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Git clone particular version of remote repository

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git

git-clone

You could "reset" your repository to any commit you want (e.g. 1 month ago).

Use git-reset for that:

git clone [remote_address_here] my_repo
cd my_repo
git reset --hard [ENTER HERE THE COMMIT HASH YOU WANT]

You Can use simply

git checkout  commithash

in this sequence

git clone `URLTORepository`
cd `into your cloned folder`
git checkout commithash

commit hash looks like this "45ef55ac20ce2389c9180658fdba35f4a663d204"


Use git log to find the revision you want to rollback to, and take note of the commit hash. After that, you have 2 options:

  1. If you plan to commit anything after that revision, I recommend you to checkout to a new branch: git checkout -b <new_branch_name> <hash>

  2. If you don't plan to commit anything after that revision, you can simply checkout without a branch: git checkout <hash> - NOTE: This will put your repository in a 'detached HEAD' state, which means its currently not attached to any branch - then you'll have some extra work to merge new commits to an actual branch.

Example:

$ git log
commit 89915b4cc0810a9c9e67b3706a2850c58120cf75
Author: Jardel Weyrich <suppressed>
Date:   Wed Aug 18 20:15:01 2010 -0300

    Added a custom extension.

commit 4553c1466c437bdd0b4e7bb35ed238cb5b39d7e7
Author: Jardel Weyrich <suppressed>
Date:   Wed Aug 18 20:13:48 2010 -0300

    Missing constness.

$ git checkout 4553c1466c437bdd0b4e7bb35ed238cb5b39d7e7
Note: moving to '4553c1466c437bdd0b4e7bb35ed238cb5b39d7e7'
which isn't a local branch
If you want to create a new branch from this checkout, you may do so
(now or later) by using -b with the checkout command again. Example:
  git checkout -b <new_branch_name>
HEAD is now at 4553c14... Missing constness.

That way you don't lose any informations, thus you can move to a newer revision when it becomes stable.


If that version you need to obtain is either a branch or a tag then:

git clone -b branch_or_tag_name repo_address_or_path

Unlike centralized version control systems, Git clones the entire repository, so you don't only get the current remote files, but the whole history. You local repository will include all this.

There might have been tags to mark a particular version at the time. If not, you can create them yourself locally. A good way to do this is to use git log or perhaps more visually with tools like gitk (perhaps gitk --all to see all the branches and tags). If you can spot the commits hashes that were used at the time, you can tag them using git tag <hash> and then check those out in new working copies (for example git checkout -b new_branch_name tag_name or directly with the hash instead of the tag name).