Linked Questions

231 votes
9 answers
51k views

Combine the first two commits of a Git repository?

Suppose you have a history containing the three commits A, B and C: A-B-C I would like to combine the two commits A and B to one commit AB: AB-C I tried git rebase -i A which opens up my editor ...
Christian's user avatar
  • 10k
5410 votes
46 answers
3.7m views

How do I squash my last N commits together?

How do I squash my last N commits together into one commit?
markdorison's user avatar
770 votes
25 answers
496k views

How to squash all git commits into one?

How do you squash your entire repository down to the first commit? I can rebase to the first commit, but that would leave me with 2 commits. Is there a way to reference the commit before the first ...
Verhogen's user avatar
  • 27.8k
777 votes
5 answers
363k views

git push --force-with-lease vs. --force

I am trying to understand the difference between git push --force and git push --force-with-lease My guess is that the latter only pushes to the remote if the remote has commits that the local ...
Alexander Mills's user avatar
410 votes
5 answers
61k views

Edit the root commit in Git?

There's ways to change the message from later commits: git commit --amend # for the most recent commit git rebase --interactive master~2 # but requires *parent* How can you ...
13ren's user avatar
  • 12k
292 votes
16 answers
72k views

Insert a commit before the root commit in Git?

I've asked before about how to squash the first two commits in a git repository. While the solutions are rather interesting and not really as mind-warping as some other things in git, they're still a ...
kch's user avatar
  • 78.5k
208 votes
13 answers
458k views

Practical uses of git reset --soft?

I have been working with git for just over a month. Indeed I have used reset for the first time only yesterday, but the soft reset still doesn't make much sense to me. I understand I can use the soft ...
AJJ's user avatar
  • 7,483
179 votes
7 answers
171k views

Git: "Cannot 'squash' without a previous commit" error while rebase

I have the following in the to-do text of git rebase -i HEAD~2: pick 56bcce7 Closes #2774 pick e43ceba Lint.py: Replace deprecated link # Rebase 684f917..e43ceba onto 684f917 (2 command(s)) # ... ...
Dawny33's user avatar
  • 10.8k
153 votes
3 answers
28k views

Is git's semi-secret empty tree object reliable, and why is there not a symbolic name for it?

Git has a well-known, or at least sort-of-well-known, empty tree whose SHA1 is: 4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904 (you can see this in any repo, even a newly created one, with git cat-file -t ...
torek's user avatar
  • 467k
44 votes
8 answers
21k views

How can I delete a specific revision of a github gist?

I created a Gist on GitHub and I saw information I don't want anyone to see. I updated the file since, but everybody can still access the old revision of the file. Except deleting the Gist, is there a ...
Cyril N.'s user avatar
  • 39.4k
42 votes
2 answers
23k views

How can I find out who force pushed in git?

Someone used git push --force but I can't tell who did it from the logs. Is there a way to identify the culprit?
glevine's user avatar
  • 727
19 votes
2 answers
8k views

Git: duplicate commits after local rebase, then pull

Background: I have a feature branch A that is one commit ahead of my development branch: 3 (develop, origin/develop) | 2 (A, origin/A) some feature branch commit |/ 1 some commit Then I rebase ...
avdgaag's user avatar
  • 41.7k
6 votes
1 answer
2k views

Git: Squashing consecutive commits that are not the most recent commits, and do not start at the root

I have reviewed several related questions about squashing the most recent commits and squashing a commit at the root, but neither will help me squash non-recent commits that are not at the root. ...
modulitos's user avatar
  • 15.1k
3 votes
2 answers
313 views

How do I delete the first and only commit if it's the only commit in the branch?

I goofed the author info. up on the first commit. However, it seems like most of the rebase or tree modification operations rely on some other commit already existing. Even when I run Git's ...
Nathan Basanese's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
630 views

Squash every commits older than 1 year in a very huge repository and limited resource

I have a 4 years old git repository that starts to become really huge: ~30GO, 60.000 files. One or two commit are done each day. I would like to squash every commits older than 1 year into the first ...
djoproject's user avatar

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