, and then execute the git restore command for that file:
$ rm file.txt
$ git restore file.txt
-
2
Full sync has few tasks:
- reverting changes
- removing new files
- get latest from remote repository
git reset HEAD --hard
git clean -f
git pull origin master
Or else, what I prefer is that, I may create a new branch with the latest from the remote using:
git checkout origin/master -b <new branch name>
origin is my remote repository reference, and master is my considered branch name. These may different from yours.
if you want to override all your local changes with specific branch then u can do
git reset --hard origin/feature/branchname
feature/branchname -> is my branch name by which I replaced my all local changes
My intention to take all the changes from feature/branchname branch and commit to a branch in which I am working, the name of my branch is 'mybranch'. Then I first replaced my local changes which is I already pushed to my branch mybranch, then I have to pushed this command to my branch. Force push command is
git push --force
It will push whatever changes I got from 'feature/branchname' branch to my 'mybranch'.
After running into this problem, I finally tried git checkout --force <branch>
and it did exactly that.
-
That's what I was trying to do, thank you. Somehow I started not to be able to sync all the remote branches (deleted ones, and new ones) on my local. Does anyone know how to do this for all the existing branches on remote? The resulting branches on local would be only the active branches on remote GitHub repo. Commented Apr 28, 2022 at 7:25