Qwen Code includes a Checkpointing feature that automatically saves a snapshot of your project's state before any file modifications are made by AI-powered tools. This allows you to safely experiment with and apply code changes, knowing you can instantly revert back to the state before the tool was run.
When you approve a tool that modifies the file system (like `write_file` or `edit`), the CLI automatically creates a "checkpoint." This checkpoint includes:
1.**A Git Snapshot:** A commit is made in a special, shadow Git repository located in your home directory (`~/.qwen/history/<project_hash>`). This snapshot captures the complete state of your project files at that moment. It does **not** interfere with your own project's Git repository.
All checkpoint data, including the Git snapshot and conversation history, is stored locally on your machine. The Git snapshot is stored in the shadow repository while the conversation history and tool calls are saved in a JSON file in your project's temporary directory, typically located at `~/.qwen/tmp/<project_hash>/checkpoints`.
Once enabled, checkpoints are created automatically. To manage them, you use the `/restore` command.
### List Available Checkpoints
To see a list of all saved checkpoints for the current project, simply run:
```
/restore
```
The CLI will display a list of available checkpoint files. These file names are typically composed of a timestamp, the name of the file being modified, and the name of the tool that was about to be run (e.g., `2025-06-22T10-00-00_000Z-my-file.txt-write_file`).
### Restore a Specific Checkpoint
To restore your project to a specific checkpoint, use the checkpoint file from the list:
After running the command, your files and conversation will be immediately restored to the state they were in when the checkpoint was created, and the original tool prompt will reappear.