# This will destroy any local modifications.
# Don't do it if you have uncommitted work you want to keep.
git reset --hard 0d1d7fc32
# Alternatively, if there's work to keep:
git stash
git reset --hard 0d1d7fc32
git stash pop
# This saves the modifications, then reapplies that patch after resetting.
# You could get merge conflicts, if you've modified things which were
# changed since the commit you reset to.
git revert 797832c
git reset --hard branch_name #Reverts all modified files to last commit on branch
//git use a new commit to replace an old commit,commit moves foward not backward
git revert <commit hash>
//Git goes back one spot on the log,undone this commit and go backward one commit:
git reset HEAD~1
//Git looks for and rolls back to a certain file:
git checkout commit-hash-here -- file/location/and/name
git reset --hard c14809fa
// The '.' is needed to attached HEAD!
$ git checkout <commit_id> .
$ git add .
$ git commit -m "go back to <commit-id>"
$ git push
// checkout source for full details!
# Revert is the command to rollback the commits.
git revert 2h3h23233
# push after change
git push