I am using GitHub as my remote repository.
I have already pushed 5 commits to the server and want to revert back to the state before the those commits.
If the commit hash is 3425661dba2aadccdbab
, how do I revert the entire local/remote back to that commit? I tried
$ reset --hard 3425661dba2aadccdbab
but that only resetted my working head to that branch and requires me to do a git pull
again. I tried checkout, but this caused me to land in a "detached head" branch.
You can do
git revert <commit>
to all the commits that have been made after your required state. (In the reverse order to avoid any conflicts.)This is a clean way if there are other people sharing the repo, but a little effortsome. (You may automate though...?)
Do a git checkout, then commit it to the branch you want. This will make a new commit with the old code (so you'll have 6 commits).
git checkout HEAD~3
, where 3 is the number of commits back you want to revert to.Better yet, you can checkout a single file into the present HEAD:
git checkout 3425661dba2aadccdbab:path/to/file/from/base
This will reduce the likelihood of making other people angry with you pulling the proverbial rug out from under their feet.
EDIT:
There's a similar question here:
Checkout old commit and make it a new commit
You basically have two options to revert changes:
The first option can be achieved by using
git revert
An example would be
git revert -n HEAD~5..HEAD
. This command creates 5 new commits, each of which undoes one of the last 5 commits of the currently checked out branch.The second option would be to actually remove the commits. Note that this changes history in the repository. So anyone who has already pull the changes will probably be rather surprised and things can get messy quickly. That said, you can do
The first command will wipe any uncommitted changes in your current working copy. and reset your local repository to the state of the current HEAD - 5 commits. The second command will force-push to the default remote (i.e. GitHub) There, any changes diverging from your current local repository are overwritten.
A note of warning again: If you don't really know what you are doing, don't use this option as it can lead to data loss for you or others if not done right. Use the first option instead as it will transparently remove changes but without the nasty side-effects of history-rewriting.
Do a
git push -f
. Not a good idea if there are other people using the same repo.