This log is updated when the HEAD gets updated.
This usually happens with:
This command will show you the history of your local repository.
If you performed a destructive command like reset and want to recover commits, you could find the hash of this commit with git-reflog.
git log --oneline 00617f7 add bacon file baee97e add new feature 62f8afd did bug fix ed937bb initial commit
git reset --hard 62f8afd HEAD is now at 62f8afd did bug fix ls index.html
git reflog 62f8afd HEAD@{0}: reset: moving to 62f8afd 00617f7 HEAD@{1}: commit: add bacon file baee97e HEAD@{2}: merge new feature: Fast-forward 62f8afd HEAD@{3}: checkout: moving from new-feature to master baee97e HEAD@{4}: rebase finished: returning to refs/heads/new-feature baee97e HEAD@{5}: rebase: add new feature 62f8afd HEAD@{6}: checkout: moving from master to 62f8afd8bc86ec01e3472df 62f8afd HEAD@{7}: merge bug-fix: Fast forward ed937bb HEAD@{8}: checkout: moving from bug-fix to master 62f8afd HEAD@{9}: commit: did bug fix ed937bb HEAD@{10}: checkout: moving from master to bug-fix ed937bb HEAD@{11}: checkout: moving from new-feature to master ff70d17 HEAD@{12}: commit: add new feature ed937bb HEAD@{13}: checkout: moving from master to new-feature ed937bb HEAD@{14}: commit (initial): initial commit git reset --hard 00617f7 HEAD is now at 00617f7 add bacon file ls bacon.html index.html new-feature.html
You could always use git reset –hard [commit hash] to revert accidentally changes.