How can I reconcile detached HEAD with master/origin?
I'm new at the branching complexities of Git. I always work on a single branch and commit changes and then periodically push to my remote origin.
Somewhere recently, I did a reset of some files to get them out of commit staging, and later did a rebase -i
to get rid of a couple recent local commits. Now I'm in a state I don't quite understand.
In my working area, git log
shows exactly what I'd expect-- I'm on the right train with the commits I didn't want gone, and new ones there, etc.
But I just pushed to the remote repository, and what's there is different-- a couple of the commits I'd killed in the rebase got pushed, and the new ones committed locally aren't there.
I think "master/origin" is detached from HEAD, but I'm not 100% clear on what that means, how to visualize it with the command line tools, and how to fix it.
First, let's clarify what HEAD is and what it means when it is detached.
HEAD is the symbolic name for the currently checked out commit. When HEAD is not detached (the “normal”1 situation: you have a branch checked out), HEAD actually points to a branch's “ref” and the branch points to the commit. HEAD is thus “attached” to a branch. When you make a new commit, the branch that HEAD points to is updated to point to the new commit. HEAD follows automatically since it just points to the branch.
git symbolic-ref HEAD
yields refs/heads/master
The branch named “master” is checked out.
git rev-parse refs/heads/master
yield 17a02998078923f2d62811326d130de991d1a95a
That commit is the current tip or “head” of the master branch.
git rev-parse HEAD
also yields 17a02998078923f2d62811326d130de991d1a95a
This is what it means to be a “symbolic ref”. It points to an object through some other reference.
(Symbolic refs were originally implemented as symbolic links, but later changed to plain files with extra interpretation so that they could be used on platforms that do not have symlinks.)
We have HEAD
→ refs/heads/master
→ 17a02998078923f2d62811326d130de991d1a95a
When HEAD is detached, it points directly to a commit—instead of indirectly pointing to one through a branch. You can think of a detached HEAD as being on an unnamed branch.
git symbolic-ref HEAD
fails with fatal: ref HEAD is not a symbolic ref
git rev-parse HEAD
yields 17a02998078923f2d62811326d130de991d1a95a
Since it is not a symbolic ref, it must point directly to the commit itself.
We have HEAD
→ 17a02998078923f2d62811326d130de991d1a95a
The important thing to remember with a detached HEAD is that if the commit it points to is otherwise unreferenced (no other ref can reach it), then it will become “dangling” when you checkout some other commit. Eventually, such dangling commits will be pruned through the garbage collection process (by default, they are kept for at least 2 weeks and may be kept longer by being referenced by HEAD's reflog).
1 It is perfectly fine to do “normal” work with a detached HEAD, you just have to keep track of what you are doing to avoid having to fish dropped history out of the reflog.
The intermediate steps of an interactive rebase are done with a detached HEAD (partially to avoid polluting the active branch's reflog). If you finish the full rebase operation, it will update your original branch with the cumulative result of the rebase operation and reattach HEAD to the original branch. My guess is that you never fully completed the rebase process; this will leave you with a detached HEAD pointing to the commit that was most recently processed by the rebase operation.
To recover from your situation, you should create a branch that points to the commit currently pointed to by your detached HEAD:
git branch temp
git checkout temp
(these two commands can be abbreviated as git checkout -b temp
)
This will reattach your HEAD to the new temp
branch.
Next, you should compare the current commit (and its history) with the normal branch on which you expected to be working:
git log --graph --decorate --pretty=oneline --abbrev-commit master origin/master temp
git diff master temp
git diff origin/master temp
(You will probably want to experiment with the log options: add -p
, leave off --pretty=…
to see the whole log message, etc.)
If your new temp
branch looks good, you may want to update (eg) master
to point to it:
git branch -f master temp
git checkout master
(these two commands can be abbreviated as git checkout -B master temp
)
You can then delete the temporary branch:
git branch -d temp
Finally, you will probably want to push the reestablished history:
git push origin master
You may need to add --force
to the end of this command to push if the remote branch can not be “fast-forwarded” to the new commit (ie you dropped, or rewrote some existing commit, or otherwise rewrote some bit of history).
If you were in the middle of a rebase operation you should probably clean it up. You can check whether a rebase was in process by looking for the directory .git/rebase-merge/
. You can manually clean up the in-progress rebase by just deleting that directory (eg if you no longer remember the purpose and context of the active rebase operation). Usually you would use git rebase --abort
, but that does some extra resetting that you probably want to avoid (it moves HEAD back to the original branch and resets it back to the original commit, which will undo some of the work we did above).
Just do this:
git checkout master
Or, if you have changes that you want to keep, do this:
git checkout -b temp
git checkout -B master temp
I ran into this issue and when I read in the top voted answer:
HEAD is the symbolic name for the currently checked out commit.
I thought: Ah-ha! If HEAD
is the symbolic name for the currenlty checkout commit, I can reconcile it against master
by rebasing it against master
:
git rebase HEAD master
This command:
master
HEAD
back to the point HEAD
diverged from master
master
The end result is that all commits that were in HEAD
but not master
are then also in master
. master
remains checked out.
Regarding the remote:
a couple of the commits I'd killed in the rebase got pushed, and the new ones committed locally aren't there.
The remote history can no longer be fast-forwarded using your local history. You'll need to force-push ( git push -f
) to overwrite the remote history. If you have any collaborators, it usually makes sense to coordinate this with them so everyone is on the same page.
After you push master
to remote origin
, your remote tracking branch origin/master
will be updated to point to the same commit as master
.
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