Git: How to revert 2 files that are stubbornly stuck at "Changed but not committed"?
I have a repo that has two files that supposedly I changed locally.
So I'm stuck with this:
$ git status
# On branch master
# Changed but not updated:
# (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
# (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
#
# modified: dir1/foo.aspx
# modified: dir2/foo.aspx
#
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
Doing git diff
says that the entire file contents have changed, even though from eyeballing it that seems untrue (there seem to be common line r开发者_开发技巧anges that diff seems to be failing to see).
Interestingly I don't remember changing these files locally. This repo is used with one remote repo (private, at GitHub.com, FWIW).
No matter what I've tried, I can't discard these local changes. I have tried all of:
$ git checkout -- .
$ git checkout -f
$ git checkout -- dir1/checkout_receipt.aspx
$ git reset --hard HEAD
$ git stash save --keep-index && git stash drop
$ git checkout-index -a -f
In other words I've tried everything described in How do I discard unstaged changes in Git? plus more. But the 2 files remain stuck as "changed but not committed".
What the heck would cause two files to be stuck like this and seemingly "un-revert-table"??
P.S. In the list above showing commands I'd already tried, I mistakenly wrote git revert
when I meant git checkout
. I'm sorry and thank you to those of you who answered that I should try checkout
. I edited the question to correct it. I definitely did already try checkout
.
I spent hours trying to solve a similar issue - a remote branch that I had checked out, which stubbornly showed four files as 'Changed but not updated', even when deleting all files and running git checkout -f
again (or other variations from this post)!
These four files were necessary, but certainly hadn't been modified by me. My final solution - persuade Git that they had not been changed. The following works for all checked out files, showing 'modified' status - make sure you have already committed/stashed any that have really been modified!:
git ls-files -m | xargs -i git update-index --assume-unchanged "{}"
On Mac OSX, however xargs operates a little bit different (thx Daniel for the comment):
git ls-files -m | xargs -I {} git update-index --assume-unchanged {}
I've added this as a placeholder for myself for next time.
What are the line endings in the files? I'm betting they're CRLF. If they are, check out this guide: http://help.github.com/line-endings/
In short, you need to make sure git is set to convert the line endings to LF on commit, and then commit those files. Files in the repo should always be LF, files checked out should be the OS's native, assuming you set git correctly.
this is how I fixed the same problem in my case: open .gitattributes change:
* text=auto
to:
#* text=auto
read more here https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/troubleshooting#_resolving-git-line-ending-issues-in-containers-resulting-in-many-modified-files
save and close , then revert or reset, thanks to @Simon East for the hint
Another possibility is that the difference (that's preventing your from reverting these files with a checkout command) is one of file mode. This is what happened to me. On my version of git you can discover this by using
git diff dir1/foo.aspx
And it will show you file mode changes. It still won't let you revert them, though. For that use either
git config core.filemode false
or change your git .config in your text editor by adding
[core]
filemode = false
After you do this, you can use
git reset HEAD dir1/foo.aspx
and the file should disappear.
(I got all of this from the answer to How do I make git ignore mode changes (chmod)?)
I had the same issue, with the interesting addition that the files were changed on windows, but not when looking at them from WSL. No amount of messing around with line endings, resets etc. was able to change it.
Eventually, I found a solution in this answer. Following is the text for convenince:
I have resolved this problem using following steps
1) Remove every file from Git's index.
git rm --cached -r .
2) Rewrite the Git index to pick up all the new line endings.
git reset --hard
Solution was part of steps described on git site https://help.github.com/articles/dealing-with-line-endings/
Try to revert local changes:
git checkout -- dir1/foo.aspx
git checkout -- dir2/foo.aspx
This issue can also be cause because git treats capitalization differences as different files but windows treats them as the same file. If a file name only had it's capitalization changed then every windows user of that repo will end up in this situation.
The solution is to confirm the files contents are correct and then recommit it. We had to merge the two files contents together since they were different. Then pull and there will be a merge conflict which you can resolve by deleting the duplicate file. Recommit the merge resolution and you are back to a stable state.
I had some phantom changed files that were showing as modified, but were actually identical.
Running this command sometimes works:
(Turns off git's "smart" but often unhelpful line-ending conversions)
git config --local core.autocrlf false
But in another case I found it was due to a .gitattributes
file in the root which had some line-ending settings present, which was trying to apply autocrlf
for certain files even when it was turned off. That wasn't actually helpful, so I deleted .gitattributes
, committed, and the file no longer showed as modified.
git checkout dir1/foo.aspx
git checkout dir2/foo.aspx
You also might have had a problem related to directories naming letter cases. Some of your colleagues could have changed the name of the directory from e.g. myHandler to MyHandler. If you later on pushed and pulled some of the files of the original directory you would have had 2 separate directories on the remote repository AND only one on your local machine since on Windows you only can have just one. And you're in trouble.
To check if that is the case, just see if the remote repository has double structure.
To fix this, make a backup copy of the parent directory outside of the repo, then delete the parent directory, push it. Make a pull (here's when the second one marked as deleted should appear on status) and push again. After that, recreate the whole structure from your backup and push the changes again.
I think it would be helpful to provide a hint on how to reproduce the issue, in order to better understand the problem:
$ git init
$ echo "*.txt -text" > .gitattributes
$ echo -e "hello\r\nworld" > 1.txt
$ git add 1.txt
$ git commit -m "committed as binary"
$ echo "*.txt text" > .gitattributes
$ echo "change.." >> 1.txt
# Ok let's revert now
$ git checkout -- 1.txt
$ git status
modified: 1.txt
# Oooops, it didn't revert!!
# hm let's diff:
$ git diff
warning: CRLF will be replaced by LF in 1.txt.
The file will have its original line endings in your working
directory.
diff --git a/1.txt b/1.txt
index c78c505..94954ab 100644
--- a/1.txt
+++ b/1.txt
@@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
-hello
+hello
world
# No actual changes. Ahh, let's change the line endings...
$ file 1.txt
1.txt: ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators
$ dos2unix 1.txt
dos2unix: converting file 1.txt to Unix format ...
$ git diff
git diff 1.txt
diff --git a/1.txt b/1.txt
index c78c505..94954ab 100644
--- a/1.txt
+++ b/1.txt
@@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
-hello
+hello
world
# No, it didn't work, file is still considered modified.
# Let's try to revert for once more:
$ git checkout -- 1.txt
$ git status
modified: 1.txt
# Nothing. Let's use a magic command that prints wrongly committed files.
$ git grep -I --files-with-matches --perl-regexp '\r' HEAD
HEAD:1.txt
2nd way to reproduce:
In the above script replace this line:
echo "*.txt -text" > .gitattributes
with
git config core.autocrlf=false
and keep the rest of the lines as is
What all the above say? A text file can (under some circumstances) be
committed with CRLF, (e.g. -text
in .gitattributes
/ or core.autocrlf=false
).
When we later want to treat the same file as text (-text
-> text
) it will need to be committed again.
Of course you can temporarily revert it (as correctly answered by Abu Assar). In our case:
echo "*.txt -text" > .gitattributes
git checkout -- 1.txt
echo "*.txt text" > .gitattributes
The answer is: do you really want to do that, because it's gonna cause the same problem everytime you change the file.
For the record:
To check which files can cause this problem in your repo execute the following command (git should be compiled with --with-libpcre):
git grep -I --files-with-matches --perl-regexp '\r' HEAD
By committing the file(s) (supposing that you want to treat them as text), it is the same thing as doing what is proposed in this link http://help.github.com/line-endings/ for fixing such problems. But, instead of you removing .git/index
and performing reset
, you can just change the file(s), then perform git checkout -- xyz zyf
and then commit.
For me the issue was not about line endings. It was about changing case in folder name (Reset_password -> Reset_Password). This solution helped me: https://stackoverflow.com/a/34919019/1328513
My issue was something else. No amount of reset
, clean
, restore
, or other git commands resolved my issue. I also tried deleting the file, reverting, etc., and every time I pulled, it would come right back.
> git status
On branch master
Your branch is behind 'origin/master' by 319 commits, and can be fast-forwarded.
(use "git pull" to update your local branch)
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git restore <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
modified: bucket/stellarium.json
I fixed it by the following:
Rename / move the file out of the way. (--> Not git mv
)
> mv .\bucket\stellarium.json .\bucket\stellarium_DELETEME.json
> git status
On branch master
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add/rm <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git restore <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
deleted: bucket/stellarium.json
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
bucket/stellarium_DELETEME.json
Restore the file.
> git restore .\bucket\stellarium.json
> git status
On branch master
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
bucket/stellarium_DELETEME.json
Delete the renamed file.
> rm .\bucket\stellarium_DELETEME.json
> git status
On branch master
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.
nothing to commit, working tree clean
So... ?
Perhaps the disk's FAT got screwed up? I'm not sure. Still don't know. But, it worked.
Been there, time has always been one of my greatest enemy so decided to go with the easiest solution.
- move the 2 local version files elsewhere
- Commit and push
- copy the files manually to the git server
- pull
Short answer: check .gitattibutes
for any setting that might affect the files that have problems.
For me there was a setting in .gitattributes
forcing eol=crlf
for some specific files:
*.bat text eol=crlf
That was added to force those files have crlf
in Windows.
I had to comment that line:
#*.bat text eol=crlf
I use macOS, the problem showed up whenever I was switching branches. Before commenting this setting I had to do a git rm --cached -r .
and a hard reset every time.
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