Going back to a previous commit in Github Desktop

morishuz picture morishuz · Jan 14, 2016 · Viewed 77.8k times · Source

I am trying to use GitHub Desktop (i.e. the GUI application - NOT command line) to go back to a previous commit (on the same branch). Something that I would have thought is a core feature, since it's the primary reason for using source control in the first place.

I can see that it's possible to revert a commit, but this is not really what I want as it creates a new commit. I would just simply like to go back with the option of going forward again, in the same way that I can just hop to a different branch.

Is this possible or is it a limitation of github desktop and I need to use the cmd line for that?

Answer

SevenEleven picture SevenEleven · Jan 14, 2016

In general, you can go back to a commit in your history with git reset.


This is not possible with GitHub Desktop. GitHub Desktop is more of a tool to synchronize your repositories and not a full featured GUI client.
But that doesn't mean you have to use the command line, since there are alternatives. You can find a list here. To mention a few (that support git reset):


Here is how you do it on command line. Most clients provide this in their UI using the same vocabulary (usually, you are able to select a commit and reset to it via context menu).

You will go back to the previous commit with

git reset HEAD^

or some more commits (for example 3) by

git reset HEAD^3

or to a specific commit by

git reset f7823ab

Have in mind that, by default, the option --mixed is passed to git reset. So, all changes made, since that commit you reset to, will still be there.

To get the original state of the commit that you want to 'revert', you have to pass --hard. For example:

git reset f7823ab --hard