Revert a range of commits in git

If you want to revert commit range B to D (at least in git version 2) in a single commit, you can do

 git revert -n B^..D

This revert the changes done by commits from B's parent commit (excluded) to the D commit (included), but doesn't create any commit with the reverted changes. The revert only modifies the working tree and the index.

Don't forgot to commit the changes after

 git commit -m "revert commit range B to D"

You can also revert multiple unrelated commits in a single commit, using same method. for example to revert B and D but not C

 git revert -n B D
 git commit -m "Revert commits B and D"

Reference: https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-revert.html

Thanks Honza Haering for the correction


Doing git revert OLDER_COMMIT^..NEWER_COMMIT didn't work for me.

I used git revert -n OLDER_COMMIT^..NEWER_COMMIT and everything is good. I'm using git version 1.7.9.6.


What version of Git are you using?

Reverting multiple commits in only supported in Git1.7.2+: see "Rollback to an old commit using revert multiple times." for more details.
The current git revert man page is only for the current Git version (1.7.4+).


As the OP Alex Spurling reports in the comments:

Upgrading to 1.7.4 works fine.
To answer my own question, this is the syntax I was looking for:

git revert B^..D 

B^ means "the first parent commit of B": that allows to include B in the revert.
See "git rev-parse SPECIFYING REVISIONS section" which include the <rev>^, e.g. HEAD^ syntax: see more at "What does the caret (^) character mean?")

Note that each reverted commit is committed separately.

Henrik N clarifies in the comments:

git revert OLDER_COMMIT^..NEWER_COMMIT

As shown below, you can revert without committing right away:

git revert -n OLDER_COMMIT^..NEWER_COMMIT
git commit -m "revert OLDER_COMMIT to NEWER_COMMIT"

Tags:

Git

Range

Revert