This post is aimed for people who want to learn how to use commands such as rebase & learn a few tricks to have a nicer Git experience.
Alright, let's start by watching the Git history of some of my first ever projects on Github:
Oh no
Oh no no no no
OH LORD WHAT HAVE I DONE
Now that I've ridiculed myself, let's check out what most of my projects look like now π
Oof, much better
If you don't know what this all means, let me explain briefly:
This is a representation of your Git history on Github, meaning the commits you've done over time on your project's branches.
You can see your own by navigating to the "Insights" tab of one of your projects, then going to the "Network" tab on the left.
The black bar represents my master
branch and each alternating blue & green bars are separate branches.
As you can see on the more recent and nicer history, they alternately get merged into master, creating this nice flow of writing code & merging it (which is always recommended, instead of accumulating pull requests).
So, how can you have a cleaner history? Let's go over real use-cases.
Here's what we're covering today (make sure to do each section in order):
The magic of git rebase
Git rebase lets your remodel your history to your will. See it as a way to manipulate your list of commits on a given branch.
For example, you could drop commits completely (basically say goodbye to them in the abyss of git), rename them (rewriting your commit message), squash them into other commits (which is useful to hide commits that do small things such as adding a semicolon, you don't really want to see them in your history) and many more things.
Learning by practice
Go to the following project I made for the occasion, fork it and let's get started.
Forking is basically creating a copy of my project for yourself, you'll be able to mess around with it without any problems ! To do it, click on the fork button on the top right:
Then, clone the repository you forked.
Example 1: fixing up a commit with rebase
Scenario: you have committed something that does not deserve a commit of its own, or you want to reduce the number of commits on your branch to one before making a pull request.
From the
master
branch, create a new branch.Create a new file, its content doesn't really matter.
Commit that new file to your branch.
git add index.js
git commit -m "add index.js"
Update something in that file
Commit it again with a message such as "update index.js"
Run
git log
, as you can see, we now have 2 commits
We now want to fixup
the update
commit into the add
commit, because this small change does not deserve a commit of its own.
To do so, we'll use the interactive mode of git rebase
, which lets us apply the rebasing with a nice interface.
- Run the rebase command like so:
git rebase -i HEAD~2
HEAD~2
means start from the last commit on the branch (the head) and go back 2 commits. If we wanted to manipulate more commits, we could change the value to the far right.
You should now have an interface that looks something like this:
Don't panic, this only shows you the two commits you are changing at the top, and the available commands bellow them.
By default, the rebase interface uses Vim, to write in it, simply press the i key. You are now in "INSERT" mode. As we want to fixup the second commit in the first one, all we have to do is write fixup
or f
instead of pick
in front of it. Our update index.js
commit will now be squashed into the add index.js
but only the add index.js
's message will be kept.
- Update the second line like so:
pick c0091ec add index.js
f a19336e update index.js
Now, we want to apply the rebase, press escape to leave the INSERT mode, press : (colon) and enter wq for "write" and "quit" and press ENTER to apply these changes. The colon simply allows you to write commands for Vim to execute.
The following message should now appear in your console:
Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/{YOUR BRANCH NAME}.
Check your git log
, you now have one beautiful and clean commit !
- Finally, force push to that branch to apply the rebase to the remote server
git push origin {BRANCH-NAME} -f
The -f
is essential as a rebase modifies your git history and requires to be forced.
Example 2: dropping a commit
These next 2 steps will be extremely similar to the first one because you now have the tools to do any kind of rebasing π
Scenario: you want to completely remove a commit
We'll drop the add FILENAME
commit we previously made:
- Run the rebase command
git rebase -i HEAD~1
- Add a
d
ordrop
in front of the commit you wish to drop.
Run
:wq
in your Vim editor (and check withgit log
that the commit was dropped)Don't forget to force push it to your remote server π
Example 3: rewording a commit
Pretty similar, with one change.
Scenario: you want to fix a typo or rewrite a commit's title or description
- Create a random commit
- Run the rebase command
git rebase -i HEAD~1
Add a
r
orreword
in front of the commit you wish to reword (no need to edit the title now).Run
:wq
in your Vim editor. This will open a similar editor with the commit(s) you wish to reword.
- Update the commit's title and description to your will, run
:wq
and that's it ! Check withgit log
that the rewording was applied
- Don't forget to force push it to your remote server π
Example 4: rebasing on master
This example isn't reproduced in the Github project, but feel free to test it out.
Scenario: you have multiple PRs (Pull Requests) open at the same time
You merge one PR, now, your second PR is not up to date with master
, oh no !
This very frequent scenario will have us rebase our second PR on master
so that it gets the new code merged from the first PR.
- From the branch you want to rebase (in our case, the second PR's branch), run the following:
git fetch
This downloads all the references our branch needs to apply the rebase.
- Then, execute the rebase like so:
git rebase origin/master
- Finally, run a
git push origin {MY-BRANCH} -f
to apply the rebase to our remote server
Hurray !
Bonus: a better git log
Is your git log
too much to handle?
Would you rather have a git log
that is straight to the point and looks nicer?
Look no further ! Here's how you can achieve it, in your console, paste the following:
git config --global alias.lg "log --color --graph --pretty=format:'%Cred%h%Creset -%C(yellow)%d%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)<%an>%Creset' --abbrev-commit"
You've now created an alias to git log
called git lg
that will display the nicer output showed before. Try it out by typing git lg
(or git lg -p
to see the lines that have changed).
Thanks to Coderwall for this bonus β¨
On the dangers of force pushing & other things to note
Force pushing can be dangerous when working with a team as mentioned by Nick Huanca:
Thanks for the article! It was a nice read/refresher. Since the audience is for people wanting to up their git game, I would suggest adding some messaging around the dangers of "force push" and maybe reference force push with care which leverages --force-with-lease
so people don't accidentally overwrite team pushes. :)
Another noteworthy thing might be to git rebase --abort
if things go unexpectedly sideways during a rebase (conflicts or other strange/unexpected behavior). It's nice to know, especially when getting started, how to back out of a command safely.
Thanks again!
So another alternative may be --force-with-lease
which "allows one to force push without the risk of unintentionally overwriting someone elseβs work. It will update remote references only if it has the same value as the remote-tracking branch we have locally." Reference. Thanks for the tip Nick ! π
As you may have noted he also mentions git rebase --abort
, which allows us to stop a rebasing mid-way through in case anything goes wrong. So if for any reason you mess up your rebase, git it a little --abort
and start again.
Closing thoughts
Learning how to use Git is probably one of the most important skills we can acquire as developers. I hope some of you won't be as afraid of rebase
as I was a while ago.
If this post has been helpful, please feel free to give it a β€οΈπ¦π and to follow me on Twitter @christo_kade !
Top comments (21)
Rewriting history on solo projects is fine but as soon as you work with another person you should consider it extremely harmful to do so on non-local branches.
From git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-R...
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I didn't get the impression from reading this article that the author suggests we should be editing the history of the
master
branch or any other shared branch. I'm more under the impression that it's about tidying up your own fix or feature branch shortly before it goes into master, and I do not see any harm or problem with that, even in a team.To the contrary, the benefit of a cleaner, more readable history that removes all clutter such as quick and dirty in-between commits and iterations that didn't end up in the final result, should bring all contributions into a sensible timeline that is easier to follow.
Talking about big teams, here's the stance from Phabricator's development team, a development and collaboration tool that originated from Facebook and turned into an Open Source project:
"One idea = one commit" means that the entirety of the fix or feature branch should be squashed into a single commit in the mainline branch. A single commit that easy to apply and revert if necessary. All in-between steps should be removed. The proposed solution to this issue is:
Source
Several other articles online give the same idea that squashing and rebasing is the way to go, especially when you work in teams:
Editing the history is only problematic when the editor doesn't 100% know what they are doing, and even then, destructive changes can be prevented by simply setting up the git repository server to reject destructive changes to the shared mainline / development branches.
On GitHub you can set up branch protection rules to prevent any
push --force
to any branch of your choice from being accepted. Phabricator doesn't allow "destructive changes" to any branch by default. Bitbucket offers the same protection under "branch permissions".Practically speaking there is nothing to worry about with proper repository configuration and with the right education. And articles like this one are helpful
Absolutely, that was not my intention, if it wasn't clear then that's my bad.
Yeah, I don't see an instance where force pushing to
master
would be recommended, glad you mentioned these protections for others to know about.And thanks for sharing some resources, I'm glad you commented π
Hi yes I agree there's nothing in the article that says rewriting master is a good idea, however I felt it was important to state that there are problems. Rewriting history and rebasing are not silver bullets and can cause issues without proper procedure.
Admittedly reading my comment back it sounds like I've dismissed the whole article on that basis but that was absolutely not my intention!
I totally agree with your statement, all these manipulations should be done locally before pushing your work. π
"Fixing" history is a misguided (and dishonest) effort--a waste of time. Rebase is a powerful git tool and should be learned and used appropriately, but maintaining a useful git log should be accomplished with forethought and disciplined adherence to good commit practices. That said, I'd rather have an imperfect but unmolested git history. A "clean" history is just a lie.
Bs. Clean history represent a step by step application growing and not how u or u team work. So isnt lie. No sense of blame anybody only the log of the build from first line to current.
Thanks for the article! It was a nice read/refresher. Since the audience is for people wanting to up their git game, I would suggest adding some messaging around the dangers of "force push" and maybe reference force push with care which leverages
--force-with-lease
so people don't accidentally overwrite team pushes. :)Another noteworthy thing might be to
git rebase --abort
if things go unexpectedly sideways during a rebase (conflicts or other strange/unexpected behavior). It's nice to know, especially when getting started, how to back out of a command safely.Thanks again!
Great points Nick, thank you for sharing them. I did not know of
--force-with-lease
.I've added a section called "On the dangers of force pushing & other things to note" which mentions your comment.
Thanks again π
Nice walkthrough. Rebasing is often painted as advanced, but I think it's best to play with it early on, and not fear it later.
Technically true, but I wouldn't phrase it like that. IMO, taken together these risk implying untrue things β that a branch's history can be arbitrarily rewritten with a plain rebase, that it's why rebase exists, and that
--interactive
just changes the UI.I'd instead say:
git rebase
allows you to replay the changes introduced in a set of commits on top of a specified base. It works by repeated cherry-picking (i.e. applying changes introduced by a commit on top of a different one).--interactive
allows you to edit the changes before they're applied.This leads to a special form of rebase β interactive rebase where the source branch is also the target β where you can arbitrarily rewrite a branch's history.
git-scm.com: Rewriting History
Just to add context: rebasing works here, but merging master is likely better for PRs on a team.
I'd say only the first two are potentially serious, but I can't think of an upside that'd make it worth dealing with them.
Thanks for the post, very good practical examples to try rebasing.
I'm just curious how did you achieve this lonely commit? π
I think interactive rebase in this example is overkill.
git commit -- amend -m "new message"
will do the work.But changing a message for commit head~2 is impossible with
amend
, so interactive rebase withreword
will solve such tasks perfectly.With pleasure, super glad it helped.
This last commit is just an automatic commit made to deploy to Github Pages
A whole different thing, so don't worry about it !
Thanks for mentioning
amend
πBro, thank you. This article has been a great help for me today.
I messed things up with
git reset HEAD~
. Luckily, gitlense(vscode ext) had a copy of the files that vanished. After doing the necessary changes, i did a rebase to fix up the previous commit as you mentioned. πHi Christopher,
Nice article, many thx!
If I may suggest, instead of fetch remote parent branch, I used to use
git pull --rebase
cmd.For example, if I need to rebase 'develop' branch from master, I'll do
git pull --rebase origin master
.This prevent me to forget about fetching the HEAD of master every time I need to rebase.
Another point, if you really need to rewrite history of a project, I would suggest to learn
git reflog
cmd also. It's really convenient to recover deleted commit for example, or to cancel a mishandling rebase...Thx again
More often than not I've got one of those commit histories that look like the "OH LORD WHAT HAVE I DONE" graph, and even
rebase
is hard to use to clean up -- this happens most often when I have something that fixes one thing, but needed two or more changes. (I really should get into the habit of committing after each file change, even if it leaves HEAD broken.)In those cases, I use a process of checking out
master
into a cleanup branch,git cherry-pick -n
(i.e., don't commit) the changes from the branch I'm cleaning up onto the cleanup branch, and thengit reset
. Now all of the commits are squashed on a per-file basis. I then repeatedly usegit add -p
to build a new set of per-file commits that catch me up by replyingy
until the next change would go into a new file. Thencommit
and repeat until all the changes have been built into commits.It loses the commit order, but very nicely collects the changes into per-file changes. Hm. This might have been better as a post instead of a comment!
Hey man, great article and especially great title choice! I came from a dev.to mail and upon reading it I immediately thought: this is about rebasing.
The Table of Contents anchors don't work though, had to scroll manually
Thanks for the great article! Is rebasing/squashing only useful for auditing your git history and/or making it easier to read?
I guess what I'm asking is - if I recommend doing this to my team, what are some of the practical applications I can mention to get them on board?