I accidentally committed the wrong files to Git, but didn't push the commit to the server yet.
How do I undo those commits from the local repository?
I accidentally committed the wrong files to Git, but didn't push the commit to the server yet.
How do I undo those commits from the local repository?
OP: How do I undo the most recent local commits in Git? I accidentally committed the wrong files [as part of several commits].
There are several ways to "undo" as series of commits, depending on the outcome you're after. Considering the start case below, reset
, rebase
and filter-branch
can all be used to rewrite your history.
How can C1 and C2 be undone to remove the tmp.log
file from each commit?
In the examples below, absolute commit references are used, but it works the same way if you're more used to relative references (i.e. HEAD~2
or HEAD@{n}
).
reset
$ git reset --soft t56pi
With reset
, a branch can be reset to a previous state, and any compounded changes be reverted to the Staging Area, from where any unwanted changes can then be discarded.
Note: As reset
clusters all previous changes into the Staging Area, individual commit meta-data is lost. If this is not OK with you, chances are you're probably better off with rebase
or filter-branch
instead.
rebase
$ git rebase --interactive t56pi
Using an interactive rebase
each offending commit in the branch can be rewritten, allowing you to modify and discard unwanted changes. In the infographic above, the source tree on the right illustrates the state post rebase
.
Step-by-step
t56pi
)pick
with edit
. Save and close.HEAD
, remove the unwanted files, and create brand new commits.Note: With rebase
much of the commit meta data is kept, in contrast to the reset
alternative above. This is most likely a preferred option, if you want to keep much of your history but only remove the unwanted files.
filter-branch
$ git filter-branch --tree-filter 'rm -r ./tmp.log' t56pi..HEAD
Above command would filter out the file ./tmp.log
from all commits in the desired range t56pi..HEAD
(assuming our initial start case from above). See below illustration for clarity.
Similar to rebase
, filter-branch
can be used to wipe unwanted files from a subsection of a branch. Instead of manually editing each commit through the rebase process, filter-branch
can automatically preformed the desired action on each commit.
Note: Just like rebase
, filter-branch
would preserve the rest of the commit meta-data, by only discarding the desired file. Notice how C1 and C2 have been rewritten, and the log-file discarded from each commit.
Just like anything related to software development, there are multiple ways to achieve the same (or similar) outcome for a give problem. You just need to pick the one most suitable for your particular case.
Do note that all three alternatives above rewrites the history completely. Unless you know exactly what you're doing and have good communication within your team - only rewrite commits that have not yet been published remotely!
Source: All examples above are borrowed from this blog.
You can undo your commits from the local repository. Please follow the below scenario.
In the below image I check out the 'test' branch (using Git command git checkout -b test
) as a local and check status (using Git command git status
) of local branch that there is nothing to commit.
In the next image image you can see here I made a few changes in Filter1.txt and added that file to the staging area and then committed my changes with some message (using Git command git commit -m "Doing commit to test revert back"
).
"-m is for commit message"
In the next image you can see your commits log whatever you have made commits (using Git command git log
).
So in the above image you can see the commit id with each commit and with your commit message now whatever commit you want to revert back or undo copy that commit id and hit the below Git command,
git revert {"paste your commit id"}
. Example:
git revert 9ca304ed12b991f8251496b4ea452857b34353e7
I have reverted back my last commit. Now if you check your Git status, you can see the modified file which is Filter1.txt and yet to commit.
Here is site: Oh shit, git!
.
Here are many recipes how to undo things in Git. Some of them:
Oh shit, I need to change the message on my last commit!
git commit --amend
# follow prompts to change the commit message
Oh shit, I accidentally committed something to master that should have been on a brand new branch!
# Create a new branch from the current state of master
git branch some-new-branch-name
# Remove the commit from the master branch
git reset HEAD~ --hard
git checkout some-new-branch-name
# Your commit lives in this branch now :)
The simplest way to undo the last commit is
git reset HEAD^
This will bring the project state before you have made the commit.
For sake of completeness, I will give the one glaringly obvious method that was overlooked by the previous answers.
Since the commit was not pushed, the remote was unchanged, so:
This is sometimes necessary if your fancy Git client goes bye-bye (looking at you, egit).
Don't forget to re-commit your saved changes since the last push.
I have found this site which describes how to undo things that you have committed into the repository.
Some commands:
git commit --amend # Change last commit
git reset HEAD~1 --soft # Undo last commit
Reference: How to undo last commit in Git?
If you have Git Extensions installed you can easily undo/revert any commit (you can download Git Extensions from here).
Open Git Extensions, right click on the commit you want to revert then select "Revert commit".
A popup will be opened (see the screenshot below)
Select "Automatically create a commit" if you want to directly commit the reverted changes or if you want to manually commit the reverted changes keep the box un-selected and click on "Revert this commit" button.
Prerequisite: When a modification to an existing file in your repository is made, this change is initially considered as unstaged. In order to commit the changes, it needs to be staged which means adding it to the index using
git add
. During a commit operation, the files that are staged gets added to an index.
Let's take an example:
- A - B - C (master)
HEAD
points to C
and the index matches C
.
git reset --soft B
with the intention of removing the commit C and pointing the master/HEAD to B. git status
you could see the files indexed in commit C as staged. git commit
at this point will create a new commit with the same changes as Cgit reset --mixed B
. git add
and then commit as usual.git reset --hard B
Hope this comparison of flags that are available to use with git reset
command will help someone to use them wisely. Refer these for further details link1 & link2
Before answering, let's add some background, explaining what this HEAD
is.
First of all what is HEAD?
HEAD
is simply a reference to the current commit (latest) on the current branch.
There can only be a single HEAD
at any given time (excluding git worktree
).
The content of HEAD
is stored inside .git/HEAD
and it contains the 40 bytes SHA-1 of the current commit.
detached HEAD
If you are not on the latest commit - meaning that HEAD
is pointing to a prior commit in history it's called detached HEAD
.
On the command line, it will look like this - SHA-1 instead of the branch name since the HEAD
is not pointing to the tip of the current branch:
git checkout
git checkout <commit_id>
git checkout -b <new branch> <commit_id>
git checkout HEAD~X // x is the number of commits to go back
This will checkout the new branch pointing to the desired commit.
This command will checkout to a given commit.
At this point, you can create a branch and start to work from this point on.
# Checkout a given commit.
# Doing so will result in a `detached HEAD` which mean that the `HEAD`
# is not pointing to the latest so you will need to checkout branch
# in order to be able to update the code.
git checkout <commit-id>
# Create a new branch forked to the given commit
git checkout -b <branch name>
git reflog
You can always use the reflog
as well.
git reflog
will display any change which updated the HEAD
and checking out the desired reflog entry will set the HEAD
back to this commit.
Every time the HEAD is modified there will be a new entry in the reflog
git reflog
git checkout HEAD@{...}
This will get you back to your desired commit
git reset --hard <commit_id>
"Move" your HEAD back to the desired commit.
# This will destroy any local modifications.
# Don't do it if you have uncommitted work you want to keep.
git reset --hard 0d1d7fc32
# Alternatively, if there's work to keep:
git stash
git reset --hard 0d1d7fc32
git stash pop
# This saves the modifications, then reapplies that patch after resetting.
# You could get merge conflicts if you've modified things which were
# changed since the commit you reset to.
git rebase --no-autostash
as well.git revert <sha-1>
"Undo" the given commit or commit range.
The reset command will "undo" any changes made in the given commit.
A new commit with the undo patch will be committed while the original commit will remain in history as well.
# Add a new commit with the undo of the original one.
# The <sha-1> can be any commit(s) or commit range
git revert <sha-1>
This schema illustrates which command does what.
As you can see there, reset && checkout
modify the HEAD
.
I validate an efficient method proposed, and here is a concrete example using it:
In case you want to permanently undo/cancel your last commit (and so on, one by one, as many as you want) three steps:
1: Get the id = SHA of the commit you want to arrive on with, of course
$ git log
2: Delete your previous commit with
$ git reset --hard 'your SHA'
3: Force the new local history upon your origin GitHub with the -f
option (the last commit track will be erased from the GitHub history)
$ git push origin master -f
$ git log
Last commit to cancel
commit e305d21bdcdc51d623faec631ced72645cca9131 (HEAD -> master, origin/master, origin/HEAD)
Author: Christophe <blabla@bla.com>
Date: Thu Jul 30 03:42:26 2020 +0200
U2_30 S45; updating files package.json & yarn.lock for GitHub Web Page from docs/CV_Portfolio...
Commit we want now on HEAD
commit 36212a48b0123456789e01a6c174103be9a11e61
Author: Christophe <blabla@bla.com>
Date: Thu Jul 30 02:38:01 2020 +0200
First commit, new title
$ git reset --hard 36212a4
HEAD is now at 36212a4 First commit, new title
$ git log
commit 36212a48b0123456789e01a6c174103be9a11e61 (HEAD -> master)
Author: Christophe <blabla@bla.com>
Date: Thu Jul 30 02:38:01 2020 +0200
First commit, new title
$ git status
On branch master
Your branch is behind 'origin/master' by 1 commit, and can be fast-forwarded.
(use "git pull" to update your local branch)
nothing to commit, working tree clean
$ git push origin master -f
Total 0 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0), pack-reused 0
To https://github.com/ GitUser bla bla/React-Apps.git
+ e305d21...36212a4 master -> master (forced update)
$ git status
On branch master
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.
nothing to commit, working tree clean
HEAD:
Before reset commit we should know about HEAD... HEAD is nothing but your current state in your working directory. It is represented by a commit number.
Git commit:
Each change assigned under a commit which is represented by a unique tag. Commits can't be deleted. So if you want your last commit, you can simply dive into it using git reset
.
You can dive into the last commit using two methods:
Method 1: (if you don't know the commit number, but want to move onto the very first)
git reset HEAD~1 # It will move your head to last commit
Method 2: (if you know the commit you simply reset onto your known commit)
git reset 0xab3
# Commit number
Note: if you want to know a recent commit try git log -p -1
Here is the graphical representation:
Just use git reset --hard <last good SHA>
to reset your changes and give new commit. You can also use git checkout -- <bad filename>
.
git reset --soft HEAD~1
git status
On branch master
Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 1 commit.
(use "git push" to publish your local commits)Changes to be committed:
(use "git restore --staged ..." to unstage) new file: file1
git log --oneline --graph
- 90f8bb1 (HEAD -> master) Second commit \
- 7083e29 Initial repository commit \
If you would like to eliminate the wrong files you should do
git reset --soft <your_last_good_commit_hash_here>
Here, if you do git status
, you will see the files in the staging area. You can select the wrong files and take them down from the staging area.
Like the following.
git reset wrongFile1 wrongFile2 wrongFile3
You can now just add the files that you need to push,
git add goodFile1 goodFile2
Commit them
git commit -v
or git commit -am "Message"
And push
git push origin master
However, if you do not care about the changed files you can hard reset to previous good commit and push everything to the server.
By
git reset --hard <your_last_good_commit_hash_here>
git push origin master
If you already published your wrong files to the server, you can use the --force
flag to push to the server and edit the history.
git push --force origin master
Before picking specific tools (commands), please pick what you need rather than blindly running commands.
Just in case you want to edit your last commit, there is a command.
Advantage: It allows you to correct the last commit's message as well as add more changes to it.
git commit --amend
Really want to undo the last commit (because of massive changes or you want to discard it all).
Advantage: The reset command will return to the one before the current revision, effectively making the last commit undone.
A. Soft Reset
Advantage: A soft flag. It guarantees the preservation of modifications made in undone revisions. The changes appear in your working copy as uncommitted local modifications once you run the command.
git reset --soft HEAD~1
B. Hard Reset
Advantage: If you don't want to keep these changes, simply use the --hard
flag. Be sure to only do this when you're sure you don't need these changes anymore.
git reset --hard HEAD~1
Advantage:
This command will tell Git to advance the HEAD pointer back one commit. The files' modifications won't be impacted, though. Now, if you run git status
, you ought to still be able to view the local file changes.
git reset HEAD~1
Use according to your needs.
Rebasing and dropping commits are the best when you want to keep the history clean useful when proposing patches to a public branch etc.
If you have to drop the topmost commit then the following one-liner helps
git rebase --onto HEAD~1 HEAD
But if you want to drop 1 of many commits you did say
a -> b -> c -> d -> master
and you want to drop commit 'c'
git rebase --onto b c
This will make 'b' as the new base of 'd' eliminating 'c'
In IntelliJ IDEA you can just open the Git repository log by pressing Alt+9, right mouse button click at some tag from the commits list, and select: "Reset Current Branch to Here...".
What I do each time I need to undo a commit/commits are:
git reset HEAD~<n>
// the number of last commits I need to undo
git status
// optional. All files are now in red (unstaged).
Now, I can add & commit just the files that I need:
git add <file names> & git commit -m "message" -m "details"
git checkout <filename>
git push origin <branch name> -f
// use -f to force the push.Assuming you're working in Visual Studio, if you go in to your branch history and look at all of your commits, simply select the event prior to the commit you want to undo, right-click it, and select Revert
. Easy as that.
To undo the last local commit, without throwing away its changes, I have this handy alias in ~/.gitconfig
[alias]
undo = reset --soft HEAD^
Then I simply use git undo
which is super-easy to remember.
Find the last commit hash code by seeing the log by:
git log
Then
git reset <the previous co>
Replace your local version, including your changes with the server version. These two lines of code will force Git to pull and overwrite local.
Open a command prompt and navigate to the Git project root. If you use Visual Studio, click on Team, Sync and click on "Open Command Prompt" (see the image) below.
Once in the Cmd prompt, go ahead with the following two instructions.
git fetch --all
Then you do
git reset --hard origin/master
This will overwrite the existing local version with the one on the Git server.
I wrote about this ages ago after having these same problems myself:
How to delete/revert a Git commit
Basically you just need to do:
git log
, get the first seven characters of the SHA hash, and then do a git revert <sha>
followed by git push --force
.
You can also revert this by using the Git revert command as follows: git revert <sha> -m -1
and then git push
.
Try this, hard reset to previous commit where those files were not added, then:
git reset --hard <commit_hash>
Make sure you have a backup of your changes just in case, as it's a hard reset, which means they'll be lost (unless you stashed earlier)
If you simply want to trash all your local changes/commits and make your local branch look like the origin branch you started from...
git reset --hard origin/branch-name
You'll encounter this problem:
$ git reset HEAD~
fatal: ambiguous argument 'HEAD~': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
'git <command> [<revision>...] -- [<file>...]'
The error occurs because if the last commit is the initial commit (or no parents) of the repository, there is no HEAD~.
If you want to reset the only commit on "master" branch
$ git update-ref -d HEAD
$ git rm --cached -r .
Get last commit ID by using this command (in the log one on the top it is the latest one):
git log
Get the commit id (GUID) and run this command:
git revert <commit_id>
#1) $ git commit -m "Something terribly misguided"
#2) $ git reset HEAD~
[ edit files as necessary ]
#3) $ git add .
#4) $ git commit -c ORIG_HEAD
If you have made local commits that you don't like, and they have not been pushed yet you can reset things back to a previous good commit. It will be as if the bad commits never happened. Here's how:
In your terminal (Terminal, Git Bash, or Windows Command Prompt), navigate to the folder for your Git repo. Run git status and make sure you have a clean working tree. Each commit has a unique hash (which looks something like 2f5451f). You need to find the hash for the last good commit (the one you want to revert back to). Here are two places you can see the hash for commits: In the commit history on GitHub or Bitbucket or website. In your terminal (Terminal, Git Bash, or Windows Command Prompt) run the command git log --online Once you know the hash for the last good commit (the one you want to revert back to), run the following command (replacing 2f5451f with your commit's hash):
git reset 2f5451f
git reset --hard 2f5451f
NOTE: If you do git reset the commits will be removed, but the changes will appear as uncommitted, giving you access to the code. This is the safest option because maybe you wanted some of that code and you can now make changes and new commits that are good. Often though you'll want to undo the commits and throw away the code, which is what git reset --hard does.
git revert commit
This will generate the opposite changes from the commit which you want to revert back, and then just commit that changes. I think this is the simplest way.
git undo
, that's it. Then the reputation git has for handling mistakes made by us mere mortals disappears. Implement by pushing the current state on a git stack before executing anygit
command. It would affect performance, so it would be best to add a config flag as to whether to enable it.alias
feature: git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Git-Aliasesgit reflog
is already close to what you describe, but gives the user more control on what's to be (un)done. But please, no, "undo" does not work the same everywhere, and people would expect many different things for the feature to achieve. Undo last commit? Undo last action? If last action was a push, undo how exactly, (reset and push) or (revert and push)?