Force "git push" to overwrite remote files
Solution 1:
You should be able to force your local revision to the remote repo by using
git push -f <remote> <branch>
(e.g. git push -f origin master
). Leaving off <remote>
and <branch>
will force push all local branches that have set --set-upstream
.
Just be warned, if other people are sharing this repository their revision history will conflict with the new one. And if they have any local commits after the point of change they will become invalid.
Update: Thought I would add a side-note. If you are creating changes that others will review, then it's not uncommon to create a branch with those changes and rebase periodically to keep them up-to-date with the main development branch. Just let other developers know this will happen periodically so they'll know what to expect.
Update 2: Because of the increasing number of viewers I'd like to add some additional information on what to do when your upstream
does experience a force push.
Say I've cloned your repo and have added a few commits like so:
D----E topic / A----B----C development
But later the development
branch is hit with a rebase
, which will cause me to receive an error like so when I run git pull
:
Unpacking objects: 100% (3/3), done. From <repo-location> * branch development -> FETCH_HEAD Auto-merging <files> CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in <locations> Automatic merge failed; fix conflicts and then commit the result.
Here I could fix the conflicts and commit
, but that would leave me with a really ugly commit history:
C----D----E----F topic / / A----B--------------C' development
It might look enticing to use git pull --force
but be careful because that'll leave you with stranded commits:
D----E topic A----B----C' development
So probably the best option is to do a git pull --rebase
. This will require me to resolve any conflicts like before, but for each step instead of committing I'll use git rebase --continue
. In the end the commit history will look much better:
D'---E' topic / A----B----C' development
Update 3: You can also use the --force-with-lease
option as a "safer" force
push, as mentioned by Cupcake in his
answer:
Force pushing with a "lease" allows the force push to fail if there are new commits on the remote that you didn't expect (technically, if you haven't fetched them into your remote-tracking branch yet), which is useful if you don't want to accidentally overwrite someone else's commits that you didn't even know about yet, and you just want to overwrite your own:
git push <remote> <branch> --force-with-lease
You can learn more details about how to use
--force-with-lease
by reading any of the following:
git push
documentation- Git: How to ignore fast forward and revert origin [branch] to earlier commit?
Solution 2:
You want to force push
What you basically want to do is to force push your local branch, in order to overwrite the remote one.
If you want a more detailed explanation of each of the following commands, then see my details section below. You basically have 4 different options for force pushing with Git:
git push <remote> <branch> -f
git push origin master -f # Example
git push <remote> -f
git push origin -f # Example
git push -f
git push <remote> <branch> --force-with-lease
If you want a more detailed explanation of each command, then see my long answers section below.
Warning: force pushing will overwrite the remote branch with the state of the branch that you're pushing. Make sure that this is what you really want to do before you use it, otherwise you may overwrite commits that you actually want to keep.
Force pushing details
Specifying the remote and branch
You can completely specify specific branches and a remote. The -f
flag is the short version of --force
git push <remote> <branch> --force
git push <remote> <branch> -f
Omitting the branch
When the branch to push branch is omitted, Git will figure it out based on your config settings. In Git versions after 2.0, a new repo will have default settings to push the currently checked-out branch:
git push <remote> --force
while prior to 2.0, new repos will have default settings to push multiple local branches. The settings in question are the remote.<remote>.push
and push.default
settings (see below).
Omitting the remote and the branch
When both the remote and the branch are omitted, the behavior of just git push --force
is determined by your push.default
Git config settings:
git push --force
As of Git 2.0, the default setting,
simple
, will basically just push your current branch to its upstream remote counter-part. The remote is determined by the branch'sbranch.<remote>.remote
setting, and defaults to the origin repo otherwise.Before Git version 2.0, the default setting,
matching
, basically just pushes all of your local branches to branches with the same name on the remote (which defaults to origin).
You can read more push.default
settings by reading git help config
or an online version of the git-config(1) Manual Page.
Force pushing more safely with --force-with-lease
Force pushing with a "lease" allows the force push to fail if there are new commits on the remote that you didn't expect (technically, if you haven't fetched them into your remote-tracking branch yet), which is useful if you don't want to accidentally overwrite someone else's commits that you didn't even know about yet, and you just want to overwrite your own:
git push <remote> <branch> --force-with-lease
You can learn more details about how to use --force-with-lease
by reading any of the following:
git push
documentation- Git: How to ignore fast forward and revert origin [branch] to earlier commit?
Solution 3:
Another option (to avoid any forced push which can be problematic for other contributors) is to:
- put your new commits in a dedicated branch
- reset your
master
onorigin/master
- merge your dedicated branch to
master
, always keeping commits from the dedicated branch (meaning creating new revisions on top ofmaster
which will mirror your dedicated branch).
See "git command for making one branch like another" for strategies to simulate agit merge --strategy=theirs
.
That way, you can push master to remote without having to force anything.
Solution 4:
Works for me:
git push --set-upstream origin master -f
Solution 5:
git push -f is a bit destructive because it resets any remote changes that had been made by anyone else on the team. A safer option is {git push --force-with-lease}.
What {--force-with-lease} does is refuse to update a branch unless it is the state that we expect; i.e. nobody has updated the branch upstream. In practice this works by checking that the upstream ref is what we expect, because refs are hashes, and implicitly encode the chain of parents into their value. You can tell {--force-with-lease} exactly what to check for, but by default will check the current remote ref. What this means in practice is that when Alice updates her branch and pushes it up to the remote repository, the ref pointing head of the branch will be updated. Now, unless Bob does a pull from the remote, his local reference to the remote will be out of date. When he goes to push using {--force-with-lease}, git will check the local ref against the new remote and refuse to force the push. {--force-with-lease} effectively only allows you to force-push if no-one else has pushed changes up to the remote in the interim. It's {--force} with the seatbelt on.