Skip to content

Commit 7326451

Browse files
jacob-kellergitster
authored andcommitted
reset: add an example of how to split a commit into two
It is often useful to break a commit into multiple parts that are more logical separations. This can be tricky to learn how to do without the brute-force method if re-writing code or commit messages from scratch. Add a section to the git-reset documentation which shows an example process for how to use git add -p and git commit -c HEAD@{1} to interactively break a commit apart and re-use the original commit message as a starting point when making the new commit message. Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <[email protected]>
1 parent 6e3a7b3 commit 7326451

File tree

1 file changed

+38
-0
lines changed

1 file changed

+38
-0
lines changed

Documentation/git-reset.txt

Lines changed: 38 additions & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -292,6 +292,44 @@ $ git reset --keep start <3>
292292
<3> But you can use "reset --keep" to remove the unwanted commit after
293293
you switched to "branch2".
294294

295+
Split a commit into two::
296+
+
297+
Suppose that you have created a commit, but later decide that you want to break
298+
apart the changes into two logical chunks and commit each separately. You want
299+
to include part of the original commit into the first commit, while including
300+
the remainder in a second commit. You can use git reset to rewind the history
301+
without changing the index, and then use git add -p to interactively select
302+
which hunks to put into the first commit.
303+
+
304+
------------
305+
$ git reset HEAD^ <1>
306+
$ git add -p <2>
307+
$ git diff --cached <3>
308+
$ git commit -c HEAD@{1} <4>
309+
...
310+
$ git add ... <5>
311+
$ git diff --cached <6>
312+
$ git commit ... <7>
313+
------------
314+
+
315+
<1> First, reset the history back one commit so that we remove the original
316+
commit, but leave the working tree with all the changes.
317+
<2> Now, interactively select hunks to add to a new commit using git add -p.
318+
This will ask for each hunk separately and you can use simple commands like
319+
"yes, include", "no don't include" or even "edit".
320+
<3> Once satisfied with the hunks, you should verify that it is what you
321+
expected by using git diff --cached to show all changes in the index.
322+
<4> Next, commit the changes stored in the index. "-c" specifies to load the
323+
editor with a commit message from a previous commit so that you can re-use the
324+
original commit message. HEAD@{1} is special notation to reference what
325+
HEAD used to be prior to the reset command. See linkgit:git-reflog[1] for
326+
more details.
327+
<5> Now you've created the first commit, and can repeat steps 2-4 as often as
328+
you like to break the work into any number of commits. Here we show a second
329+
step which simply adds the remaining changes.
330+
<6> Then check again that the changes are what you expected to add.
331+
<7> And finally commit the remaining changes.
332+
295333

296334
DISCUSSION
297335
----------

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)