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The rollback feature is a fast method of undoing blatantly unproductive edits, such as vandalism and nonsense. The name derives from the data management term rollback, meaning an operation that reverses the effect of changes made to a database. Rollback is available automatically to all 1,702 Wikipedia administrators and the 3,097 users with the rollbacker permission. In total, 4,799 editors have rollback rights.
How it worksRollback is available within recent change lists, page histories, diffs, and user contribution pages. When an admin or rollbacker sees an obviously inappropriate change (usually vandalism), it only takes one click (on the "rollback" link) to revert the changes. However, take care! Unlike the undo feature:
The automatic edit summary looks like this: Because the feature is used mostly to revert vandalism, links to the reverted user's contributions and talk pages are included to check for other bad edits, and/or issue warnings to that user. Rollback always signals itself as a "minor edit", hence the bold "m" at the beginning. When to use rollbackRollback should be used only for reverts that are self-explanatory – such as removing obvious vandalism – to revert content in your own user space – or to revert edits by banned users who are not allowed to edit. Provided that an explanation is supplied in an appropriate location, such as at the relevant talk page, rollback may also be used in circumstances where widely spread edits (by a misguided editor or malfunctioning bot) are judged to be unhelpful to the encyclopedia, since such edits would be tedious to revert manually.[1] However, reversion for other reasons requires an appropriate explanatory edit summary; unless this requirement is met by using tools that allow for different edit summaries, rollback would not be the appropriate method of reversion in those circumstances. Rollback must, therefore, always be used with care. Although rollback is significantly faster and uses less bandwidth than other methods of reversion, do not worry about performance. When using rollback to restore text to a page, ensure that the text restored does not violate Wikipedia policies. When in doubt, use another method of reversion and supply an edit summary to explain your reasoning. When not to use rollbackIf there is any doubt about whether to revert an edit, please do not use this feature. Use the undo feature instead, and add a more informative edit summary explaining your revert. Misuse of rollback may cause the feature to be revoked by an administrator. Because administrators have rollback automatically, it cannot be removed without removing their administrator access. Mass rollbacksRollbacks may be used, with caution, if a large number of non-vandalism reverts need to be carried out (for instance, if a discussion agreed that a set of edits by an editor or bot need to be undone). In such circumstances, an explanation must be provided at the appropriate venue, such as at a relevant talk page. Alternatively, scripts that allow for custom edit summaries may be used, with caution (for instance, User:John254/mass rollback.js permits all rollback links currently viewable in a user's contributions history to be rolled back with a single click). Custom edit summariesTools are available to specify custom edit summaries with rollback. Two examples are User:Gracenotes/rollback.js and User:Mr.Z-man/rollbackSummary.js. A similar tool that prompts for a summary is User:Ilmari Karonen/rollbacksummary.js. Custom edit summaries help other editors when reviewing changes. Two extra scripts with the rollback summary shown by default are at User:Porchcrop/Rollback Summary. To provide a custom edit summary manually, copy the rollback link, and append the URL parameter "&summary=summary". Rollback and TwinkleEditors may have both rollback and the anti-vandalism tool Twinkle, and will see both types of rollback link. Editors can use either feature, though plain rollback is faster. Twinkle has the advantage of allowing an extra comment for the edit summary (except for "rollback (VANDAL)"), and in its default settings, it will automatically watch the reverted page and open the user's talk page for giving warnings. How to applyEditors may ask any administrator; however, administrators found in Category:Wikipedia administrators willing to grant rollback requests have specifically indicated their willingness to consider such requests. Alternatively, you may file a request at Wikipedia:Requests for permissions/Rollback. An administrator can grant (or revoke) rollback using their own judgment, via the interface at Special:UserRights. PracticingTo practice with rollback and see how it works, please see Wikipedia:New admin school/Rollback. HistoryThe rollbacker permission feature was implemented on the English-language Wikipedia following several discussions at Wikipedia:Non-administrator rollback and two major polls. Following the second poll, non-administrator rollback was implemented on 9 January 2008 as noted at bug 12534, and began to be granted the same day. NotesSee also
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