Say I'm in a Git repository. I delete a file and commit that change. I continue working and make some more commits. Then, I find I need to restore that file.
I know I can checkout a file using git checkout HEAD^ foo.bar
, but I don't really know when that file was deleted.
I'm hoping I don't have to manually browse my logs, checkout the entire project for a given SHA and then manually copy that file into my original project checkout.
Find the last commit that affected the given path. As the file isn't in the HEAD commit, this commit must have deleted it.
git rev-list -n 1 HEAD -- <file_path>
Then checkout the version at the commit before, using the caret (^
) symbol:
git checkout <deleting_commit>^ -- <file_path>
Or in one command, if $file
is the file in question.
git checkout $(git rev-list -n 1 HEAD -- "$file")^ -- "$file"
If you are using zsh and have the EXTENDED_GLOB option enabled, the caret symbol won't work. You can use ~1
instead.
git checkout $(git rev-list -n 1 HEAD -- "$file")~1 -- "$file"