1089

The answers to How to modify existing, unpushed commits? describe a way to amend previous commit messages that haven't yet been pushed upstream. The new messages inherit the timestamps of the original commits. This seems logical, but is there a way to also re-set the times?

3

30 Answers 30

1176

You can do an interactive rebase and choose edit for the commit whose date you would like to alter. When the rebase process stops for amending the commit you type in for instance:

git commit --amend --date="Wed Feb 16 14:00 2011 +0100" --no-edit

P.S. --date=now will use the current time.

Afterward, you continue your interactive rebase.

To change the commit date instead of the author date:

GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="Wed Feb 16 14:00 2011 +0100" git commit --amend --no-edit

The lines above set an environment variable GIT_COMMITTER_DATE which is used in amending commit.

Everything is tested in Git Bash.

15
  • 23
    @nschum --date="" and --data"non-date-text" all yield the same, taking the date of now. Nov 18, 2011 at 9:34
  • 16
    on git version 1.7.7.1 using --date="now" gives fatal: invalid date format: now
    – Aragorn
    Jan 10, 2012 at 17:58
  • 9
    When the commit whose date you want to change is the most recent commit, you don't have to do the rebase, you can just do the git commit --amend
    – Eponymous
    May 2, 2012 at 13:09
  • 7
    Instead of export GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="", try unset GIT_COMMITTER_DATE. May 30, 2012 at 13:39
  • 2
    I'm using --no-edit so that you can use in automated scripts! + var fixedDate = strftime(new Date(), "%c"); + var result = shelljs.exec("git commit --amend --date=\"" + fixedDate + "\" --no-edit"); Feb 20, 2016 at 0:19
650
+50

Use git filter-branch with an env filter that sets GIT_AUTHOR_DATE and GIT_COMMITTER_DATE for the specific hash of the commit you're looking to fix.

This will invalidate that and all future hashes.

Example:

If you wanted to change the dates of commit 119f9ecf58069b265ab22f1f97d2b648faf932e0, you could do so with something like this:

git filter-branch --env-filter \
    'if [ $GIT_COMMIT = 119f9ecf58069b265ab22f1f97d2b648faf932e0 ]
     then
         export GIT_AUTHOR_DATE="Fri Jan 2 21:38:53 2009 -0800"
         export GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="Sat May 19 01:01:01 2007 -0700"
     fi'
17
  • 7
    See "DATE FORMATS" kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-commit.html
    – Dustin
    Mar 14, 2013 at 21:31
  • 11
    That found the correct value, but just setting those variables didn't actually seem to affect the date of the old commit.
    – IQAndreas
    May 10, 2014 at 20:17
  • 49
    What do you mean by "This will invalidate that and all future hashes."?
    – EpicDavi
    May 12, 2014 at 12:13
  • 25
    EpicDavi: It means that you will have to force push to any remote repository, and anyone who has pulled the commit or any future commits will have to reset and pull, or delete and clone from scratch. As far as I know, there is no method that gets around this.
    – EriF89
    Sep 9, 2014 at 9:12
  • 8
    Just as a note for beginners, the short hash does not work in the if statement, use the long SHA-1 Mar 19, 2019 at 15:57
455

A better way to handle all of these suggestions in one command is

LC_ALL=C GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="$(date)" git commit --amend --no-edit --date "$(date)"

This will set the last commit's commit and author date to "right now."

10
  • 23
    This works great to edit specific commits during an interactive rebase. Dec 9, 2013 at 1:21
  • 18
    It seems that Git isn't locale-aware of date format, so to be completely correct, you'll have to make it something like this: LANG= GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="`date`" git commit --amend --date "`date`" May 27, 2015 at 19:53
  • 17
    you can also just do --date "now". Git >= 2 will interpret that.
    – wisbucky
    Mar 7, 2018 at 22:17
  • 15
    What does LC_ALL=C do?
    – stwykd
    May 5, 2020 at 6:25
  • 4
    @stwykd it ensures that $(date) uses a format that Git can understand, by temporarily overriding the system locale
    – pxeger
    Jul 4, 2021 at 15:09
340

Just do git commit --amend --reset-author --no-edit. For older commits, you can do an interactive rebase and choose edit for the commit whose date you want to modify.

git rebase -i <ref>

Then amend the commit with --reset-author and --no-edit to change the author date to the current date:

git commit --amend --reset-author --no-edit

Finally continue with your interactive rebase:

git rebase --continue
8
  • 8
    good call on using --reset-author, it's new in git 1.6.6 (ref gitlog.wordpress.com/2010/01/13/git-1-6-6 )
    – Tim Abell
    Aug 25, 2015 at 12:57
  • 2
    This works nicely to make Github show the commits of a rebased PR in the correct order, since they order them by timestamp and without this trick, the timestamps may all be the same. Mar 2, 2017 at 9:32
  • 10
    note --reset-author will reset both the Author and the Author Date to now.
    – wisbucky
    Mar 8, 2018 at 0:22
  • 2
    will this change the "COMMITTER DATE" at the same time? Apr 16, 2020 at 14:48
  • @luochen1990 no, this does not change the committer date, this only changes the author date
    – ehab
    Oct 24, 2020 at 9:44
213

I wrote a script and Homebrew package for this. Super easy to install, you can find it on GitHub PotatoLabs/git-redate page.

Syntax:

git redate -c 3

You just have to run git redate and you'll be able to edit all the dates in vim of the most recent 5 commits (there's also a -c option for how many commits you want to go back, it just defaults to 5). Let me know if you have any questions, comments, or suggestions!

enter image description here

16
  • 5
    Great stuff, even though I had to use vim rather than nano Mar 25, 2017 at 16:51
  • Thanks @Edmund for a great script. I couldn't see the date to edit in vi after I ran git redate -c. All I see is %cI | XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | Initial commit. Could you please help? Thanks Apr 22, 2017 at 23:55
  • @KiemNguyen could you try just git redate (without the -c)?
    – bigpotato
    Apr 22, 2017 at 23:57
  • 7
    completely agree with Mina and @howdoyouturnthison here, why don't you make it editor agnostic via EDITOR environment variable? (also I'm on linux, not mac...)
    – ympostor
    Jun 21, 2017 at 10:46
  • 3
    Thanks @Edmund! Just in case, you script has a problem with handling default value for COMMITS. If it's not set, the following code applies filters just to (I guess/found) the last commit. "git filter-branch -f --env-filter "$ENVFILTER" HEAD~$COMMITS..HEAD >/dev/null" Oct 30, 2017 at 4:42
179

Each commit is associated with two dates, the committer date and the author date. You can view these dates with:

git log --format=fuller

If you want to change the author date and the committer date of the last 6 commits, you can simply use an interactive rebase :

git rebase -i HEAD~6

.

pick c95a4b7 Modification 1
pick 1bc0b44 Modification 2
pick de19ad3 Modification 3
pick c110e7e Modification 4
pick 342256c Modification 5
pick 5108205 Modification 6

# Rebase eadedca..5108205 onto eadedca (6 commands)
#
# Commands:
# p, pick = use commit
# r, reword = use commit, but edit the commit message
# e, edit = use commit, but stop for amending
# s, squash = use commit, but meld into previous commit
# f, fixup = like "squash", but discard this commit's log message
# x, exec = run command (the rest of the line) using shell
# d, drop = remove commit

For all commits where you want to change the date, replace pick by edit (or just e), then save and quit your editor.

You can now amend each commit by specifying the author date and the committer date in ISO-8601 format:

GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="2017-10-08T09:51:07" git commit --amend --date="2017-10-08T09:51:07"

The first date is the commit date, the second one is the author date.

Then go to the next commit with :

git rebase --continue

Repeat the process until you amend all your commits. Check your progression with git status.

7
  • 1
    I followed this and ended up on a 'detatched head'!
    – Simon H
    Apr 3, 2017 at 6:16
  • 11
    This is the best and the easiest answer. Small tip: use --no-edit in git commit --amend --no-edit --date=2017-10-08T09:51:07 to keep the old commit message. Apr 16, 2018 at 11:16
  • 2
    You might also want to update GIT_COMMITTER_DATE as described here eddmann.com/posts/…
    – smihael
    Apr 26, 2018 at 16:11
  • 2
    @smihael Thanks for the link. I've included your suggestion in my answer. Jul 31, 2018 at 19:57
  • 2
    Great answer due to git log --format=fuller and the ability to change both dates in one command. Feb 23, 2020 at 10:08
133
git commit --amend --date="now"
2
  • 3
    Thanks! Works great, although it works only for the most recent commit.
    – banan3'14
    Mar 7, 2022 at 15:00
  • This is perfect for when squashing multiple commits into a single one, that always leaves the last commit's date, thanks! Jan 25 at 11:42
113

How to Edit Multiple Commit Dates

Other answers aren't very convenient for editing several commit dates. I've come back to this question after a few years to share a technique.

To change the dates of the last 4 commits:

git rebase -i HEAD~4

Edit the rebase as follows, inserting exec lines to modify dates as needed:

pick 4ca564e Do something
exec git commit --amend --no-edit --date "1 Oct 2019 12:00:00 PDT"
pick 1670583 Add another thing
exec git commit --amend --no-edit --date "2 Oct 2019 12:00:00 PDT"
pick b54021c Add some tests
exec git commit --amend --no-edit --date "3 Oct 2019 12:00:00 PDT"
pick e8f6653 Fix the broken thing
exec git commit --amend --no-edit --date "4 Oct 2019 12:00:00 PDT"

Update (Sep. 2021):

If you want to see the original commit date in the rebase instruction list (Git 2.6+):

git config --add rebase.instructionFormat "[%ai] %s"

Then you'll see something like

pick 4f5a371f [2021-09-08 02:56:50 -0700] Add npm events
pick 67937227 [2021-09-09 03:05:42 -0700] Fixup
4
  • 1
    Is it possible to use current date/time as parameter?
    – qwerty
    Dec 8, 2019 at 18:55
  • 2
    Re. 'Is it possible to use current date/time as parameter?': "now" is understood as a valid date, so the exec lines above would become exec git commit --amend --no-edit --date "now" May 17, 2020 at 19:01
  • As a addition I wrote a bash script which combines this answer (multiple commits) with the accepted answer (filter): gist.github.com/pixelbrackets/e2c2b451b77516e69377ecb4fd6f3a0d Sep 2, 2020 at 8:19
  • for current date, you can do exec git commit --amend --reset-author --no-edit
    – sziraqui
    Feb 23, 2022 at 9:38
47

Building on theosp's answer, I wrote a script called git-cdc (for change date commit) that I put in my PATH.

The name is important: git-xxx anywhere in your PATH allows you to type:

git xxx
# here
git cdc ... 

That script is in bash, even on Windows (since Git will be calling it from its msys environment)

#!/bin/bash
# commit
# date YYYY-mm-dd HH:MM:SS

commit="$1" datecal="$2"
temp_branch="temp-rebasing-branch"
current_branch="$(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)"

date_timestamp=$(date -d "$datecal" +%s)
date_r=$(date -R -d "$datecal")

if [[ -z "$commit" ]]; then
    exit 0
fi

git checkout -b "$temp_branch" "$commit"
GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="$date_timestamp" GIT_AUTHOR_DATE="$date_timestamp" git commit --amend --no-edit --date "$date_r"
git checkout "$current_branch"
git rebase  --autostash --committer-date-is-author-date "$commit" --onto "$temp_branch"
git branch -d "$temp_branch"

With that, you can type:

git cdc @~ "2014-07-04 20:32:45"

That would reset author/commit date of the commit before HEAD (@~) to the specified date.

git cdc @~ "2 days ago"

That would reset author/commit date of the commit before HEAD (@~) to the same hour, but 2 days ago.


Ilya Semenov mentions in the comments:

For OS X you may also install GNU coreutils (brew install coreutils), add it to PATH (PATH="/usr/local/opt/coreutils/libexec/gnubin:$PATH") and then use "2 days ago" syntax.

6
  • 1
    For me this only worked with quoting the date and the time into one quote: git cdc @~ "2014-07-04 20:32:45 otherwise it would not recognize the time and hence obtain time 00:00:00 (it becomes the third argument).
    – peschü
    Nov 12, 2014 at 9:40
  • 3
    For OS X you may also install GNU coreutils (brew install coreutils), add it to PATH (PATH="/usr/local/opt/coreutils/libexec/gnubin:$PATH") and then use "2 days ago" syntax. Dec 4, 2015 at 10:26
  • 2
    @IlyaSemenov Interesting. I have included your comment in the answer for more visibility.
    – VonC
    Dec 4, 2015 at 11:47
  • I am trying to use your first example but I keep getting "fatal: invalid date format:". What date format is Mac OS X expecting?
    – user94547
    Jun 11, 2016 at 19:25
  • @usbsnowcrash not sure on mac. Does the second example "2 days ago" work?
    – VonC
    Jun 11, 2016 at 19:51
45

After reading all the answers I came up with a more succinct and convenient way of editing the date of multiple commits at once without the need of rebasing interactively:

git rebase HEAD~4 --exec "git commit --amend --no-edit --date 'now'"

It changes both the committer and author dates.

5
  • 2
    I liked your answer, I needed all local commits so I did: git rebase origin/main --exec "git commit --amend --reset-author --no-edit"
    – A1rPun
    Jun 14, 2021 at 13:48
  • Great solution. But I experience a strange issue. When I change all the dates and push it to a remote branch with git push -f -u origin bugfix and see it on Bitbucket page it still contains the previous commit dates. However it's reproducible not only with this solution but with others too. It looks like Git still holds the previous dates somewhere.
    – ka3ak
    Nov 10, 2022 at 14:14
  • 1
    @ka3ak I see a commit has 2 dates/timestamps, AuthorDate and CommitDate, which can be shown using git log --pretty=fuller command, as explained here. I guess Bitbucket shows the CommitDate instead of the AuthorDate. In this particular case I suggest using this command (where t is the date you want to set):t='2017-09-01 12:34:56'; GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="$t" git commit --amend --no-edit --date="$t". This command will change both the AuthorDate and the CommitDate. Nov 16, 2022 at 16:18
  • @PereJoanMartorell I'll try. But in the meantime I used the following approach: While being on branch bugfix I executed git checkout -b bugfix_copy; git reset bugfix; git rebase ...(change commit dates) ; git push origin +bugfix_copy:bugfix. After the last command even Bitbucket showed current time for each commit on its page. I used this approach also because I wanted to keep the branch bugfix whose commit dates would be unchanged.
    – ka3ak
    Nov 17, 2022 at 17:20
  • Contrary to what the answer claims, this does not change both committer and author dates. I wanted to edit in a change to make it so but "there are too many pending edits, please try again later." Here is an amended solution that follows the same approach: t='2023-06-01T13:12:04'; git rebase HEAD~2 --exec "GIT_COMMITTER_DATE='$t' git commit --amend --no-edit --date '$t'". Replace date string with now or whatever date you want to use instead.
    – Chrisuu
    Jun 2 at 18:59
24

To change both the author date and the commit date:

GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="Wed Sep 23 9:40 2015 +0200" git commit --amend --date "Wed Sep 23 9:40 2015 +0200"
1
  • 3
    I’d just add --no-edit to this command, to avoid changing the commit message. Good job!
    – fitojb
    Jan 1, 2022 at 1:52
24

I created this npm package to change date of old commits.

https://github.com/bitriddler/git-change-date

Sample Usage:

npm install -g git-change-date
cd [your-directory]
git-change-date

You will be prompted to choose the commit you want to modify then to enter the new date.

If you want to change a commit by specific hash run this git-change-date --hash=[hash]

3
  • I just wanted to say that this is great and worked beautifully. Thank you, you saved me a great deal of time!
    – panza
    Apr 26, 2020 at 14:35
  • 1
    @Kareem Elbahrawy I am getting following error: Please help me (Git + Windows 10) Command failed: cd C:\D\Projects\Git\xx-xx && git filter-branch -f --env-filter 'if [ $GIT_COMMIT = xxxxxx ] then export GIT_AUTHOR_DATE="Wed Jan 27 16:00:00 2021 +0530" export GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="Wed Jan 27 16:00:00 2021 +0530" fi' fatal: $GIT_COMMIT: no such path in the working tree. Use 'git <command> -- <path>...' to specify paths that do not exist locally. Feb 1, 2021 at 6:47
  • I just wanted to say that it stuck on simple count = 3 and modifying second commit. the error is stdout maxBuffer length exceeded. So I don't recommend this package. Just avoid it.
    – Alexey Sh.
    Jul 27 at 7:20
22

if it is previous last commit.

git rebase  -i HEAD~2
git commit --amend --date=now

if you already push to orgin and can force use:

git push --force 

if you can't force the push and if it is pushed, you can't change the commit! .

22

The most simple way to modify the date and time of the last commit

git commit --amend --date="12/31/2021 @ 14:00"
2
  • 3
    This changes only the AuthorDate, not the CommitDate. You can see that it does not work by typing git log --format=fuller. Jun 17, 2021 at 13:52
  • 8
    To also change the commit date after this: git rebase --committer-date-is-author-date HEAD^
    – krubo
    May 18, 2022 at 6:22
19

Here is a convenient alias that changes both commit and author times of the last commit to a time accepted by date --date:

[alias]
    cd = "!d=\"$(date -d \"$1\")\" && shift && GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=\"$d\" \
            git commit --amend --date \"$d\""

Usage: git cd <date_arg>

Examples:

git cd now  # update the last commit time to current time
git cd '1 hour ago'  # set time to 1 hour ago

Edit: Here is a more-automated version which checks that the index is clean (no uncommitted changes) and reuses the last commit message, or fails otherwise (fool-proof):

[alias]
    cd = "!d=\"$(date -d \"$1\")\" && shift && \
        git diff-index --cached --quiet HEAD --ignore-submodules -- && \
        GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=\"$d\" git commit --amend -C HEAD --date \"$d\"" \
        || echo >&2 "error: date change failed: index not clean!"
1
  • And the author change, @eold?
    – Oo'-
    Jan 28, 2022 at 12:22
19

The following bash function will change the time of any commit on the current branch.

Be careful not to use if you already pushed the commit or if you use the commit in another branch.

# rewrite_commit_date(commit, date_timestamp)
#
# !! Commit has to be on the current branch, and only on the current branch !!
# 
# Usage example:
#
# 1. Set commit 0c935403 date to now:
#
#   rewrite_commit_date 0c935403
#
# 2. Set commit 0c935403 date to 1402221655:
#
#   rewrite_commit_date 0c935403 1402221655
#
rewrite_commit_date () {
    local commit="$1" date_timestamp="$2"
    local date temp_branch="temp-rebasing-branch"
    local current_branch="$(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)"

    if [[ -z "$date_timestamp" ]]; then
        date="$(date -R)"
    else
        date="$(date -R --date "@$date_timestamp")"
    fi

    git checkout -b "$temp_branch" "$commit"
    GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="$date" git commit --amend --date "$date"
    git checkout "$current_branch"
    git rebase "$commit" --onto "$temp_branch"
    git branch -d "$temp_branch"
}
4
  • 1
    You have a bug in there: if [[ -z "$commit" ]] -> if [[ -z "$date_timestamp" ]]
    – blueFast
    Apr 14, 2016 at 8:31
  • Nice! I would recommend setting GIT_COMMITTER_DATE= at the end of the method to prevent any further manual commits to keep the date specified.
    – scharette
    Sep 26, 2019 at 17:56
  • @loopkin, GIT_COMMITTER_DATE is set just for the "git commit" command so no need to clear it afterwards
    – nimrodm
    Apr 26, 2020 at 5:05
  • @nimrodm, I just tested again and you are correct. Thanks for pointing that out.
    – scharette
    Apr 27, 2020 at 13:44
14

Information from July 2022:

This one working amazing with current timestamp:

git commit --amend --date=now --no-edit

And this one - with any date format:

git commit --amend --date="Mon Jul 25 10:37:36 2022 +0300" --no-edit
11

If you want to get the exact date of another commit (say you rebase edited a commit and want it to have the date of the original pre-rebase version):

git commit --amend --date="$(git show -s --format=%ai a383243)"

This corrects the date of the HEAD commit to be exactly the date of commit a383243 (include more digits if there are ambiguities). It will also pop up an editor window so you can edit the commit message.

That's for the author date which is what you care for usually - see other answers for the committer date.

0
11

If commit not yet pushed then I can use something like that:

git commit --amend --date=" Wed Mar 25 10:05:44 2020 +0300"

after that git bash opens editor with the already applied date so you need just to save it by typing in the VI editor command mode ":wq" and you can push it

2
  • 2
    Just adding to the nice answer: if you don't want to edit the commit message (if you just want to change the commit date), use the --no-edit option. Jan 15, 2020 at 1:53
  • Also, if the commit has already been pushed, you can still push the changed commit using git push -f (forced update). That may have side effects, though. (especially if many people have local clones of the repository) Jan 15, 2020 at 1:56
9

Set the date of the last commit to the current date

GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="$(date)" git commit --amend --no-edit --date "$(date)"

Set the date of the last commit to an arbitrary date

GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="Mon 20 Aug 2018 20:19:19 BST" git commit --amend --no-edit --date "Mon 20 Aug 2018 20:19:19 BST"

Set the date of an arbitrary commit to an arbitrary or current date

Rebase to before said commit and stop for amendment:

  1. git rebase <commit-hash>^ -i
  2. Replace pick with e (edit) on the line with that commit (the first one)
  3. quit the editor (ESC followed by :wq in VIM)
  4. Either:
  • GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="$(date)" git commit --amend --no-edit --date "$(date)"
  • GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="Mon 20 Aug 2018 20:19:19 BST" git commit --amend --no-edit --date "Mon 20 Aug 2018 20:19:19 BST"

Source: https://codewithhugo.com/change-the-date-of-a-git-commit/

8

If you want to perform the accepted answer (https://stackoverflow.com/a/454750/72809) in standard Windows command line, you need the following command:

git filter-branch -f --env-filter "if [ $GIT_COMMIT = 578e6a450ff5318981367fe1f6f2390ce60ee045 ]; then export GIT_AUTHOR_DATE='2009-10-16T16:00+03:00'; export GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=$GIT_AUTHOR_DATE; fi"

Notes:

  • It may be possible to split the command over multiple lines (Windows supports line splitting with the carret symbol ^), but I didn't succeed.
  • You can write ISO dates, saving a lot of time finding the right day-of-week and general frustration over the order of elements.
  • If you want the Author and Committer date to be the same, you can just reference the previously set variable.

Many thanks go to a blog post by Colin Svingen. Even though his code didn't work for me, it helped me find the correct solution.

7

For those using Powershell

git rebase DESIRED_REF^ -i

$commitDateString = "2020-01-22T22:22:22"
$env:GIT_COMMITTER_DATE = $commitDateString
git commit --amend --date $commitDateString
$env:GIT_COMMITTER_DATE = ""

git rebase --continue

Credit to https://mnaoumov.wordpress.com/2012/09/23/git-change-date-of-commit/

6

For updating the date of the 5 last commits to the current date (this method doesn't allow to update the initial commit):

git rebase HEAD~5 --exec "git commit --amend --no-edit --date 'now'"

For all commits after commit 95f5074…15074db2:

git rebase 95f5074…15074db2 --exec "git commit --amend --no-edit --date 'now'"

For all commits (including the initial commit):

git rebase --root --exec "git commit --amend --no-edit --date 'now'"

Add -i for the interactive mode.

Run git log --format=fuller --show-signature to validate the changes.

Run git push -f to update the remote repository (⚠️Danger zone)

There are implications. For instance:

  • Commit IDs will change, so you will have to recreate tags
  • You will lose original signatures
  • This will use your .gitconfig, this means your key will be used for signing commits (if Git is configured to sign commits)
1
  • Instead of changing the date of the last 3 commits, is it possible to change the --date and env variable GIT_COMMITTER_DATE of only the THIRD commit with a single command?
    – the_RR
    Apr 8, 2022 at 18:16
5

Edit the author date and the commit date of the last 3 commits:

git rebase -i HEAD~3 --committer-date-is-author-date --exec "git commit --amend --no-edit --date=now"

The --exec command is appended after each line in the rebase and you can choose the author date with the --date=..., the committer date will be the same of author date.

2
  • I get "fatal: cannot combine apply options with merge options"
    – krubo
    May 18, 2022 at 6:26
  • Git status is clean? The command is exactly that above?
    – gfdevelop
    May 19, 2022 at 7:18
5
GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="Sun Nov 20 21:02 2022 +0530" git commit --amend --no-edit --date="Sun Nov 20 21:02 2022 +0530"
git push -f

Works everytime.

2
  • why do we need to specify the time twice?
    – Franz Wong
    Dec 16, 2022 at 4:44
  • 1
    This is my guess: there are two timestamps in git: committer date and authoring date. GIT_COMMITTER_DATE takes care of the former and --date takes care of the latter. Dec 16, 2022 at 10:11
2

I wanted to make sure that I update my code’s copyright comments at precisely midnight, and I didn’t want to risk a tiny delay with at or cron. So, I commited the code and then:

GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="Fri Jan 1 00:00:00 2021 +1000" git commit --amend --no-edit --date="Fri Jan 1 00:00:00 2021 +1000"

(Or perhaps even set the UTC offset to 0? Decisions… ) Now I can push!

Happy new year, everybody 🥳

2

In addition to Matt Montag's answer:

If you need to reset timestamp to current time after rebase command

git rebase -i HEAD~2

you can use one of these options

pick 4ca564e Do something
exec git commit --amend --no-edit --date=now
pick 1670583 Add another thing
exec git commit --amend --no-edit --reset-author

Both will work

1

There are already many great answers, but when I want to change date for multiple commits in one day or in one month, I don't find a proper answer. So I create a new script for this with explaintion, hope it will help someone:

#!/bin/bash

# change GIT_AUTHOR_DATE for commit at Thu Sep 14 13:39:41 2017 +0800
# you can change the data_match to change all commits at any date, one day or one month
# you can also do the same for GIT_COMMITTER_DATE

git filter-branch --force --env-filter '

date_match="^Thu, 14 Sep 2017 13+"              

# GIT_AUTHOR_DATE will be @1505367581 +0800, Git internal format 
author_data=$GIT_AUTHOR_DATE;                   
author_data=${author_data#@}                  
author_data=${author_data% +0800}                # author_data is 1505367581     

oneday=$((24*60*60))

# author_data_str will be "Thu, 14 Sep 2017 13:39:41 +0800", RFC2822 format
author_data_str=`date -R -d @$author_data`      

if [[ $author_data_str =~ $date_match ]];
then
    # remove one day from author_data
    new_data_sec=$(($author_data-$oneday))
    # change to git internal format based on new_data_sec
    new_data="@$new_data_sec +0800"             
    export GIT_AUTHOR_DATE="$new_data"
fi
' --tag-name-filter cat -- --branches --tags

The date will be changed:

AuthorDate: Wed Sep 13 13:39:41 2017 +0800
1

I have recently needed this and made my own script looking a lot like git-redate

However my scripts does the minimal modifications and takes a lot less time to rewrite (if you need to update) many commits as it does them all at once

change_git_history

Actually this allows to change commit messages too

Explaination:

The scripts concatenates a bunch of bash if-expression looking like so

Here are the ones modifiying the commit date

if [ "$GIT_COMMIT" = "$com_hash" ]; # com is commit
then
    export GIT_AUTHOR_DATE="$com_date";
    export GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="$com_date";
fi;

Here are the ones modifiying the commit message:

if [ true = false ]; # impossible
then
    : # pass
elif [ "$GIT_COMMIT" = "$com_hash" ];
then
    sed 's/.*/$com_msg_esc/g' # replace content with new content
else
    cat - # returns previous content
fi;

And we push all the update using

git filter-branch -f \
    --env-filter "$UPDATES" \
    --msg-filter "$MESSAGES" \
    -- "$REV"

(doc is here filter-branch man)

2
  • While this link may answer the question, it is better to include the essential parts of the answer here and provide the link for reference. Link-only answers can become invalid if the linked page changes. - From Review Jan 16, 2022 at 1:38
  • Thanks @SimasJoneliunas I've update the answer :)
    – Xiaojiba
    Jan 18, 2022 at 13:25
0

TL;DR: Matching dates + re-creating GPG signatures

(Comment/edit if you know a workaround for the stripping to preserve the original signature.)


I'll bump this old thread because a feature of signing commits has been introduced and all of these git filter-branch and likes basically strip the signatures as specified in the docs:

... If the tag has a signature attached, the signature will be stripped. It is by definition impossible to preserve signatures. ... (source: --tag-name-filter )

But it'll also break the pretty Verified badge on a GitHub commit (and in other Git hosting places if implemented in the same way), so this will fix that as well. Partially.

Afaik it's not possible to mangle a (GPG) signature through git command in a way that it also contains the date of a commit instead of the date of signing in a simple way and therefore even if the dates for authoring and commit are moved, it'll still be the present date, example:

commit <hash>
gpg: Signature made Sun 25 Jul 2021 00:00:00 PM TZ
gpg:                using TYPE key KEY
gpg: Good signature from "Signer <[email protected]>"
Author:     Author <[email protected]>
AuthorDate: Sat Jan 1 00:00:00 2000 +0000
Commit:     Author <[email protected]>
CommitDate: Sat Jan 1 00:00:00 2000 +0000

So imagine you have a repo you want to sign from a certain commit (I'll go for the root commit; not recommended if somebody else works on the repo). The documentation for git commit says it pulls data from env vars too, if present, thus we have a place to put the input to.

To retrieve the data (can be set with git commit --date=...) we can take a look at git show --format=%ad, so for a raw date string that would be:

git show --format=%ad --no-patch
# Sat Jan 1 00:00:00 2000 +0000

So we have:

  • point of start
  • raw date string for each commit
  • GIT_COMMITTER_DATE to match the dates (author -> committer)

For rebasing let's do this:

git rebase --root <branch-name> --keep-empty --interactive

which will go for the root commit of a branch <branch-name>, preserve any empty commits created with git commit -m "empty" --allow-empty and ask you which commits to modify. There you change the desired commits from pick to edit (for my case that'd be marking all of them as edit), then you'll be dropped into a detached HEAD commit and from here the fun begins.

# or "while :"
while true
do
    GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=$(git show --format=%ad --no-patch) \
        git commit --amend --gpg-sign --no-edit --allow-empty
    git rebase --continue
done

(if you do not have user.signingkey specified, use --gpg-sign=<fingerprint>)

This will go through each of the edit-marked commit, set the committer's date to match the author's date, keep any empty commit, won't touch the overall patch body and will add a signature with a date of when the command was executed.

Once you see fatal: No rebase in progress? press Ctrl-C to stop the loop and check the logs to confirm that the dates match and the signatures are present everywhere with:

git log --pretty=fuller --show-signature

If everything is okay in the logs, simply issue git push --force and you're done. Now you should see that Verified badge for each commit.

Example with a real history tree. GitHub doesn't seem to care about the signature's date (no reference anywhere), but it'll still be present in the git log.

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