Working with Git, I had to go back to a specific commit. I made some changes and I now want to commit them. What is a proper way of doing this?
My project is now in detached-HEAD state. Will my changes be saved if I make a commit with
git commit
? Otherwise, what should I do to not lose my changes?
Disclaimer: git isn't complicated, it's just versatile. Don't be scared off just because I've rambled into a long answer :)
You had:
master: a-b-c-d-e-f
and wanted to change c
. You did:
* git checkout c
(avoid checking out commits in future. Move the branch head instead)
* changed some files
You are in:
master: a-b-c-d-e-f
\uncommitted-work,detached
If you want to re-apply d-e-f on top of your changed "c"
(If you have pushed, people downstream will be have to recover from upstream rebase)
git stash .
git checkout master
git stash pop
(resolve conflicts)
git stage .
git commit -m "temporary name for g"
- (
master: a-b-c-d-e-f-g
)
git rebase c -i
("re-apply my current branch on to point c, and let me manipulate the commits interactively", i.e, re-parent (rebase) d-e-f
onto a new c
)
- Follow guide to interactive rebase. You want to re-order
g
so it's after c, then change the rebase command from pick
to fixup
. dd
to delete a line, P
to place it, i
to enter insert mode to type "fixup" then :wq
to save and exit vim.
- (
master: a-b-c'-d'-e'-f'
, where c'
is the result of you merging g
and c
during the rebase. d-e-f
have become d'-e'-f'
as their ancestry has changed so they're not the "same" commits as far as git is concerned, but their contents remain the same)
If you want to undo d-e-f
(and rewrite history as if you never made them)
(If you have pushed, people downstream will be have to recover from upstream rebase) :
git stash .
git checkout master
- (
master: a-b-c-d-e-f
, with stashed files originally based upon c)
git reset --hard c
(discard all files and commits on master since c)
- (
master: a-b-c
, with stashed files)
git stash pop
(resolve conflicts)
- (
master: a-b-c-*
)
git stage .
git commit -m "description of g"
- (
master: a-b-c-g
)
If you want to undo d-e-f (but keep them in history)
git stash
git revert --no-commit d
git revert --no-commit e
git revert --no-commit f
git push
git stash pop
(will be no conflicts)
git stage .
git commit -m "Undo d-e-f in order to fix..."
git push
If you have git push
d-e-f, and you want to keep them separate:
Sounds like your new changes are for a new branch off master. git branch <foo>
.
Create a new branch from this commit and THEN do the commit
:
git checkout -b <branchname>
git commit
Assuming you already staged (i.e. git add myfile1 myfile2
) your files.
to save your work in the detached head:
git checkout -b <new-branch-name-for-detached-head> <sha-of-the-detached-head>
and if you want to merge it to master:
git checkout master
git merge <new-branch-name-you-have-just-created>