How do I undo 'git add' before commit?
Solution 1:
You can undo git add
before commit with
git reset <file>
which will remove it from the current index (the "about to be committed" list) without changing anything else.
You can use
git reset
without any file name to unstage all due changes. This can come in handy when there are too many files to be listed one by one in a reasonable amount of time.
In old versions of Git, the above commands are equivalent to git reset HEAD <file>
and git reset HEAD
respectively, and will fail if HEAD
is undefined (because you haven't yet made any commits in your repository) or ambiguous (because you created a branch called HEAD
, which is a stupid thing that you shouldn't do). This was changed in Git 1.8.2, though, so in modern versions of Git you can use the commands above even prior to making your first commit:
"git reset" (without options or parameters) used to error out when you do not have any commits in your history, but it now gives you an empty index (to match non-existent commit you are not even on).
Documentation: git reset
Solution 2:
You want:
git rm --cached <added_file_to_undo>
Reasoning:
When I was new to this, I first tried
git reset .
(to undo my entire initial add), only to get this (not so) helpful message:
fatal: Failed to resolve 'HEAD' as a valid ref.
It turns out that this is because the HEAD ref (branch?) doesn't exist until after the first commit. That is, you'll run into the same beginner's problem as me if your workflow, like mine, was something like:
- cd to my great new project directory to try out Git, the new hotness
git init
git add .
-
git status
... lots of crap scrolls by ...
=> Damn, I didn't want to add all of that.
-
google "undo git add"
=> find Stack Overflow - yay
-
git reset .
=> fatal: Failed to resolve 'HEAD' as a valid ref.
It further turns out that there's a bug logged against the unhelpfulness of this in the mailing list.
And that the correct solution was right there in the Git status output (which, yes, I glossed over as 'crap)
... # Changes to be committed: # (use "git rm --cached <file>..." to unstage) ...
And the solution indeed is to use git rm --cached FILE
.
Note the warnings elsewhere here - git rm
deletes your local working copy of the file, but not if you use --cached. Here's the result of git help rm
:
--cached Use this option to unstage and remove paths only from the index. Working tree files, whether modified or not, will be left.
I proceed to use
git rm --cached .
to remove everything and start again. Didn't work though, because while add .
is recursive, turns out rm
needs -r
to recurse. Sigh.
git rm -r --cached .
Okay, now I'm back to where I started. Next time I'm going to use -n
to do a dry run and see what will be added:
git add -n .
I zipped up everything to a safe place before trusting git help rm
about the --cached
not destroying anything (and what if I misspelled it).