Git CLI tricks

Gabriele de Capoa
2 min readJun 3, 2021
Photo by Yancy Min on Unsplash

If you use Git as source code management tool, you probably use a plugin for your favorite IDE or a desktop application. Anyway, sometimes you need to use the CLI to perform some tricky commands.

Here you could find my personal tricks for Git CLI I learned during my work (or too late to be used in my day-by-day job).

Undo last commit

Sometimes you need to undo your last commit, because you need to remove a file from that or to avoid commit some secrets. In that case, git reset is the command you need to run.

If you would like to preserve the change, so you could update it, then you need to run

git reset --soft HEAD~1

Otherwise, if you would delete completely the changes, you need to run

git reset --hard HEAD~1

If you already push your commit on remote repository, then you need to force the push in order to remove also from the history of the remote.

git reset --hard HEAD~1
git push --force

Exclude merge commits checking logs

Merge commits could be useful, but they get dirty the history of the repository. If you would like to analyze the history without those commits, you could use this.

git log --oneline --graph --no-merges

Easy changelog

Create changelogs is annoying, but it is important before release a new version of your application. The easiest way to do that in Git is

git shortlog XXXXXX..HEAD --no-merges

where XXXXXX is the SHA code for the previous commit. This works also with tags, following the rule OLD_TAG..NEW_TAG.

Clean up deleted branches and tags

If you use branches for each feature you create, you will have tons of branches in your repo, and you will need to clean up stolen one. You could clean up your local repo while you are pulling the updates.

git pull --all --prune

Originally published at https://gabriele-decapoa.github.io.

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Gabriele de Capoa

Cloud software engineer, wanna-be data scientist, former Scrum Master. Agile, DevOps, Kubernetes and SQL are my top topics.