Hello, Git folks. I managed to accidentally break the our test lab by attempting to git mv a directory with a submodule inside. It seems like if a reset does an undo on a mv, the workfold entry should be fixed to put the submodule in its old location. Consider the following sequence of commands: Setup a git repo with a submodule: mkdir metaproject mkdir upstream cd metaproject git init cd ..\upstream git init echo hello > test.txt git add -A git commit -m "an example commit" cd ..\metapoject mkdir start git submodule add ../upstream start/upstream git add -A git commit -m "Add submodule in start/upstream." Move the directory containing the submodule: git mv start target git add -A git commit -m "Moved submodule parent directory." Check that the worktree got correctly fixed by git mv; this output is as expected: type .git\modules\start\upstream\config [core] repositoryformatversion = 0 filemode = false bare = false logallrefupdates = true symlinks = false ignorecase = true worktree = ../../../../target/upstream [remote "origin"] url = C:/Users/bion/Desktop/upstream fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* [branch "master"] remote = origin merge = refs/heads/master Now try to go back to the previous commit using git reset --hard: git log --oneline 1f560be (HEAD -> master) Moved submodule parent directory. a5977ce Add submodule in start/upstream. git reset --hard a5977ce warning: unable to rmdir target/upstream: Directory not empty HEAD is now at a5977ce Add submodule in start/upstream. Check that the worktree got fixed correctly; it did not: type .git\modules\start\upstream\config [core] repositoryformatversion = 0 filemode = false bare = false logallrefupdates = true symlinks = false ignorecase = true worktree = ../../../../target/upstream [remote "origin"] url = C:/Users/bion/Desktop/upstream fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* [branch "master"] remote = origin merge = refs/heads/master Is git reset intended to put the submodule in the right place? If not, is there a command we can run before/after reset to restore consistency? Thanks folks! Billy O'Neal