I have a project in a remote repository, synchronized with a local repository (development) and the server one (prod). I’ve been making some commited changes already pushed to remote and pulled from the server. Now, I want to undo those changes. So I could just git checkout
to the commit before the changes and commit the new changes, but I’m guessing that there will be problems to push them again to remote. Any suggestion on how should I proceed?
13 s
You can revert individual commits with:
git revert <commit_hash>
This will create a new commit which reverts the changes of the commit you specified. Note that it only reverts that specific commit, and not commits that come after that. If you want to revert a range of commits, you can do it like this:
git revert <oldest_commit_hash>..<latest_commit_hash>
It reverts all the commits after <oldest_commit_hash>
up to and including <latest_commit_hash>
. On some versions of git it also reverts the <oldest_commit_hash>
, so double check if that commit gets reverted or not. You can always drop the latest revert commit (which reverts the oldest commit) with g reset --hard HEAD~
.
To know the hash of the commit(s) you can use git log
.
Look at the git-revert man page for more information about the git revert
command. Also, look at this answer for more information about reverting commits.