repo status
shows me a lot of un-wanted changes.
It would be开发者_JAVA技巧 duplicated if I enter every project and use git reset --hard
.
Is there a way to reset all the changes using repo, something like repo reset --hard
?
This is the command I use for this kind of things, very useful
repo forall -vc "git reset --hard"
What everything mean here ?
the repo forall
will execute for all repos.
the -v
is verbose, so it will print the output of the command
the -c "COMMAND TO EXECUTE"
is the actual command you want
If there is a need to revert working folder to the clean state where you don't have local modifications and no untracked files (i.e. where repo status shows nothing), I found these two approaches useful on repo sync and deleted/modified files
repo forall -c 'git reset --hard ; git clean -fdx'
or
rm -rf * ; repo sync -l
// note that .repo is preserved after that
Note, that this is not equivalent to initializing a new local repo and syncing (e.g. stash is preserved)
If you are not sure what is going on, please read the full thread repo sync and deleted/modified files
You can use the repo
command as the following to revert all your changes:
repo sync -d
This will revert all your changes back to original revision.
Edited:
The command above is working only with the version at that time.
The working command is :
repo forall -vc "git reset --hard"
The command and options description
- forall
Executes the given shell command in each project
Options (that can be used with the forall
command)
-c
: command and arguments to execute. The command is evaluated through /bin/sh and any arguments after it are passed through as shell positional parameters.
-p
: show project headers before output of the specified command. This is achieved by binding pipes to the command's stdin, stdout, and sterr streams, and piping all output into a continuous stream that is displayed in a single pager session.
-v
: show messages the command writes to stderr.
For more information please refer the repo document
I use the repo forall command with the below syntax and it helps me to reset the tracking files.
repo forall -p -c 'git checkout -f foo'
where foo
should be replaced with a legitimate branch name.
repo forall does not cover all of the git tree
#!/bin/bash
for gitdir in $(find . -type d -name .git -prune); do
pushd $(dirname $gitdir)
git reset --hard
popd
done
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