first, create a new branch in the current position (in case you need your old 'screwed up' history):
git branch fubar-pin
update your list of remote branches and sync new commits:
git fetch --all
then, reset your branch to the point where origin/branch points to:
git reset --hard origin/branch
be careful, this will remove any changes from your working tree!
What I do when I mess up my local branch is I just rename my broken branch, and check out/branch the upstream branch again:
git branch -m branch branch-old
git fetch remote
git checkout -b branch remote/branch
Then if you're sure you don't want anything from your old branch, remove it:
git branch -D branch-old
But usually I leave the old branch around locally, just in case I had something in there.
Your local branch likely has modifications to it you want to discard. To do this, you'll need to use git reset
to reset the branch head to the last spot that you diverged from the upstream repo's branch. Use git branch -v
to find the sha1 id of the upstream branch, and reset your branch it it using git reset SHA1ID
. Then you should be able to do a git checkout
to discard the changes it left in your directory.
Note: always do this on a backed-up repo. That way you can assure you're self it worked right. Or if it didn't, you have a backup to revert to.
git reset --hard
This is to revert all your local changes to the origin head
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