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So I'm working on a project with other people, and there's multiple github forks being worked on. Someone just made a fix for a problem and I merged with his fork, but then I realized that I could find a better solution. I want to revert the commit I just made. I tried doing this with git revert HEAD but it gave me this error:

fatal: Commit <SHA1> is a merge but no -m option was given.

What does that mean? When I merged and committed, I did use the -m option to say "Merged with <username>".

What am I doing wrong here?

0

4 Answers 4

377

By default git revert refuses to revert a merge commit as what that actually means is ambiguous. I presume that your HEAD is in fact a merge commit.

If you want to revert the merge commit, you have to specify which parent of the merge you want to consider to be the main trunk, i.e. what you want to revert to.

Often this will be parent number one, for example if you were on master and did git merge unwanted and then decided to revert the merge of unwanted. The first parent would be your pre-merge master branch and the second parent would be the tip of unwanted.

In this case you could do:

git revert -m 1 HEAD

git cat-file -p [MERGE_COMMIT_ID] will show the parent branches in order. The first one listed would be -m 1, the second -m 2.

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  • 5
    OK thanks. I found it easier just to change the two files that were affected by the merge and then commit some of my other changes too.
    – icnhzabot
    Commented May 11, 2011 at 22:11
  • 70
    Where can I find information whether I have to use -m1 or -m2, ...? Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 8:51
  • 55
    git cat-file -p [MERGE_COMMIT_ID] will show the parent branches in order. The first one listed would be -m 1, the second -m 2. Commented Oct 12, 2016 at 5:23
  • 7
    So if I need to revert back past 10 merges (which is quite likely since git performs a merge automatically everytime I pull in changes from another developer) I have to do this for every single merge? Is this why git fans are so keen on rebasing, because revert is basically useless?
    – Neutrino
    Commented Sep 17, 2017 at 16:50
  • 3
    "what that actually means is ambiguous" - I disagree. If I'm on branch-b and merge in some commits from branch-a, this results in modified content on branch-b, and no modification on branch-a. The only sensible thing "revert" can mean in this context is "undo the modifications made to branch-b". There's zero ambiguity.
    – aroth
    Commented Dec 16, 2021 at 3:24
61

Say the other guy created bar on top of foo, but you created baz in the meantime and then merged, giving a history of

$ git lola
*   2582152 (HEAD, master) Merge branch 'otherguy'
|\  
| * c7256de (otherguy) bar
* | b7e7176 baz
|/  
* 9968f79 foo

Note: git lola is a non-standard but useful alias.

No dice with git revert:

$ git revert HEAD
fatal: Commit 2582152... is a merge but no -m option was given.

Charles Bailey gave an excellent answer as usual. Using git revert as in

$ git revert --no-edit -m 1 HEAD
[master e900aad] Revert "Merge branch 'otherguy'"
 0 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
 delete mode 100644 bar

effectively deletes bar and produces a history of

$ git lola
* e900aad (HEAD, master) Revert "Merge branch 'otherguy'"
*   2582152 Merge branch 'otherguy'
|\  
| * c7256de (otherguy) bar
* | b7e7176 baz
|/  
* 9968f79 foo

But I suspect you want to throw away the merge commit:

$ git reset --hard HEAD^
HEAD is now at b7e7176 baz

$ git lola
* b7e7176 (HEAD, master) baz
| * c7256de (otherguy) bar
|/  
* 9968f79 foo

As documented in the git rev-parse manual

<rev>^, e.g. HEAD^, v1.5.1^0
A suffix ^ to a revision parameter means the first parent of that commit object. ^<n> means the n-th parent (i.e. <rev>^ is equivalent to <rev>^1). As a special rule, <rev>^0 means the commit itself and is used when <rev> is the object name of a tag object that refers to a commit object.

so before invoking git reset, HEAD^ (or HEAD^1) was b7e7176 and HEAD^2 was c7256de, i.e., respectively the first and second parents of the merge commit.

Be careful with git reset --hard because it can destroy work.

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    It's a mixed up, muddled up, shook up world. Except for Lola. Thanks a million for this fantastic alias.
    – Barney
    Commented Jan 28, 2016 at 14:52
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    Easy way to Add lola to your git commands: git config --global alias.lola "log --graph --decorate --pretty=oneline --abbrev-commit --all"
    – D. Gibbs
    Commented Apr 28, 2020 at 16:05
10

I had this problem, the solution was to look at the commit graph (using gitk) and see that I had the following:

*   commit I want to cherry-pick (x)
|\  
| * branch I want to cherry-pick to (y)
* | 
|/  
* common parent (x)

I understand now that I want to do

git cherry-pick -m 2 mycommitsha

This is because -m 1 would merge based on the common parent where as -m 2 merges based on branch y, that is the one I want to cherry-pick to.

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    Possibly because it's not related to git-revert, which is what this question is about.
    – pnomolos
    Commented May 9, 2016 at 16:52
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    I think this question is about the -m option, not exclusively about git merge. I.e., the reasoning behind the use of the -m option would seem to be similar for reverts and cherry-picks. If that's not true, please let us know. Since I haven't found any other questions that specifically address the cherry-pick use of it, thanks for this answer, which probably led google to help me find this question and useful, relevant discussion!
    – nealmcb
    Commented Nov 30, 2017 at 15:54
  • If I understand correctly, git has no record of which branch (y) was made on; as far as it knows, your picture is symmetric: the unnamed commit on the left branch isn't any better or worse than the one on the right (y) in any way. If that's correct, how does it decide which is 1 and which is 2?
    – Don Hatch
    Commented Sep 29, 2020 at 20:00
3

In the original question, the '-m option' of the git error was probably mistaken to denote a commit message. As explained in the other answers, use '-m n' to specify the nth parent of the merge to pick the parent you consider to be the main trunk.

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