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GIT-RESET(1)			  Git Manual			  GIT-RESET(1)

NAME
       git-reset - Set `HEAD` or the index to a	known state

SYNOPSIS
       git reset [--soft | --mixed [-N]	| --hard | --merge | --keep] [-q] [<commit>]
       git reset [-q] [<tree-ish>] [--]	<pathspec>...
       git reset [-q] [--pathspec-from-file=<file> [--pathspec-file-nul]] [<tree-ish>]
       git reset (--patch | -p)	[<tree-ish>] [--] [<pathspec>...]

DESCRIPTION
       git reset does either of	the following:

	1. git reset [<mode>] <commit> changes which commit HEAD points	to.
	   This	makes it possible to undo various Git operations, for example
	   commit, merge, rebase, and pull.

	2. When	you specify files or directories or pass --patch, git reset
	   updates the staged version of the specified files.

	   git reset [<mode>] [<commit>]
	       Set the current branch head (HEAD) to point at <commit>.
	       Depending on <mode>, also update	the working directory and/or
	       index to	match the contents of <commit>.	 <commit> defaults to
	       HEAD. Before the	operation, ORIG_HEAD is	set to the tip of the
	       current branch.

	       The <mode> must be one of the following (default	--mixed):

	       --mixed
		   Leave your working directory	unchanged. Update the index to
		   match the new HEAD, so nothing will be staged.

		   If -N is specified, mark removed paths as intent-to-add
		   (see	git-add(1)).

	       --soft
		   Leave your working tree files and the index unchanged. For
		   example, if you have	no staged changes, you can use git
		   reset --soft	HEAD~5;	git commit to combine the last 5
		   commits into	1 commit. This works even with changes in the
		   working tree, which are left	untouched, but such usage can
		   lead	to confusion.

	       --hard
		   Overwrite all files and directories with the	version	from
		   <commit>, and may overwrite untracked files.	Tracked	files
		   not in <commit> are removed so that the working tree
		   matches <commit>. Update the	index to match the new HEAD,
		   so nothing will be staged.

	       --merge
		   Reset the index and update the files	in the working tree
		   that	are different between <commit> and HEAD, but keep
		   those which are different between the index and working
		   tree	(i.e. which have changes which have not	been added).
		   Mainly exists to reset unmerged index entries, like those
		   left	behind by git am -3 or git switch -m in	certain
		   situations. If a file that is different between <commit>
		   and the index has unstaged changes, reset is	aborted.

	       --keep
		   Resets index	entries	and updates files in the working tree
		   that	are different between <commit> and HEAD. If a file
		   that	is different between <commit> and HEAD has local
		   changes, reset is aborted.

	       --recurse-submodules, --no-recurse-submodules
		   When	the working tree is updated, using
		   --recurse-submodules	will also recursively reset the
		   working tree	of all active submodules according to the
		   commit recorded in the superproject,	also setting the
		   submodules' HEAD to be detached at that commit.

	   git reset [-q] [<tree-ish>] [--] <pathspec>..., git reset [-q]
	   [--pathspec-from-file=<file>	[--pathspec-file-nul]] [<tree-ish>]
	       For all specified files or directories, set the staged version
	       to the version from the given commit or tree (which defaults to
	       HEAD).

	       This means that git reset <pathspec> is the opposite of git add
	       <pathspec>: it unstages all changes to the specified file(s) or
	       directories. This is equivalent to git restore --staged
	       <pathspec>....

	       In this mode, git reset updates only the	index (without
	       updating	the HEAD or working tree files). If you	want to	update
	       the files as well as the	index entries, use git-restore(1).

	   git reset (--patch |	-p) [<tree-ish>] [--] [<pathspec>...]
	       Interactively select changes from the difference	between	the
	       index and the specified commit or tree (which defaults to
	       HEAD). The index	is modified using the chosen changes.

	       This means that git reset -p is the opposite of git add -p,
	       i.e. you	can use	it to selectively unstage changes. See the
	       "Interactive Mode" section of git-add(1)	to learn how to	use
	       the --patch option.

       See "Reset, restore and revert" in git(1) for the differences between
       the three commands.

OPTIONS
       -q, --quiet
	   Be quiet, only report errors.

       --refresh, --no-refresh
	   Refresh the index after a mixed reset. Enabled by default.

       --pathspec-from-file=<file>
	   Pathspec is passed in <file>	instead	of commandline args. If	<file>
	   is exactly -	then standard input is used. Pathspec elements are
	   separated by	LF or CR/LF. Pathspec elements can be quoted as
	   explained for the configuration variable core.quotePath (see	git-
	   config(1)). See also	--pathspec-file-nul and	global
	   --literal-pathspecs.

       --pathspec-file-nul
	   Only	meaningful with	--pathspec-from-file. Pathspec elements	are
	   separated with NUL character	and all	other characters are taken
	   literally (including	newlines and quotes).

       -U<n>, --unified=<n>
	   Generate diffs with <n> lines of context. Defaults to diff.context
	   or 3	if the config option is	unset.

       --inter-hunk-context=<n>
	   Show	the context between diff hunks,	up to the specified <number>
	   of lines, thereby fusing hunks that are close to each other.
	   Defaults to diff.interHunkContext or	0 if the config	option is
	   unset.

       --
	   Do not interpret any	more arguments as options.

       <pathspec>...
	   Limits the paths affected by	the operation.

	   For more details, see the pathspec entry in gitglossary(7).

EXAMPLES
       Undo add

	       $ edit					  (1)
	       $ git add frotz.c filfre.c
	       $ mailx					  (2)
	       $ git reset				  (3)
	       $ git pull git://info.example.com/ nitfol  (4)
	    1. You are happily working on something, and find the changes
	       in these	files are in good order. You do	not want to see
	       them when you run git diff, because you plan to work on
	       other files and changes with these files	are distracting.
	    2. Somebody	asks you to pull, and the changes sound	worthy of
	       merging.
	    3. However,	you already dirtied the	index (i.e. your index
	       does not	match the HEAD commit).	But you	know the pull you
	       are going to make does not affect frotz.c or filfre.c, so
	       you revert the index changes for	these two files. Your
	       changes in working tree remain there.
	    4. Then you	can pull and merge, leaving frotz.c and	filfre.c
	       changes still in	the working tree.

       Undo a commit and redo

	       $ git commit ...
	       $ git reset --soft HEAD^	     (1)
	       $ edit			     (2)
	       $ git commit -a -c ORIG_HEAD  (3)
	    1. This is most often done when you	remembered what	you just
	       committed is incomplete,	or you misspelled your commit
	       message,	or both. Leaves	working	tree as	it was before
	       "reset".
	    2. Make corrections	to working tree	files.
	    3. "reset" copies the old head to .git/ORIG_HEAD; redo the
	       commit by starting with its log message.	If you do not
	       need to edit the	message	further, you can give -C option
	       instead.

	       See also	the --amend option to git-commit(1).

       Undo a commit, making it	a topic	branch

	       $ git branch topic/wip	       (1)
	       $ git reset --hard HEAD~3       (2)
	       $ git switch topic/wip	       (3)
	    1. You have	made some commits, but realize they were
	       premature to be in the master branch. You want to continue
	       polishing them in a topic branch, so create topic/wip
	       branch off of the current HEAD.
	    2. Rewind the master branch	to get rid of those three
	       commits.
	    3. Switch to topic/wip branch and keep working.

       Undo commits permanently

	       $ git commit ...
	       $ git reset --hard HEAD~3   (1)
	    1. The last	three commits (HEAD, HEAD^, and	HEAD~2)	were bad
	       and you do not want to ever see them again. Do not do this
	       if you have already given these commits to somebody else.
	       (See the	"RECOVERING FROM UPSTREAM REBASE" section in git-
	       rebase(1) for the implications of doing so.)

       Undo a merge or pull

	       $ git pull			  (1)
	       Auto-merging nitfol
	       CONFLICT	(content): Merge conflict in nitfol
	       Automatic merge failed; fix conflicts and then commit the result.
	       $ git reset --hard		  (2)
	       $ git pull . topic/branch	  (3)
	       Updating	from 41223... to 13134...
	       Fast-forward
	       $ git reset --hard ORIG_HEAD	  (4)
	    1. Try to update from the upstream resulted	in a lot of
	       conflicts; you were not ready to	spend a	lot of time
	       merging right now, so you decide	to do that later.
	    2. "pull" has not made merge commit, so git	reset --hard
	       which is	a synonym for git reset	--hard HEAD clears the
	       mess from the index file	and the	working	tree.
	    3. Merge a topic branch into the current branch, which
	       resulted	in a fast-forward.
	    4. But you decided that the	topic branch is	not ready for
	       public consumption yet. "pull" or "merge" always	leaves
	       the original tip	of the current branch in ORIG_HEAD, so
	       resetting hard to it brings your	index file and the
	       working tree back to that state,	and resets the tip of the
	       branch to that commit.

       Undo a merge or pull inside a dirty working tree

	       $ git pull			  (1)
	       Auto-merging nitfol
	       Merge made by recursive.
		nitfol		      |	  20 +++++----
		...
	       $ git reset --merge ORIG_HEAD	  (2)
	    1. Even if you may have local modifications	in your	working
	       tree, you can safely say	git pull when you know that the
	       change in the other branch does not overlap with	them.
	    2. After inspecting	the result of the merge, you may find
	       that the	change in the other branch is unsatisfactory.
	       Running git reset --hard	ORIG_HEAD will let you go back to
	       where you were, but it will discard your	local changes,
	       which you do not	want.  git reset --merge keeps your local
	       changes.

       Interrupted workflow
	   Suppose you are interrupted by an urgent fix	request	while you are
	   in the middle of a large change. The	files in your working tree are
	   not in any shape to be committed yet, but you need to get to	the
	   other branch	for a quick bugfix.

	       $ git switch feature  ;#	you were working in "feature" branch and
	       $ work work work	     ;#	got interrupted
	       $ git commit -a -m "snapshot WIP"		 (1)
	       $ git switch master
	       $ fix fix fix
	       $ git commit ;# commit with real	log
	       $ git switch feature
	       $ git reset --soft HEAD^	;# go back to WIP state	 (2)
	       $ git reset					 (3)
	    1. This commit will	get blown away so a throw-away log
	       message is OK.
	    2. This removes the	WIP commit from	the commit history, and
	       sets your working tree to the state just	before you made
	       that snapshot.
	    3. At this point the index file still has all the WIP changes
	       you committed as	snapshot WIP. This updates the index to
	       show your WIP files as uncommitted.

	       See also	git-stash(1).

       Reset a single file in the index
	   Suppose you have added a file to your index,	but later decide you
	   do not want to add it to your commit. You can remove	the file from
	   the index while keeping your	changes	with git reset.

	       $ git reset -- frotz.c			   (1)
	       $ git commit -m "Commit files in	index"	   (2)
	       $ git add frotz.c			   (3)
	    1. This removes the	file from the index while keeping it in
	       the working directory.
	    2. This commits all	other changes in the index.
	    3. Adds the	file to	the index again.

       Keep changes in working tree while discarding some previous commits
	   Suppose you are working on something	and you	commit it, and then
	   you continue	working	a bit more, but	now you	think that what	you
	   have	in your	working	tree should be in another branch that has
	   nothing to do with what you committed previously. You can start a
	   new branch and reset	it while keeping the changes in	your working
	   tree.

	       $ git tag start
	       $ git switch -c branch1
	       $ edit
	       $ git commit ...				   (1)
	       $ edit
	       $ git switch -c branch2			   (2)
	       $ git reset --keep start			   (3)
	    1. This commits your first edits in	branch1.
	    2. In the ideal world, you could have realized that	the
	       earlier commit did not belong to	the new	topic when you
	       created and switched to branch2 (i.e.  git switch -c
	       branch2 start), but nobody is perfect.
	    3. But you can use reset --keep to remove the unwanted commit
	       after you switched to branch2.

       Split a commit apart into a sequence of commits
	   Suppose that	you have created lots of logically separate changes
	   and committed them together.	Then, later you	decide that it might
	   be better to	have each logical chunk	associated with	its own
	   commit. You can use git reset to rewind history without changing
	   the contents	of your	local files, and then successively use git add
	   -p to interactively select which hunks to include into each commit,
	   using git commit -c to pre-populate the commit message.

	       $ git reset -N HEAD^			   (1)
	       $ git add -p				   (2)
	       $ git diff --cached			   (3)
	       $ git commit -c HEAD@{1}			   (4)
	       ...					   (5)
	       $ git add ...				   (6)
	       $ git diff --cached			   (7)
	       $ git commit ...				   (8)
	    1. First, reset the	history	back one commit	so that	we remove
	       the original commit, but	leave the working tree with all
	       the changes. The	-N ensures that	any new	files added with
	       HEAD are	still marked so	that git add -p	will find them.
	    2. Next, we	interactively select diff hunks	to add using the
	       git add -p facility. This will ask you about each diff
	       hunk in sequence	and you	can use	simple commands	such as
	       "yes, include this", "No	don't include this" or even the
	       very powerful "edit" facility.
	    3. Once satisfied with the hunks you want to include, you
	       should verify what has been prepared for	the first commit
	       by using	git diff --cached. This	shows all the changes
	       that have been moved into the index and are about to be
	       committed.
	    4. Next, commit the	changes	stored in the index. The -c
	       option specifies	to pre-populate	the commit message from
	       the original message that you started with in the first
	       commit. This is helpful to avoid	retyping it. The HEAD@{1}
	       is a special notation for the commit that HEAD used to be
	       at prior	to the original	reset commit (1	change ago). See
	       git-reflog(1) for more details. You may also use	any other
	       valid commit reference.
	    5. You can repeat steps 2-4	multiple times to break	the
	       original	code into any number of	commits.
	    6. Now you've split	out many of the	changes	into their own
	       commits,	and might no longer use	the patch mode of git
	       add, in order to	select all remaining uncommitted changes.
	    7. Once again, check to verify that	you've included	what you
	       want to.	You may	also wish to verify that git diff doesn't
	       show any	remaining changes to be	committed later.
	    8. And finally create the final commit.

DISCUSSION
       The tables below	show what happens when running:

	   git reset --option target

       to reset	the HEAD to another commit (target) with the different reset
       options depending on the	state of the files.

       In these	tables,	A, B, C	and D are some different states	of a file. For
       example,	the first line of the first table means	that if	a file is in
       state A in the working tree, in state B in the index, in	state C	in
       HEAD and	in state D in the target, then git reset --soft	target will
       leave the file in the working tree in state A and in the	index in state
       B. It resets (i.e. moves) the HEAD (i.e.	the tip	of the current branch,
       if you are on one) to target (which has the file	in state D).

	   working index HEAD target	     working index HEAD
	   ----------------------------------------------------
	    A	    B	  C    D     --soft   A	      B	    D
				     --mixed  A	      D	    D
				     --hard   D	      D	    D
				     --merge (disallowed)
				     --keep  (disallowed)

	   working index HEAD target	     working index HEAD
	   ----------------------------------------------------
	    A	    B	  C    C     --soft   A	      B	    C
				     --mixed  A	      C	    C
				     --hard   C	      C	    C
				     --merge (disallowed)
				     --keep   A	      C	    C

	   working index HEAD target	     working index HEAD
	   ----------------------------------------------------
	    B	    B	  C    D     --soft   B	      B	    D
				     --mixed  B	      D	    D
				     --hard   D	      D	    D
				     --merge  D	      D	    D
				     --keep  (disallowed)

	   working index HEAD target	     working index HEAD
	   ----------------------------------------------------
	    B	    B	  C    C     --soft   B	      B	    C
				     --mixed  B	      C	    C
				     --hard   C	      C	    C
				     --merge  C	      C	    C
				     --keep   B	      C	    C

	   working index HEAD target	     working index HEAD
	   ----------------------------------------------------
	    B	    C	  C    D     --soft   B	      C	    D
				     --mixed  B	      D	    D
				     --hard   D	      D	    D
				     --merge (disallowed)
				     --keep  (disallowed)

	   working index HEAD target	     working index HEAD
	   ----------------------------------------------------
	    B	    C	  C    C     --soft   B	      C	    C
				     --mixed  B	      C	    C
				     --hard   C	      C	    C
				     --merge  B	      C	    C
				     --keep   B	      C	    C

       git reset --merge is meant to be	used when resetting out	of a
       conflicted merge. Any mergy operation guarantees	that the working tree
       file that is involved in	the merge does not have	a local	change with
       respect to the index before it starts, and that it writes the result
       out to the working tree.	So if we see some difference between the index
       and the target and also between the index and the working tree, then it
       means that we are not resetting out from	a state	that a mergy operation
       left after failing with a conflict. That	is why we disallow --merge
       option in this case.

       git reset --keep	is meant to be used when removing some of the last
       commits in the current branch while keeping changes in the working
       tree. If	there could be conflicts between the changes in	the commit we
       want to remove and the changes in the working tree we want to keep, the
       reset is	disallowed. That's why it is disallowed	if there are both
       changes between the working tree	and HEAD, and between HEAD and the
       target. To be safe, it is also disallowed when there are	unmerged
       entries.

       The following tables show what happens when there are unmerged entries:

	   working index HEAD target	     working index HEAD
	   ----------------------------------------------------
	    X	    U	  A    B     --soft  (disallowed)
				     --mixed  X	      B	    B
				     --hard   B	      B	    B
				     --merge  B	      B	    B
				     --keep  (disallowed)

	   working index HEAD target	     working index HEAD
	   ----------------------------------------------------
	    X	    U	  A    A     --soft  (disallowed)
				     --mixed  X	      A	    A
				     --hard   A	      A	    A
				     --merge  A	      A	    A
				     --keep  (disallowed)

       X means any state and U means an	unmerged index.

GIT
       Part of the git(1) suite

Git 2.53.0			  2026-02-01			  GIT-RESET(1)

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