How to inject a commit between some two arbitrary commits in the past?

Turns out to be quite simple, the answer found here. Suppose you're on a branch branch. Perform these steps:

  • create a temporary branch from the commit after you want to insert the new commit (in this case commit A):

    git checkout -b temp A
    
  • perform the changes and commit them, creating a the commit, let's call it N:

    git commit -a -m "Message"
    

    (or git add followed by git commit)

  • rebase the commits you want to have after the new commit (in this case commits B and C) onto the new commit:

    git rebase temp branch
    

(possibly you need to use -p to preserve merges, if there were any - thanks to a no longer existing comment by ciekawy)

  • delete the temporary branch:

    git branch -d temp
    

After this, the history looks as follows:

A -- N -- B -- C

It is of course possible that some conflicts will appear while rebasing.

In case your branch is not local-only this will introduce rewriting history, so might cause serious problems.


It's even easier than in OP's answer.

  1. git rebase -i <any earlier commit>. This displays a list of commits in your configured text editor.
  2. Find the commit you want to insert after (let's assume it's a1b2c3d). In your editor, for that line, change pick to edit.
  3. Begin the rebase by closing your text editor (save your changes). This leaves you at a command prompt with the commit you chose earlier (a1b2c3d) as if it has just been committed.
  4. Make your changes and git commit (NOT amending, unlike most edits). This creates new a commit after the one you chose.
  5. git rebase --continue. This replays the successive commits, leaving your new commit inserted in the correct place.

Beware that this will rewrite history, and break anyone else who tries to pull.


Even easier solution:

  1. Create your new commit at the end, D. Now you have:

    A -- B -- C -- D
    
  2. Then run:

    $ git rebase -i hash-of-A
    
  3. Git will open your editor and it will look like this:

    pick 8668d21 B
    pick 650f1fc C
    pick 74096b9 D
    
  4. Just move D to the top like this, then save and quit

    pick 74096b9 D
    pick 8668d21 B
    pick 650f1fc C
    
  5. Now you will have:

    A -- D -- B -- C
    

Here's a strategy that avoids doing an "edit hack" during the rebase seen in the other answers I've read.

By using git rebase -i you obtain a list of commits since that commit. Just add a "break" at the top of the file, this will cause the rebase to break at that point.

break
pick <B's hash> <B's commit message>
pick <C's hash> <C's commit message>

Once launched, git rebase will now stop at the point of the "break". You can now edit your files and create your commit normally. You can then continue the rebase with git rebase --continue. This may cause conflicts you'll have to fix. If you get lost, don't forget you can always abort using git rebase --abort.

This strategy can be generalised to insert a commit anywhere, just put the "break" at the spot where you want to insert a commit.

After rewriting history, don't forget to git push -f. The usual warnings about other people fetching your branch apply.

Tags:

Git