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Git for Programmers

You're reading from   Git for Programmers Master Git for effective implementation of version control for your programming projects

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Product type Book
Published in Jun 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801075732
Pages 264 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Jesse Liberty Jesse Liberty
Author Profile Icon Jesse Liberty
Jesse Liberty
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction 2. Creating Your Repository FREE CHAPTER 3. Branching, Places, and GUIs 4. Merging, Pull Requests, and Handling Merge Conflicts 5. Rebasing, Amend, and Cherry-Picking 6. Interactive Rebasing 7. Workflow, Notes, and Tags 8. Aliases 9. Using the Log 10. Important Git Commands and Metadata 11. Finding a Broken Commit: Bisect and Blame 12. Fixing Mistakes 13. Next Steps
14. Other Books You May Enjoy
15. Index

You messed up the remote by pushing a broken branch

If (and when) you break the Master branch by pushing an incomplete and broken local copy, dry your tears, take heart! This can be fixed.

Note, this should not be possible. If you are using Azure DevOps (or something similar) your pipeline should not accept any merge that doesn't compile (and arguably pass a set of unit tests). But I digress…

The first command you want is:

git reset --hard <remoteRepository> / <Yourbranch>@{1}

That resets your local copy of <Yourbranch> to the last synchronized version of <remoteRepo>. Thus, if your branch is Feature1 and it is on origin, you would write:

git reset --hard origin/Feature1@{1}

Now you want to restore the remote repo to its state before you broke it:

git push -f <remoteRepository><Yourbranch>
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