Coocoo4Cocoa
Coocoo4Cocoa

Reputation: 50916

Git: checking out a file from a previous commit and amending it to HEAD

I recently committed a file to the HEAD of my branch which has errors in it. I need to do the following things:

What's the best way of going about that?

Upvotes: 79

Views: 48392

Answers (2)

sykloid
sykloid

Reputation: 101416

You've practically said it yourself:

First get the file back from one commit before:

$> git checkout HEAD~1 path/to/file.ext

Then commit it:

$> git commit -a -m 'Retrieved file from older revision'

If only the changes to that file were present in the last commit, you can even use git revert:

$> git revert HEAD

I think it would be better to make this a separate commit, because it tells you exactly what you've reverted, and why. However, you can squash this into the previous commit by using the --amend switch to git commit.

Upvotes: 126

Tecnocat
Tecnocat

Reputation: 1182

Be carefull, in this scenario:

Commit hash - File modified
aaaaaaa       index.php
bbbbbbb       test.php
ccccccc       index.php

Git checkout HEAD~1 (or HEAD^) index.php try to checkout the index.php file to previous HEAD hash (bbbbbbb) but this is not the real previous commit hash file, is ccccccc. In the previous HEAD hash, index.php still remain unchanged because the last changed was made in hash ccccccc.

To revert some file to previous commit hash that affected the file, use:

git log -n 2 --pretty=format:%h path/to/file.ext

Ignore first hash and take the second hash, then:

git checkout <second_hash> path/to/file.ext
git commit -m 'Revert this file to real previous commit'

Upvotes: 0

Related Questions