- Undo local changes
- Undo committed local changes
- Undo remote changes without changing history
- Undo remote changes while changing history
- Undo commits by removing them
- Undo commits with a new replacement commit
- The difference between
git revert
andgit reset
- Unstage changes
- Related topics
Undo changes
Git provides options for undoing changes. You can undo changes at any point in the Git workflow.
The method to use to undo changes depends on if the changes are:
- Only on your local computer.
- Stored remotely on a Git server such as GitLab.com.
Undo local changes
Until you push your changes to a remote repository, changes you make in Git are only in your local development environment.
Undo unstaged local changes
When you make a change, but have not yet staged it, you can undo your work.
-
Confirm that the file is unstaged (that you did not use
git add <file>
) by runninggit status
:$ git status On branch main Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/main'. Changes not staged for commit: (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed) (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory) modified: <file> no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
-
Choose an option and undo your changes:
-
To overwrite local changes:
git checkout -- <file>
-
To discard local changes to all files, permanently:
git reset --hard
-
Undo staged local changes
If you added a file to staging, you can undo it.
-
Confirm that the file is staged (that you used
git add <file>
) by runninggit status
:$ git status On branch main Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/main'. Changes to be committed: (use "git restore --staged <file>..." to unstage) new file: <file>
-
Choose an option and undo your changes:
-
To unstage the file but keep your changes:
git restore --staged <file>
-
To unstage everything but keep your changes:
git reset
-
To unstage the file to current commit (HEAD):
git reset HEAD <file>
-
To discard everything permanently:
git reset --hard
-
Undo committed local changes
When you commit to your local repository (git commit
), Git records
your changes. Because you did not push to a remote repository yet, your changes are
not public (or shared with other developers). At this point, you can undo your changes.
Undo staged local changes without modifying history
You can revert a commit while retaining the commit history.
This example uses five commits A
,B
,C
,D
,E
, which were committed in order: A-B-C-D-E
.
The commit you want to undo is B
.
- Find the commit SHA of the commit you want to revert to. To look
through a log of commits, type
git log
. -
Choose an option and undo your changes:
-
To swap additions and deletions changes introduced by commit
B
:git revert <commit-B-SHA>
-
To undo changes on a single file or directory from commit
B
, but retain them in the staged state:git checkout <commit-B-SHA> <file>
-
To undo changes on a single file or directory from commit
B
, but retain them in the unstaged state:git reset <commit-B-SHA> <file>
-
Undo multiple committed changes
You can recover from multiple commits. For example, if you have done commits A-B-C-D
on your branch and then realize that C
and D
are wrong.
To recover from multiple incorrect commits:
-
Check out the last correct commit. In this example,
B
.git checkout <commit-B-SHA>
-
Create a new branch.
git checkout -b new-path-of-feature
-
Add, push, and commit your changes.
The commits are now A-B-C-D-E
.
Alternatively, with GitLab, you can cherry-pick that commit into a new merge request.
B
and commit E
. However, this solution results in A-B-E
,
which clashes with what other developers have locally.Undo staged local changes with history modification
The following sections document tasks that rewrite Git history. For more information, see What happens during rebase.
Delete a specific commit
You can delete a specific commit. For example, if you have
commits A-B-C-D
and you want to delete commit B
.
-
Rebase the range from current commit
D
toB
:git rebase -i A
A list of commits is displayed in your editor.
- In front of commit
B
, replacepick
withdrop
. - Leave the default,
pick
, for all other commits. - Save and exit the editor.
Modify a specific commit
You can modify a specific commit. For example, if you have
commits A-B-C-D
and you want to modify something introduced in commit B
.
-
Rebase the range from current commit
D
toB
:git rebase -i A
A list of commits is displayed in your editor.
- In front of commit
B
, replacepick
withedit
. - Leave the default,
pick
, for all other commits. - Save and exit the editor.
-
Open the file in your editor, make your edits, and commit the changes:
git commit -a
Redoing the undo
You can recall previous local commits. However, not all previous commits are available, because Git regularly cleans the commits that are unreachable by branches or tags.
To view repository history and track prior commits, run git reflog show
. For example:
$ git reflog show
# Example output:
b673187 HEAD@{4}: merge 6e43d5987921bde189640cc1e37661f7f75c9c0b: Merge made by the 'recursive' strategy.
eb37e74 HEAD@{5}: rebase -i (finish): returning to refs/heads/master
eb37e74 HEAD@{6}: rebase -i (pick): Commit C
97436c6 HEAD@{7}: rebase -i (start): checkout 97436c6eec6396c63856c19b6a96372705b08b1b
...
88f1867 HEAD@{12}: commit: Commit D
97436c6 HEAD@{13}: checkout: moving from 97436c6eec6396c63856c19b6a96372705b08b1b to test
97436c6 HEAD@{14}: checkout: moving from master to 97436c6
05cc326 HEAD@{15}: commit: Commit C
6e43d59 HEAD@{16}: commit: Commit B
This output shows the repository history, including:
- The commit SHA.
- How many
HEAD
-changing actions ago the commit was made (HEAD@{12}
was 12HEAD
-changing actions ago). - The action that was taken, for example: commit, rebase, merge.
- A description of the action that changed
HEAD
.
Undo remote changes without changing history
To undo changes in the remote repository, you can create a new commit with the changes you want to undo. You should follow this process, which preserves the history and provides a clear timeline and development structure. However, you only need this procedure if your work was merged into a branch that other developers use as the base for their work.
To revert changes introduced in a specific commit B
:
git revert B
Undo remote changes while changing history
You can undo remote changes and change history.
Even with an updated history, old commits can still be accessed by commit SHA. This is the case at least until all the automated cleanup of detached commits is performed, or a cleanup is run manually. Even the cleanup might not remove old commits if there are still refs pointing to them.
When changing history is acceptable
You should not change the history when you’re working in a public branch or a branch that might be used by other developers.
When you contribute to large open source repositories, like GitLab, you can squash your commits into a single one.
To squash commits on your branch to a single commit on a target branch
at merge, use git merge --squash
.
How to change history
A branch of a merge request is a public branch and might be used by
other developers. However, the project rules might require
you to use git rebase
to reduce the number of
displayed commits on target branch after reviews are done.
You can modify history by using git rebase -i
. Use this command to modify, squash,
and delete commits.
#
# Commands:
# p, pick = use commit
# r, reword = use commit, but edit the commit message
# e, edit = use commit, but stop for amending
# s, squash = use commit, but meld into previous commit
# f, fixup = like "squash", but discard this commit's log message
# x, exec = run command (the rest of the line) using shell
# d, drop = remove commit
#
# These lines can be re-ordered; they are executed from top to bottom.
#
# If you remove a line THAT COMMIT WILL BE LOST.
#
# However, if you remove everything, the rebase will be aborted.
#
# Empty commits are commented out
Use git rebase
carefully on shared and remote branches.
Experiment locally before you push to the remote repository.
# Modify history from commit-id to HEAD (current commit)
git rebase -i commit-id
Redact text
-
Introduced in GitLab 17.1 with a flag named
rewrite_history_ui
. Disabled by default. - Enabled on GitLab.com in GitLab 17.2.
- Enabled on self-managed and GitLab Dedicated in GitLab 17.3.
Permanently delete sensitive or confidential information that was accidentally committed, ensuring
it’s no longer accessible in your repository’s history.
Replaces a list of strings with ***REMOVED***
.
Alternatively, to completely delete specific files from a repository, see Remove blobs.
Prerequisites:
- You must have the Owner role for the instance.
To redact text from your repository:
- On the left sidebar, select Search or go to and find your project.
- Select Settings > Repository.
- Expand Repository maintenance.
- Select Redact text.
- On the drawer, enter the text to redact. You can use regex and glob patterns.
- Select Redact matching strings.
- On the confirmation dialog, enter your project path.
- Select Yes, redact matching strings.
- On the left sidebar, select Settings > General.
- Expand Advanced.
- Select Run housekeeping.
Delete sensitive information from commits
You can use Git to delete sensitive information from your past commits. However, history is modified in the process.
To rewrite history with
certain filters,
run git filter-branch
.
To remove a file from the history altogether use:
git filter-branch --tree-filter 'rm filename' HEAD
The git filter-branch
command might be slow on large repositories.
Tools are available to execute Git commands more quickly.
These tools are faster because they do not provide the same
feature set as git filter-branch
does, but focus on specific use cases.
For more information about purging files from the repository history and GitLab storage, see Reduce repository size.
Undo commits by removing them
-
Undo your last commit and put everything back in the staging area:
git reset --soft HEAD^
-
Add files and change the commit message:
git commit --amend -m "New Message"
-
Undo the last change and remove all other changes, if you did not push yet:
git reset --hard HEAD^
-
Undo the last change and remove the last two commits, if you did not push yet:
git reset --hard HEAD^^
Git reset sample workflow
The following is a common Git reset workflow:
- Edit a file.
-
Check the status of the branch:
git status
-
Commit the changes to the branch with a wrong commit message:
git commit -am "kjkfjkg"
-
Check the Git log:
git log
-
Amend the commit with the correct commit message:
git commit --amend -m "New comment added"
-
Check the Git log again:
git log
-
Soft reset the branch:
git reset --soft HEAD^
-
Check the Git log again:
git log
-
Pull updates for the branch from the remote:
git pull origin <branch>
-
Push changes for the branch to the remote:
git push origin <branch>
Undo commits with a new replacement commit
git revert <commit-sha>
The difference between git revert
and git reset
- The
git reset
command removes the commit. Thegit revert
command removes the changes but leaves the commit. - The
git revert
command is safer, because you can revert a revert.
# Changed file
git commit -am "bug introduced"
git revert HEAD
# New commit created reverting changes
# Now we want to re apply the reverted commit
git log # take hash from the revert commit
git revert <rev commit hash>
# reverted commit is back (new commit created again)
Unstage changes
When you stage a file in Git, you instruct Git to track changes to the file in preparation for a commit. To disregard changes to a file, and not include it in your next commit, unstage the file.
Unstage a file
-
To remove files from staging, but keep your changes:
git reset HEAD <file>
-
To unstage the last three commits:
git reset HEAD^3
-
To unstage changes to a certain file from HEAD:
git reset <filename>
After you unstage the file, to revert the file back to the state it was in before the changes:
git checkout -- <file>
Remove a file
-
To remove a file from disk and repository, use
git rm
. To remove a directory, use the-r
flag:git rm '*.txt' git rm -r <dirname>
-
To keep a file on disk but remove it from the repository (such as a file you want to add to
.gitignore
), use therm
command with the--cache
flag:git rm <filename> --cache
These commands remove the file from current branches, but do not expunge it from your repository’s history. To completely remove all traces of the file, past and present, from your repository, see Remove blobs.