areful: git reset --hard
WILL DELETE YOUR WORKING DIRECTORY CHANGES. Be sure to stash any local changes you want to keep before running this command.git
Assuming you are sitting on that commit, then this command will wack it...less
git reset --hard HEAD~1
The HEAD~1
means the commit before head.this
Or, you could look at the output of git log
, find the commit id of the commit you want to back up to, and then do this:code
git reset --hard <sha1-commit-id>
If you already pushed it, you will need to do a force push to get rid of it...get
git push origin HEAD --force
However, if others may have pulled it, then you would be better off starting a new branch. Because when they pull, it will just merge it into their work, and you will get it pushed back up again.it
If you already pushed, it may be better to use git revert
, to create a "mirror image" commit that will undo the changes. However, both commits will be in the log.ast
FYI -- git reset --hard HEAD
is great if you want to get rid of WORK IN PROGRESS. It will reset you back to the most recent commit, and erase all the changes in your working tree and index.command
Lastly, if you need to find a commit that you "deleted", it is typically present in git reflog
unless you have garbage collected your repository.im