I have a file, let's say file.txt I have done git mv file.txt to file1.txt, then I created a new file called file.txt and worked on it. Unfortunately I didn't add that file to git yet. Anyway the problem is that I did git stash, then git stash apply, but the new file.txt dis开发者_Python百科appeared... anyway to get it back?
The problem here is mostly a misunderstanding of what git stash save
does. It saves only changes to tracked files. Untracked files are not saved by git stash
. When you moved file.txt to file1.txt, the new file.txt is an untracked file and will not be saved by git stash
. This isn't a bug, it's just the way that git stash
behaves. It could be that the documentation for git stash
should be more clear about this.
As the documentation for git stash save
states, it will do a git reset --hard
after saving your changes. It was the git reset --hard
that overwrote the new file.txt. One might argue that git reset --hard
should generate a warning if an untracked file will be overwritten, but I still wouldn't call this a bug. It's doing what it's supposed to do.
The important thing to understand here -- and what would have saved you a lot of trouble -- is that git stash save
does not save untracked files (and it probably shouldn't).
This looks like serious (i.e. data loss) bug in stash. Please report it. Unfortunately, I don't believe that there's any way to get the new file.txt
back.
This bug has now been fixed in git >=1.7.1.1.
for the future, use git stash -u
to stash uncommitted files (http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-stash.html) You can do this starting from git version 1.7 i believe.
This is post is to simply illustrate the recreation process without getting crammed into a comment. Note: Using Git version 1.7.0.2
To recreate:
~/test $ git init
~/test $ echo "hello" > file.txt
~/test $ git add .
~/test $ git commit -m "init commit"
~/test $ git mv file.txt file1.txt
~/test $ echo "new data" > file.txt
~/test $ git stash
~/test $ git stash apply
~/test $ cat file.txt
cat: file.txt: No such file or directory
~/test $ cat file1.txt
hello
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