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?
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