I made a mistake and called git add -all
, now all files are added. I did not make a commit
and push
. How can I undo my action?
2 Answers
It has already been answered several times:
You can use
git reset
. This will 'unstage' all the files you've added after your last commit.If you want to unstage only some files, use
git reset -- <file 1> <file 2> <file n>
.Also it's possible to unstage some of the changes in files by using
git reset -p
.
See
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5If it was already answered several times, the correct course of action would be to vote to mark as duplicate, and not answer the question. Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 15:04
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@SecondRikudo That's what I did, look at my comment at the top. The reason I posted is to provide more than one answer link. Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 15:04
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4Emphasizing the and not answer the question part. The idea is that if someone searches Google for this problem, they'd find the canonical with the best answer, and not one of the many duplicates asked. By answering these questions you're giving them more visibility. Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 15:05
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I did this reset and it said it unstaged them but they're still in the index because if I a git status it shows them marked as modified still. How do I COMPLETELY get rid of changes bot added and committed locally? Commented Oct 16, 2015 at 2:37
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To reset specific files you can use: git reset -- <file_a> <file_b>
or to reset all your changes you can use git reset
.
git reset HEAD
?