This question already has an answer here:
How can I uncommit my last commit in git?
Is it
git reset --hard HEAD
or
git reset --hard HEAD^
?
If you aren't totally sure what you mean by "uncommit" and don't know if you want to use git reset
, please see "Revert to a previous Git commit".
If you're trying to understand git reset
better, please see "Can you explain what "git reset" does in plain English?".
If you know you want to use git reset
, it still depends what you mean by "uncommit". If all you want to do is undo the act of committing, leaving everything else intact, use:
git reset --soft HEAD^
If you want to undo the act of committing and everything you'd staged, but leave the work tree (your files intact):
git reset HEAD^
And if you actually want to completely undo it, throwing away all uncommitted changes, resetting everything to the previous commit (as the original question asked):
git reset --hard HEAD^
The original question also asked it's HEAD^
not HEAD
. HEAD
refers to the current commit - generally, the tip of the currently checked-out branch. The ^
is a notation which can be attached to any commit specifier, and means "the commit before". So, HEAD^
is the commit before the current one, just as master^
is the commit before the tip of the master branch.
Here's the portion of the git-rev-parse documentation describing all of the ways to specify commits (^
is just a basic one among many).
To keep the changes from the commit you want to undo
git reset --soft HEAD^
To destroy the changes from the commit you want to undo
git reset --hard HEAD^
You can also say
git reset --soft HEAD~2
to go back 2 commits.
Edit: As charsi mentioned, if you are on Windows you will need to put HEAD or commit hash in quotes.
git reset --soft "HEAD^"
git reset --soft "asdf"
git reset --soft HEAD^
Will keep the modified changes in your working tree.
git reset --hard HEAD^
WILL THROW AWAY THE CHANGES YOU MADE !!!
Be careful, reset --hard
will remove your local (uncommitted) modifications, too.
git reset --hard HEAD^
note: if you're on windows you'll need to quote the HEAD^ so
git reset --hard "HEAD^"
Just a note - if you're using ZSH and see the error
zsh: no matches found: HEAD^
You need to escape the ^
git reset --soft HEAD\^
If you haven't pushed your changes yet use git reset --soft [Hash for one commit]
to rollback to a specific commit. --soft
tells git to keep the changes being rolled back (i.e., mark the files as modified). --hard
tells git to delete the changes being rolled back.
If you commit to the wrong branch
While on the wrong branch:
git log -2
gives you hashes of 2 last commits, lets say$prev
and$last
git checkout $prev
checkout correct commitgit checkout -b new-feature-branch
creates a new branch for featuregit cherry-pick $last
patches a branch with your changes
Then you can follow one the methods suggested above to remove your commit from the first branch.
Be careful with that.
But you can use the rebase command
git rebase -i HEAD~2
A vi
will open and all you have to do is delete the line with the commit. Also can read instructions that was shown in proper edition @ vi
, a couple of things can be performed on this mode
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2845731/how-to-uncommit-my-last-commit-in-git