Basically what has happened is this:
I moved a bunch of files from one directory to another directory.
I then committed my change and pushed it.
Then I notice that my "move" actually wasn't a move but Mercurial, I guess, actually copied the files I wanted to move and pasted them in the new directory and then deleted the original files.
The unintended result of this is that all the history is lost since it is no longer the old files but new ones.
So what I would like to know is how do I revert/rollback/backout this change?
I have read about all three ways but I'm still not sure which is the best way to approach this. I just want to backout my push so that I can move the files correctly without losing all the history.
You can't directly "undo" a push but there are ways to essentially negate its effects.
Option 1: The most straightforward option is if you have full control over all clones which have received the pushed commit which was in error. If so, use hg strip on all of them to remove the bad commit(s).
Option 2: If you cannot do that, you could delete the incorrectly added files and revert the deletion of the original files (example), and then just redo the operation as you originally intended.
Option 3: Update back to the commit prior to the bad one. Then use hg move to correctly relocate the files, and commit that which will create a new head (since you were working off a revision older than the current tip). Then merge this new head with the tip. That should cause the history to be retained.
Related
I'm new to github and have been working on a group project for school. Recently it turned out we were missing some stuff and nothing was organized (every file was just uploaded into the main directory) so I removed everything using a command in the github shell. Then I proceeded to make files and organize all the code and re-upload and store everything in there.
However, when I did this, I had to keep committing every time I made a new folder and stored a bunch of files in it. I would like to keep the changes made during those commits (because I created folders and re-uploaded the stuff), but I want to remove those commits from the history because they are cluttering up the project.
Is this possible, and if so can you please walk me through the steps. Also I'm new to github so I don't know much.
Here is a picture of the ones I want to remove from my history because they are cluttering up the screen (see red marks):
Thanks :)
EDIT: PLEASE NOTE: I don't want to revert the changes, I just want all those history to be removed because they are cluttering up the commit history.
You should use:
git rebase -i HEAD~14
To rebase and squash your unwanted commits. Just use p to mark the last commit and use f to mark the unwanted commits for squashing it with the previous commits. This will remove it from commit log keeping the changes.
More info: https://git-scm.com/book/gr/v2/%CE%94%CE%B9%CE%B1%CE%BA%CE%BB%CE%B1%CE%B4%CF%8E%CF%83%CE%B5%CE%B9%CF%82-%CF%83%CF%84%CE%BF-Git-Rebasing
It is possible in GitKraken to revert changes of a single file to an earlier commit instead of reverting an entire commit?
Answer
A revert in the git-sense of it can only be performed on a commit. It introduces a new commit that exactly negates the reverted commits' changes. See here. GitKraken supports this: right click on a commit, Revert <branch> to this commit.
What you want to accomplish, however, can be done via git checkout. I do not think GitKraken supports this funtionality for a single file yet. You can, however, use the command line.
Reset single file via command line
git checkout <commit> <file>
Check out a previous version of a file. This turns the <file> that
resides in the working directory into an exact copy of the one from
<commit> and adds it to the staging area.
Documentation can be found here.
git checkout HEAD~1 <filename> will thus reset a single file to the commit before the current HEAD.
You can accomplish this in the GitKraken UI, but it's a little roundabout:
Revert the most recent commit(s) back to where the file was deleted, but when GitKraken asks if you want to immediately commit the reversion, click no.
Unstage all changes
Stage only the add for the file you're trying to restore
Right click in Unstaged, and Discard all
This should leave you with only an add for the one file you wanted to restore. Commit that, and now you've got your one file back.
Note that this can work across numerous commits, not just one... but since it's going to have to roll back everything from all of those commits, and then discard all of the rollbacks (except one) it can be quite slow if involves massive changes. In situations like this, it is probably better to use the git CI as suggested in kowsky's answer.
Although it doesn't strictly involves using git commands, GitKraken offers the possibility to visualize the content of any project file at any given commit.
When acting on a single file, it might be much easier to copy/paste the targeted commit file's content than using complicated git commands that might very well end up messing your whole project's commit history.
To achieve this, simply:
Open your git project in GitKraken
Click on the desired commit in the commit history line
In the right panel, check the View all files checkbox
Locate the desired project file and click on it
The file content will be displayed in the main panel
You can now copy/paste the content
Simple and efficient when you only need to revert a very limited number of files...
GitKraken 7.3.0 (probably older versions too) does allow for effectively running git checkout on a single file in the UI: Right click on the file under "unstaged files" and select "discard changes". Works on folders as well.
(This answer was previously a comment to the accepted answer)
You can make an UNDO to the last commit edit it and after that make a Force push to overwrite that. Works very well
Hope GitKraken can do this, as "TortoiseGit" does.
In my repository I needed to revert to an older revision. I did reverting and made the changes I needed to. How do I push the new revision upstream?
I was on rev 17 when I needed to revert back to rev 13. Now that I've made my changes, I'm on rev 18. Thing is, when I go to push these changes up (I'm using TortoiseHG), I get an error "abort:push create new remote head.
I don't want to do a merge. Do I want to do a force with the --force command or do I need to delete rev 14-17. If I need to delete, how do I delete 14-17.?
Proper solution is to actually merge with option Discard all changes from merge target (other) revision. But sometimes life is harder on us and we really need to drop some changes (eg. we committed nuclear launch codes or some other security sensitive data). Is that your case? If yes then follow.
Assuming that original changes were not published you could:
enable mq extension
r-click on offending changes and execute Modify history->Strip.
This will permanently remove changes from your local history.
You don't want to delete revisions and therefore destroy history. That goes against the reason version control exists.
You can do a merge and discard.
You can also do this in tortoiseHG.
Sometimes need arises to update a library or file that has previously been put into .hgignore.
Normally, I would delete its entry from ignore list, commit/push a change and put ignore entry back.
Is this a good practice or there is some better/elegant way to deal with such a situation in Mercurial?
From the hgignore man page
The Mercurial system uses a file called .hgignore in the root directory of a repository to control its behavior when it searches for files that it is not currently tracking.
This library is obviously tracked. At some point you did hg add <library>. hgignore is no longer part of the equation for this file. In the future just update your library and commit.
hgignore is used for things like stopping mercurial talking about certain files when you do an hg status or adding them on hg addremove. It doesn't stop mercurial noticing if a tracked file changes.
You don't need to remove the entry from .hgignore; you can just hg add the file.
However, when you use a GUI, this GUI might use the .hgignore entries to show you a filtered list of files you can add. In this case, you would either have to add the file maqnually with hg add, or remove the entry temporarily from the .hgignore file.
There are certain files in my repository that I want to be able to edit locally. But I never want to push any changes to those files to the server. Is it possible for me to set that up?
EDIT: to clarify, I do want to pull changes that others have made. But I don't want to push my changes.
It's not easily possible. Mercurial doesn't push and pull files it pushes and pulls changesets. Your only route would be to never commit those files. Ignoring them isn't an option because they're already tracked (added) and tracked always overrides ignored.
You could explicitly exclude them on commits like.
hg commit -X a-file-I-changed -X another-file
And since you'll eventually forget to do that you could set up an alias in your hgrc:
[alias]
mycommit = -X a-file-I-changed -X another-file
However, I'm going to go out on a limb and guess you're talking about a configuration file like a database settings file. The best way to handle that is to commit not database.conf (or whatever it's called) but instead database.conf.sample and then have your launch script copy database.conf.sample to database.conf if it doesn't already exist. That's the normal practice.
If your change is substantial consider making it a patch in a Mercurial Queue. You can pop your change, pull their changes, and then push your change back on to the working dir. If it's a change you couldn't bear to lose you can make make the queue a repository of its own, and then clone that repository elsewhere.
A Ry4an writes, you can exclude the file when you commit. A colleague of mine has made a simple extension that will automate this in simple cases:
https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/ExcludeExtension
https://bitbucket.org/aragost/exclude/
The non-simple case is a merge -- Mercurial wont let you exclude files when you commit a merge. For now, you'll have to move the modified file aside, revert it, and then move it back after the merge. Patches are welcome to handle this case!