Git revert last commit after push code example

Example 1: git amend commit message after push

$ git commit --amend -m "New and correct message"

Example 2: revert last push to server

git reset --hard HEAD@{1}
git push -f

Example 3: revert last commit

git reset HEAD~

Example 4: git remove commits from branch after push

git reset --hard <last_working_commit_id>
So we must not reset to the commit_id that we don't want.

Then sure, we must push to remote branch:

git push --force

Example 5: git undo pushed commit

git reset <previous label or sha1>
git commit -am "commit message"
git push -f <remote-name> <branch-name>  //  git push -f origin master

Example 6: how to revert back to previous commit in git permanently

# This will destroy any local modifications.
# Don't do it if you have uncommitted work you want to keep.
git reset --hard 0d1d7fc32

# Alternatively, if there's work to keep:
git stash
git reset --hard 0d1d7fc32
git stash pop
# This saves the modifications, then reapplies that patch after resetting.
# You could get merge conflicts, if you've modified things which were
# changed since the commit you reset to.