Undoing a git rebase

GitRebaseGit RebaseUndo

Git Problem Overview


Does anybody know how to easily undo a git rebase?

The only way that comes to mind is to go at it manually:

  • git checkout the commit parent to both of the branches
  • then create a temp branch from there
  • cherry-pick all commits by hand
  • replace the branch in which I rebased by the manually-created branch

In my current situation this is gonna work because I can easily spot commits from both branches (one was my stuff, the other was my colleague's stuff).

However my approach strikes me as suboptimal and error-prone (let's say I had just rebased with 2 of my own branches).

Any ideas?

Clarification: I'm talking about a rebase during which a bunch of commits were replayed. Not only one.

Git Solutions


Solution 1 - Git

The easiest way would be to find the head commit of the branch as it was immediately before the rebase started in the reflog...

git reflog

and to reset the current branch to it (with the usual caveats about being absolutely sure before reseting with the --hard option).

Suppose the old commit was HEAD@{2} in the ref log:

git reset --hard HEAD@{2}

In Windows, you may need to quote the reference:

git reset --hard "HEAD@{2}"

You can check the history of the candidate old head by just doing a git log HEAD@{2} (Windows: git log "HEAD@{2}").

If you've not disabled per branch reflogs you should be able to simply do git reflog branchname@{1} as a rebase detaches the branch head before reattaching to the final head. I would double check this, though as I haven't verified this recently.

Per default, all reflogs are activated for non-bare repositories:

[core]
    logAllRefUpdates = true

Solution 2 - Git

Actually, rebase saves your starting point to ORIG_HEAD so this is usually as simple as:

git reset --hard ORIG_HEAD

However, the reset, rebase and merge all save your original HEAD pointer into ORIG_HEAD so, if you've done any of those commands since the rebase you're trying to undo then you'll have to use the reflog.

Solution 3 - Git

Charles's answer works, but you may want to do this:

git rebase --abort

to clean up after the reset.

Otherwise, you may get the message “Interactive rebase already started”.

Solution 4 - Git

Resetting the branch to the dangling commit object of its old tip is of course the best solution, because it restores the previous state without expending any effort. But if you happen to have lost those commits (f.ex. because you garbage-collected your repository in the meantime, or this is a fresh clone), you can always rebase the branch again. The key to this is the --onto switch.

Let’s say you had a topic branch imaginatively called topic, that you branched off master when the tip of master was the 0deadbeef commit. At some point while on the topic branch, you did git rebase master. Now you want to undo this. Here’s how:

git rebase --onto 0deadbeef master topic

This will take all commits on topic that aren’t on master and replay them on top of 0deadbeef.

With --onto, you can rearrange your history into pretty much any shape whatsoever.

Have fun. :-)

Solution 5 - Git

In case you had pushed your branch to remote repository (usually it's origin) and then you've done a succesfull rebase (without merge) (git rebase --abort gives "No rebase in progress") you can easily reset branch using command:

> git reset --hard origin/{branchName}

Example:

$ ~/work/projects/{ProjectName} $ git status
On branch {branchName}
Your branch is ahead of 'origin/{branchName}' by 135 commits.
  (use "git push" to publish your local commits)

nothing to commit, working directory clean

$ ~/work/projects/{ProjectName} $ git reset --hard origin/{branchName}
HEAD is now at 6df5719 "Commit message".

$ ~/work/projects/{ProjectName} $ git status
On branch {branchName}
Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/{branchName}.

nothing to commit, working directory clean

Solution 6 - Git

I actually put a backup tag on the branch before I do any nontrivial operation (most rebases are trivial, but I'd do that if it looks anywhere complex).

Then, restoring is as easy as git reset --hard BACKUP.

Solution 7 - Git

git reset --hard origin/{branchName}

is the correct solution to reset all your local changes done by rebase.

Solution 8 - Git

Using reflog didn't work for me.

What worked for me was similar to as described here. Open the file in .git/logs/refs named after the branch that was rebased and find the line that contains "rebase finsihed", something like:

5fce6b51 88552c8f Kris Leech <me@example.com> 1329744625 +0000  rebase finished: refs/heads/integrate onto 9e460878

Checkout the second commit listed on the line.

git checkout 88552c8f

Once confirmed this contained my lost changes I branched and let out a sigh of relief.

git log
git checkout -b lost_changes

Solution 9 - Git

For multiple commits, remember that any commit references all the history leading up to that commit. So in Charles' answer, read "the old commit" as "the newest of the old commits". If you reset to that commit, then all the history leading up to that commit will reappear. This should do what you want.

Solution 10 - Git

If you successfully rebased against a remote branch and can not git rebase --abort you still can do some tricks to save your work and don't have forced pushes. Suppose your current branch that was rebased by mistake is called your-branch and is tracking origin/your-branch

  • git branch -m your-branch-rebased # rename current branch
  • git checkout origin/your-branch # checkout to latest state that is known to the origin
  • git checkout -b your-branch
  • check git log your-branch-rebased, compare to git log your-branch, and define commits that are missing from your-branch
  • git cherry-pick COMMIT_HASH for every commit in your-branch-rebased
  • push your changes. Please be aware that two local branches are associated with remote/your-branch and you should push only your-branch

Solution 11 - Git

If you don't want to do a hard reset...

You can checkout the commit from the reflog, and then save it as a new branch:

git reflog

Find the commit just before you started rebasing. You may need to scroll further down to find it (press Enter or PageDown). Take note of the HEAD number and replace 57:

git checkout HEAD@{57}

Review the branch/commits, and if it's correct then create a new branch using this HEAD:

git checkout -b new_branch_name

Solution 12 - Git

Following the solution of @Allan and @Zearin, I wish I could simply do a comment though but I don't enough reputation, so I have used the following command:

Instead of doing git rebase -i --abort (note the -i) I had to simply do git rebase --abort (without the -i).

Using both -i and --abort at the same time causes Git to show me a list of usage/options.

So my previous and current branch status with this solution is:

matbhz@myPc /my/project/environment (branch-123|REBASE-i)
$ git rebase --abort

matbhz@myPc /my/project/environment (branch-123)
$

Solution 13 - Git

Another way that doesn't require doing a hard reset is to create a new branch with your desired starting point.

As with the other solutions, you use the reflog to find the correct starting point.

git reflog

(you can also use git log -g here for more detail)

Then you note the reference to the commit SHA (ex: e86a52b851e).

Finally, you use the git branch command.

git branch recover-branch e86a52b851e

Reference: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Internals-Maintenance-and-Data-Recovery#_data_recovery

Solution 14 - Git

Let's say I rebase master to my feature branch and I get 30 new commits which break something. I've found that often it's easiest to just remove the bad commits.

git rebase -i HEAD~31

Interactive rebase for the last 31 commits (it doesn't hurt if you pick way too many).

Simply take the commits that you want to get rid of and mark them with "d" instead of "pick". Now the commits are deleted effectively undoing the rebase (if you remove only the commits you just got when rebasing).

Solution 15 - Git

If you are on a branch you can use:

git reset --hard @{1}

There is not only a reference log for HEAD (obtained by git reflog), there are also reflogs for each branch (obtained by git reflog <branch>). So, if you are on master then git reflog master will list all changes to that branch. You can refer to that changes by master@{1}, master@{2}, etc.

git rebase will usually change HEAD multiple times but the current branch will be updated only once.

@{1} is simply a shortcut for the current branch, so it's equal to master@{1} if you are on master.

git reset --hard ORIG_HEAD will not work if you used git reset during an interactive rebase.

Solution 16 - Git

It annoys me to no end that none of these answers is fully automatic, despite the fact that it should be automatable (at least mostly). I created a set of aliases to try to remedy this:

# Useful commands
#################

# Undo the last rebase
undo-rebase = "! f() { : git reset ; PREV_COMMIT=`git x-rev-before-rebase` && git reset --merge \"$PREV_COMMIT\" \"$@\";}; f"

# See what changed since the last rebase
rdiff = "!f() { : git diff ; git diff `git x-rev-before-rebase` "$@";}; f"

# Helpers
########
# Get the revision before the last rebase started
x-rev-before-rebase = !git reflog --skip=1 -1 \"`git x-start-of-rebase`\" --format=\"%gD\"

# Get the revision that started the rebase
x-start-of-rebase = reflog --grep-reflog '^rebase (start)' -1 --format="%gD"

You should be able to tweak this to allow going back an arbitrary number of rebases pretty easily (juggling the args is the trickiest part), which can be useful if you do a number of rebases in quick succession and mess something up along the way.

Caveats

It will get confused if any commit messages begin with "rebase (start)" (please don't do this). You could make the regex more resilient to improve the situation by matching something like this for your regex:

--grep-reflog "^rebase (start): checkout " 

WARNING: not tested (regex may need adjustments)

The reason I haven't done this is because I'm not 100% that a rebase always begins with a checkout. Can anyone confirm this?

[If you're curious about the null (:) commands at the beginning of the function, that's a way of setting up bash completions for the aliases]

Solution 17 - Git

What I usually do is git reset #commit_hash

to the last commit where I think rebase had no effect.

then git pull

Now your branch should match exactly like master and rebased commits should not be in it.

Now one can just cherry-pick the commits on this branch.

Solution 18 - Git

I tried all suggestions with reset and reflog without any success. Restoring local history of IntelliJ resolved the problem of lost files

Solution 19 - Git

If you mess something up within a git rebase, e.g. git rebase --abort, while you have uncommitted files, they will be lost and git reflog will not help. This happened to me and you will need to think outside the box here. If you are lucky like me and use IntelliJ Webstorm then you can right-click->local history and can revert to a previous state of your file/folders no matter what mistakes you have done with versioning software. It is always good to have another failsafe running.

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