How to revert a "git rm -r ."?
Asked Answered
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13

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I accidentely said git rm -r .. How do I recover from this?

I did not commit.

I think all files were marked for deletion and were also physically removed from my local checkout.

EDIT: I could (if I knew the command) revert to the last commit. But it would be a lot better if I could just undo the git rm -r .. Because I am not really sure what I did after the last commit and before the git rm -r ..

Stutzman answered 24/1, 2010 at 2:47 Comment(5)
For this particular question, reset --hard is a good solution...it's already listed so I'll just mention in this comment that you might want to check the documentation for git-reflog.Stanwin
Note that because you didn't supply -f to git rm git won't have removed any files that had staged or unstaged changes so a git reset; git checkout . should recover everything.Idle
Just watch out - git checkout . will wipe out all unstaged changes.Recognize
I just did something like this, and I do not understand why my local files where deleted (and, like the OP, I have not committed yet.)Leandro
With Git 2.23+ (August 2019), you would restore files with git restore: git restore -s@ -SW -- .. See my answer below.Baedeker
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546
git reset HEAD

Should do it. If you don't have any uncommitted changes that you care about, then

git reset --hard HEAD

should forcibly reset everything to your last commit. If you do have uncommitted changes, but the first command doesn't work, then save your uncommitted changes with git stash:

git stash
git reset --hard HEAD
git stash pop
Incubation answered 24/1, 2010 at 2:56 Comment(16)
Note that git reset --hard HEAD destroys any useful changes you have made in parent directories of the current working directory.Mediaeval
@Mild: I'm still wearing a cold sweat!Naphtha
I didn't down vote, but I just tried stash, reset hard, pop and lost all of my recent changes. Maybe I misread the answer.Imprison
This rarely works for me, and I'm so glad I work in a Dropbox folder. Poor form, but saves me every time...Surd
When I did git stash pop, it just removed the files again, of course because it stashes the fact that I (accidentally) removed some files. This answer doesn't work if you have uncommited changes you want to keep.View
This also did not work for me. The files are still missing.Leandro
This does not answer the question. git rm -r . could be executed in any sub-directly. This will reset the entire tree. See @Jaime Bellmyer answer.Scott
You may need git stash -u/git stash --include-untracked if your recent changes include new (untracked) files.Hardpressed
@View Instead of using git stash pop you can use git stash apply. This way if there's a merge conflict or you want to discard the changes without them being removed from the top of the stash.Firelock
git stash; git reset --hard HEAD; git stash pop Did the trick for me! Thanks!Tenterhook
This doesn't help in any way.Jurisconsult
git checkout HEAD . recovered all my folders and files.Distichous
This solution does not work. Popping the stash back leads to untracked but still deleted files and folders. The following two options work -- (1) git stash; git reset HEAD; git stash drop 0 (here you are stashing the deleted files/folders and resetting to head and then dropping your stash with deleted changes) (2) git checkout HEAD .Enmity
i really made a huge mistakeCoelho
If you can read this, be calm. Backup everything before trying any of those git commands.Barbarbarbara
If you have already committed, try git reset HEAD~n. (n is the number of how many previous commits you want to go backward. You can also use ^ together with ~ for better control.)Walling
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293

I git-rm'd a few files and went on making changes before my next commit when I realized I needed some of those files back. Rather than stash and reset, you can simply checkout the individual files you missed/removed if you want:

git checkout HEAD path/to/file path/to/another_file

This leaves your other uncommitted changes intact with no workarounds.

Haustellum answered 4/1, 2012 at 23:28 Comment(2)
This helped because I had other uncommitted changes.Kevakevan
This answer helps for those of us that stumbled upon this question looking to revert a single git rm rather than an entire recursive git rm -r. For a full recursive delete, the other solutions may be better, depending on the amount of files removed.Carlottacarlovingian
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72

To regain some single files or folders one may use the following

git reset -- path/to/file
git checkout -- path/to/file

This will first recreate the index entries for path/to/file and recreate the file as it was in the last commit, i.e.HEAD.

Hint: one may pass a commit hash to both commands to recreate files from an older commit. See git reset --help and git checkout --help for details.

Nolen answered 19/1, 2013 at 14:54 Comment(1)
Best answer. Easy surgical 'undo' of a single git rm operation without wiping out other uncommitted changes.Gilbertgilberta
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38

undo git rm

git rm file             # delete file & update index
git checkout HEAD file  # restore file & index from HEAD

undo git rm -r

git rm -r dir          # delete tracked files in dir & update index
git checkout HEAD dir  # restore file & index from HEAD

undo git rm -rf

git rm -r dir          # delete tracked files & delete uncommitted changes
not possible           # `uncommitted changes` can not be restored.

Uncommitted changes includes not staged changes, staged changes but not committed.

Markus answered 5/2, 2018 at 17:30 Comment(2)
Of course, nothing can undo git rm -rf, as that may delete untracked or staged (only) files as well.Newport
git rm -rf file and git rm -rf dir will not delete any untracked files.Markus
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Update:

Since git rm . deletes all files in this and child directories in the working checkout as well as in the index, you need to undo each of these changes:

git reset HEAD . # This undoes the index changes
git checkout .   # This checks out files in this and child directories from the HEAD

This should do what you want. It does not affect parent folders of your checked-out code or index.


Old answer that wasn't:

reset HEAD

will do the trick, and will not erase any uncommitted changes you have made to your files.

after that you need to repeat any git add commands you had queued up.

Mediaeval answered 24/1, 2010 at 2:48 Comment(1)
sorry, I always setup git alias.co="checkout" so that git co does checkout.Mediaeval
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If you end up with none of the above working, you might be able to retrieve data using the suggestion from here: http://www.spinics.net/lists/git/msg62499.html

git prune -n
git cat-file -p <blob #>
Bolo answered 28/11, 2012 at 17:39 Comment(5)
4 years later, still a lifesaver!Iseabal
I wrote a c++ program to concatenate the results (I had some 100 objects dangling in my repo, making this necessary). Just compile and run, then pass in your git repo local directory. raw.githubusercontent.com/bluuman/git-recover-files/master/…Domineer
This is a good method, after running the git prune -n, I got many lines, those lines are either tree or blob or commit, and I fill out all the hash string of blob, and I try to use the second command to git cat-file -p <blob #>, and I still can't find the lost file. My situation is quite simple, I have create a new file named a.cpp, and I add this file to the index, and later I use the git rm -f to remove this file, and I see that a.cpp get lost.Branch
Sorry about my previous comment, I tested again, it can recover the git rm -f deleted file, I'm not sure why the previous test does not works, thanks!Branch
Just a note that while this works, it cannot recover filenames or paths, so if you're like me and you just deleted a 5k file nested folder system you were trying to create a repo for, you are basically completely out of luck.Mollusc
A
13

If you've committed and pushed the changes, you can do this to get the file back

// Replace 2 with the # of commits back before the file was deleted.
git checkout HEAD~2 path/to/file
Aleishaalejandra answered 29/1, 2015 at 21:49 Comment(1)
This worked for 'Changes to be committed:' where a file was deleted from an old git cherry-pick which I still needed.I had tried git reset HEAD~<number> <file> which didn't work.Krasnodar
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There are some good answers already, but I might suggest a little-used syntax that not only works great, but is very explicit in what you want (therefor not scary or mysterious)

git checkout <branch>@{"20 minutes ago"} <filename>
Victory answered 28/9, 2013 at 17:0 Comment(0)
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4

If you execute the command git rm -r --cached . on a repo with changes that are not staged (so not committed either), you can undo the operation (unstage from deletion) with the command git restore --staged .

So in a nutshell, to undo git rm -r --cached . you only need to run git restore --staged .

Ammonia answered 30/4, 2021 at 10:3 Comment(1)
This worked for me luckily before I did a commit but for clarity you have to append the file that you removed to the end as in: git restore --staged completePathToRemovedFilePulvinate
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3

Get list commit

git log  --oneline

For example, Stable commit has hash: 45ff319c360cd7bd5442c0fbbe14202d20ccdf81

git reset --hard 45ff319c360cd7bd5442c0fbbe14202d20ccdf81
git push -ff origin master
Procaine answered 30/9, 2016 at 13:37 Comment(0)
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With Git 2.23+ (August 2019), the proper command to restore files (and the index) woud be to use... git restore (not reset --hard or the confusing git checkout command)

That is:

git restore -s=HEAD --staged --worktree -- .

Or its abbreviated form:

git restore -s@ -SW -- .
Baedeker answered 7/11, 2019 at 17:3 Comment(0)
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I had an identical situation. In my case the solution was:

git checkout -- .
Celt answered 14/8, 2014 at 11:11 Comment(0)
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I had exactly the same issue: was cleaning up my folders, rearranging and moving files. I entered: git rm . and hit enter; and then felt my bowels loosen a bit. Luckily, I didn't type in git commit -m "" straightaway.

However, the following command

git checkout .

restored everything, and saved my life.

Semicentennial answered 27/7, 2016 at 10:9 Comment(0)

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