Question

Per accident I committed twice because I forgot to add two files. Can I remove a specific commit from the log?

screenshot of log

I want to delete commit № 4.

Was it helpful?

Solution

The simple answer is "no", because Subversion doesn't know how to resolve the case when you add a commit, someone else updates their checkout, and then you remove the commit from history. There might or might not be a complex answer involving surgery on the Subversion storage.

OTHER TIPS

  1. AFAICS, you have not delete r4, but merge with r5, yes?
  2. In general, SVN commit history is immutable, as Sii said - and if you haven't rights delete/create repo - you can't do anything.

If you can delete current repo and create new with new history, you can try:

  • svnadmin dump for getting human-readable (barely, I have to say) repository-dump, grok format and edit dump, delete repo, svnadmin load to recreate the repo
  • another idea is (instead of editing dump) another SCM, which has a bridge to SVN (hg+MQ (histedit)+hg-git, f.e, will allow you to get repo and fold/delete changesets). For replacing old repository - see p.2 above

In your case, it's just necessary to modify the commit comment associated with commit #4 to reflect the actual changes you made. You can do that with Subversion by modifying the SVN repository configuration. See the Subversion FAQ.

Why? Let Subversion keep the history - that's what it's for. Check in early and often. There's no need to erase commit #4.

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