04. Resetting Commits
Reset vs Revert
At first glance, resetting might seem coincidentally close to reverting, but they are actually quite different. Reverting creates a new commit that reverts or undos a previous commit. Resetting, on the other hand, erases commits!
⚠️ Resetting Is Dangerous ⚠️
You've got to be careful with Git's resetting capabilities. This is one of the few commands that lets you erase commits from the repository. If a commit is no longer in the repository, then its content is gone.
To alleviate the stress a bit, Git does keep track of everything for about 30 days before it completely erases anything. To access this content, you'll need to use the
git reflog
command. Check out these links for more info:
Relative Commit References
You already know that you can reference commits by their SHA, by tags, branches, and the special HEAD
pointer. Sometimes that's not enough, though. There will be times when you'll want to reference a commit relative to another commit. For example, there will be times where you'll want to tell Git about the commit that's one before the current commit…or two before the current commit. There are special characters called "Ancestry References" that we can use to tell Git about these relative references. Those characters are:
^
– indicates the parent commit~
– indicates the first parent commit
Here's how we can refer to previous commits:
- the parent commit – the following indicate the parent commit of the current commit
- HEAD^
- HEAD~
- HEAD~1
- the grandparent commit – the following indicate the grandparent commit of the current commit
- HEAD^^
- HEAD~2
- the great-grandparent commit – the following indicate the great-grandparent commit of the current commit
- HEAD^^^
- HEAD~3
The main difference between the ^
and the ~
is when a commit is created from a merge. A merge commit has two parents. With a merge commit, the ^
reference is used to indicate the first parent of the commit while ^2
indicates the second parent. The first parent is the branch you were on when you ran git merge
while the second parent is the branch that was merged in.
It's easier if we look at an example. This what my git log
currently shows:
* 9ec05ca (HEAD -> master) Revert "Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades""
* db7e87a Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades"
* 796ddb0 Merge branch 'heading-update'
|\
| * 4c9749e (heading-update) Set page heading to "Crusade"
* | 0c5975a Set page heading to "Quest"
|/
* 1a56a81 Merge branch 'sidebar'
|\
| * f69811c (sidebar) Update sidebar with favorite movie
| * e6c65a6 Add new sidebar content
* | e014d91 (footer) Add links to social media
* | 209752a Improve site heading for SEO
* | 3772ab1 Set background color for page
|/
* 5bfe5e7 Add starting HTML structure
* 6fa5f34 Add .gitignore file
* a879849 Add header to blog
* 94de470 Initial commit
Let's look at how we'd refer to some of the previous commits. Since HEAD
points to the 9ec05ca
commit:
HEAD^
is thedb7e87a
commitHEAD~1
is also thedb7e87a
commitHEAD^^
is the796ddb0
commitHEAD~2
is also the796ddb0
commitHEAD^^^
is the0c5975a
commitHEAD~3
is also the0c5975a
commitHEAD^^^2
is the4c9749e
commit (this is the grandparent's (HEAD^^
) second parent (^2
))
Which Commit?
Use this repository to answer the following quiz questions:
* 9ec05ca (HEAD -> master) Revert "Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades""
* db7e87a Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades"
* 796ddb0 Merge branch 'heading-update'
|\
| * 4c9749e (heading-update) Set page heading to "Crusade"
* | 0c5975a Set page heading to "Quest"
|/
* 1a56a81 Merge branch 'sidebar'
|\
| * f69811c (sidebar) Update sidebar with favorite movie
| * e6c65a6 Add new sidebar content
* | e014d91 (footer) Add links to social media
* | 209752a Improve site heading for SEO
* | 3772ab1 Set background color for page
|/
* 5bfe5e7 Add starting HTML structure
* 6fa5f34 Add .gitignore file
* a879849 Add header to blog
* 94de470 Initial commit
Which commit?
SOLUTION:
209752aQUESTION:
You did so well on that last one, why not give this one a go! Using the same repository, which commit is referenced by HEAD~4^2
?
SOLUTION:
NOTE: The solutions are expressed in RegEx pattern. Udacity uses these patterns to check the given answer
The git reset
Command
The git reset
command is used to reset (erase) commits:
$ git reset <reference-to-commit>
It can be used to:
- move the HEAD and current branch pointer to the referenced commit
- erase commits
- move committed changes to the staging index
- unstage committed changes
Git Reset's Flags
The way that Git determines if it erases, stages previously committed changes, or unstages previously committed changes is by the flag that's used. The flags are:
--mixed
--soft
--hard
It's easier to understand how they work with a little animation.
Nd016 WebND Ud123 Gitcourse BETAMOJITO L6 17 Soft Vs Medium Vs Hard Walkthrough
💡 Backup Branch 💡
Remember that using the
git reset
command will erase commits from the current branch. So if you want to follow along with all the resetting stuff that's coming up, you'll need to create a branch on the current commit that you can use as a backup.
Before I do any resetting, I usually create a
backup
branch on the most-recent commit so that I can get back to the commits if I make a mistake:
$ git branch backup
Reset's --mixed
Flag
Let's look at each one of these flags.
* 9ec05ca (HEAD -> master) Revert "Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades""
* db7e87a Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades"
* 796ddb0 Merge branch 'heading-update'
Using the sample repo above with HEAD
pointing to master
on commit 9ec05ca
, running git reset --mixed HEAD^
will take the changes made in commit 9ec05ca
and move them to the working directory.
💡 Back To Normal 💡
If you created the
backup
branch prior to resetting anything, then you can easily get back to having themaster
branch point to the same commit as thebackup
branch. You'll just need to:
- remove the uncommitted changes from the working directory
- merge
backup
intomaster
(which will cause a Fast-forward merge and movemaster
up to the same point asbackup
)
$ git checkout -- index.html $ git merge backup
Reset's --soft
Flag
Let's use the same few commits and look at how the --soft
flag works:
* 9ec05ca (HEAD -> master) Revert "Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades""
* db7e87a Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades"
* 796ddb0 Merge branch 'heading-update'
Running git reset --soft HEAD^
will take the changes made in commit 9ec05ca
and move them directly to the Staging Index.
Reset's --hard
Flag
Last but not least, let's look at the --hard
flag:
* 9ec05ca (HEAD -> master) Revert "Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades""
* db7e87a Set page heading to "Quests & Crusades"
* 796ddb0 Merge branch 'heading-update'
Running git reset --hard HEAD^
will take the changes made in commit 9ec05ca
and erases them.
Now it's your turn!
Refer to the following repository:
* e014d91 (HEAD -> master, footer) Add links to social media
* 209752a Improve site heading for SEO
* 3772ab1 Set background color for page
* 5bfe5e7 Add starting HTML structure
* 6fa5f34 Add .gitignore file
* a879849 Add header to blog
* 94de470 Initial commit
Where's The Content?
SOLUTION:
erasedWhere's The Content 2?
SOLUTION:
Staging IndexReset Recap
To recap, the git reset
command is used erase commits:
$ git reset <reference-to-commit>
It can be used to:
- move the HEAD and current branch pointer to the referenced commit
- erase commits with the
--hard
flag - moves committed changes to the staging index with the
--soft
flag - unstages committed changes
--mixed
flag
Typically, ancestry references are used to indicate previous commits. The ancestry references are:
^
– indicates the parent commit~
– indicates the first parent commit
Further Research
- git-reset from Git docs
- Reset Demystified from Git Blog
- Ancestry References from Git Book