I made a big oops, and could use some help undoing it.
We have two repositories-a fairly stable repository, and a repository we're working on changes in. I just made a defect fix in our stable repository, and was moving it up to the working repository. I pulled from the stable repository, merged, then accidentally pushed to the stable repository.
The stable repository now looks like this:
*merge
| \
| \
| *b
*a |
| /
*c
where a
is the commit that should be the tip of the stable repository, b
is all the stuff that we've done in the development repository, and c
is the point we branched the development repository.
How do I go about making it back to:
*a
|
*c
(I know I can't really make changes go away, I'm just looking for a functional structure...)
I've read some things that make me think that hg backout
is the command I need, but I'm not exactly sure what it does.
hg rollback reverts the last transaction, so you'd be left with unfinished merge, which you have to use hg update -C to get out. If you don't want *b (you have it in another clone), then enable the built-in MQ extension and run hg strip -r <*b> . It will get rid of *b and *merge.
A simple way to 'uncommit' your last commit is to use hg strip -r -1 -k. In case the link breaks, the documentation mentioned by @phb states: hg rollback Roll back the last transaction (DANGEROUS) (DEPRECATED) Please use 'hg commit --amend' instead of rollback to correct mistakes in the last commit.
Backout works by applying a changeset that's the opposite of the changeset to be backed out. That new changeset is committed to the repository, and eventually merged.
hg rollback
reverts the last transaction, so you'd be left with unfinished merge, which you have to use hg update -C
to get out.
If you don't want *b (you have it in another clone), then enable the built-in MQ extension and run hg strip -r <*b>
. It will get rid of *b and *merge. By default it saves a backup in case you change your mind again.
UPDATE (per @Rudi's comment: sorry I missed the "already pushed" part)
Since the merge is already pushed out, NEVER EVER do what I suggested earlier. Hate emails from fellow developers would have been the best outcome.
Do this instead:
hg up -r<*merge> hg revert -r<*a> -a hg ci -m "undo unintended merge"
Or you could be more kosher:
hg up -r<*merge> hg backout -r<*merge> --parent<*a>
I think it to late to make hg rollback
since you have already pushed your changes.
You might try with MQ extensions but this also works locally. hg strip
will only modify your local repo. You could of course try to modify your server repo directly on server but if somebody pulled it it is too late.
Another option is described in chapter 9 of hgbook in section Backing out a merge. It involves hg backout
command but it might be an overkill for you...
I suggest to hg update -C
to *a revision, merge with tip and ignore all changes from *merge? Your repository will look more or less like this than:
*second merge | \ | \ | \ | \ *merge | | \ | | \ | | *b | *a | / | / / *c---
Commands for this are
$ hg --config ui.merge=internal:local merge #keep my files
$ hg --config ui.merge=internal:other merge #keep their files
More details could be found here.
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