How do I revert an SVN commit?

Solution 1:

Both examples must work, but

svn merge -r UPREV:LOWREV . undo range

svn merge -c -REV . undo single revision

in this syntax - if current dir is WC and (as in must done after every merge) you'll commit results

Do you want to see logs?

Solution 2:

If you're using the TortoiseSVN client, it's easily done via the Show Log dialog.

Solution 3:

svn merge -r 1944:1943 . should revert the changes of r1944 in your working copy. You can then review the changes in your working copy (with diff), but you'd need to commit in order to apply the revert into the repository.

Solution 4:

First, revert the working copy to 1943.

> svn merge -c -1943 .

Second, check what is about to be commited.

> svn status

Third, commit version 1945.

> svn commit -m "Fix bad commit."

Fourth, look at the new log.

> svn log -l 4

------------------------------------------------------------------------
1945 | myname | 2015-04-20 19:20:51 -0700 (Mon, 20 Apr 2015) | 1 line

Fix bad commit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1944 | myname | 2015-04-20 19:09:58 -0700 (Mon, 20 Apr 2015) | 1 line

This is the bad commit that I made.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1943 | myname | 2015-04-20 18:36:45 -0700 (Mon, 20 Apr 2015) | 1 line

This was a good commit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Solution 5:

It is impossible to "uncommit" a revision, but you can revert your working copy to version 1943 and commit that as version 1945. The versions 1943 and 1945 will be identical, effectively reverting the changes.