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| title | date | permalink | tags | cta | snippet | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rebase and reorder | 2025-03-07 | daily/2025/03/07/rebase-and-reorder |
|
~ | Sometimes when tidying my commits or updating a local branch with remote changes, the order of commits changes - making them out of order in the Git log. This is how I fix it. |
Sometimes when tidying my commits or updating a local branch with remote changes, the order of commits changes - making them out of order in when running git log.
I want the commits in the log to be in the correct sequential order.
If not, it would be confusing if I review the commits in the future.
This is easy to fix when running git rebase -i to perform an interactive rebase on the commits.
The commit has a -x or --exec option that will perform a given command on each commit.
The commit date can be reset using git reset --amend, and combining these commands will amend the date of each commit.
Running git rebase --interactive --exec "git commit --amend --no-edit --date now" will amend and update each commit, keeping the commit message the same, but changing the commit date to the current time - leaving the Git log in the correct order.