I have a remote Git repository, and I need to roll back the last n
commits into cold oblivion.
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"into cold oblivion", LOL on that one, sometimes that's just where some commits should go. 😬– dbDevMar 17 at 21:40
4 Answers
You can use git revert <commit>…
for all the n commits, and then push as usual, keeping history unchanged.
Or you can "roll back" with git reset --hard HEAD~n
. If you are pushing in a public or shared repository, you may diverge and break others work based on your original branch. Git will prevent you doing so, but you can use git push -f
to force the update.
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5You can rollback to a specific commit by using:
git reset --hard [sha1]
where sha1 is the commit hash identifier.– PikachuJul 17, 2012 at 22:42 -
7You cannot use get reset --hard in a remote repository since there is no working directory. The original question only states there is a remote repo, there is no mention of a local repo.– HazokJun 13, 2013 at 7:58
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3just a note, git push -f will force push all local branches to their remotes Jan 9, 2015 at 23:26
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Please keep in mind, that using
revert
will cause your feature branches to be treated as "already" merged. That's because these branches are actually being merged. But the changes were reverted. Solution: Cherry-pick or revert the revert commit.– BenediktFeb 5, 2016 at 11:45 -
@Benedikt does the
reset --hard
also cause the feature branches to be treated as already merged? My assumption is it wouldn't (whererevert
would). Apr 9, 2016 at 12:11
elmarco is correct... his suggestion is the best for shared/public repositories (or, at least public branches). If it wasn't shared (or you're willing to disrupt others) you can also push a particular ref:
git push origin old_master:master
Or, if there's a particular commit SHA1 (say 1e4f99e in abbreviated form) you'd like to move back to:
git push origin 1e4f99e:master
Fortunately I was in a position to use Pat Notz's solution which completely removed the unwanted commit. However, initially I got the error
error: failed to push some refs to 'ssh://git@gitrepo.git'
To prevent you from losing history, non-fast-forward updates were rejected*
But adding the force (-f
) option overwrite this error
git push -f origin 52e36b294e:master
If you have direct access to the remote repo, you could always use:
git reset --soft <sha1>
This works since there is no attempt to modify the non-existent working directory. For more details please see the original answer:
How can I uncommit the last commit in a git bare repository?
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2Why would
--soft
even be necessary? You could probably do the same thing with just plaingit reset
, without the mode flag.– user456814Jun 24, 2014 at 18:37