Revert to a commit by a SHA hash in Git? [duplicate]
I'm not clear on how git revert
works. For example, I want to revert to a commit six commits behind the head, reverting all the changes in the intermediary commits in between.
Say its SHA hash is 56e05fced214c44a37759efa2dfc25a65d8ae98d
. Then why can't I just do something like:
git revert 56e05fced214c44a37759efa2dfc25a65d8ae98d
Solution 1:
If you want to commit on top of the current HEAD with the exact state at a different commit, undoing all the intermediate commits, then you can use reset
to create the correct state of the index to make the commit.
# Reset the index and working tree to the desired tree
# Ensure you have no uncommitted changes that you want to keep
git reset --hard 56e05fced
# Move the branch pointer back to the previous HEAD
git reset --soft "HEAD@{1}"
git commit -m "Revert to 56e05fced"
Solution 2:
What git-revert does is create a commit which undoes changes made in a given commit, creating a commit which is reverse (well, reciprocal) of a given commit. Therefore
git revert <SHA-1>
should and does work.
If you want to rewind back to a specified commit, and you can do this because this part of history was not yet published, you need to use git-reset, not git-revert:
git reset --hard <SHA-1>
(Note that --hard
would make you lose any non-committed changes in the working directory).
Additional Notes
By the way, perhaps it is not obvious, but everywhere where documentation says <commit>
or <commit-ish>
(or <object>
), you can put an SHA-1 identifier (full or shortened) of commit.
Solution 3:
It reverts the said commit, that is, adds the commit opposite to it. If you want to checkout an earlier revision, you do:
git checkout 56e05fced214c44a37759efa2dfc25a65d8ae98d
Solution 4:
The best way to rollback to a specific commit is:
git reset --hard <commit-id>
Then:
git push <reponame> -f