Browse Source
Given one existing commit, revert the change the patch introduces, and record a new commit that records it. This requires your working tree to be clean (no modifications from the HEAD commit). This is based on what Linus posted to the list, with enhancements he suggested, including the use of -M to attempt reverting renames. Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>maint
Junio C Hamano
20 years ago
2 changed files with 38 additions and 0 deletions
@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
@@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
|
||||
#!/bin/sh |
||||
. git-sh-setup-script || die "Not a git archive" |
||||
|
||||
# We want a clean tree and clean index to be able to revert. |
||||
status=$(git status) |
||||
case "$status" in |
||||
'nothing to commit') ;; |
||||
*) |
||||
echo "$status" |
||||
die "Your working tree is dirty; cannot revert a previous patch." ;; |
||||
esac |
||||
|
||||
rev=$(git-rev-parse --no-flags --verify --revs-only "$@") && |
||||
commit=$(git-rev-parse --verify "$rev^0") || exit |
||||
if git-diff-tree -R -M -p $commit | git-apply --index && |
||||
msg=$(git-rev-list --pretty=oneline --max-count=1 $commit) |
||||
then |
||||
{ |
||||
echo "$msg" | sed -e ' |
||||
s/^[^ ]* /Revert "/ |
||||
s/$/"/' |
||||
echo |
||||
echo "This reverts $commit commit." |
||||
test "$rev" = "$commit" || |
||||
echo "(original 'git revert' arguments: $@)" |
||||
} | git commit -F - |
||||
else |
||||
# Now why did it fail? |
||||
parents=`git-cat-file commit "$commit" 2>/dev/null | |
||||
sed -ne '/^$/q;/^parent /p' | |
||||
wc -l` |
||||
case $parents in |
||||
0) die "Cannot revert the root commit nor non commit-ish." ;; |
||||
1) die "The patch does not apply." ;; |
||||
*) die "Cannot revert a merge commit." ;; |
||||
esac |
||||
fi |
Loading…
Reference in new issue