Remove folder and its contents from git/GitHub's history
Asked Answered
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I was working on a repository on my GitHub account and this is a problem I stumbled upon.

  • Node.js project with a folder with a few npm packages installed
  • The packages were in node_modules folder
  • Added that folder to git repository and pushed the code to github (wasn't thinking about the npm part at that time)
  • Realized that you don't really need that folder to be a part of the code
  • Deleted that folder, pushed it

At that instance, the size of the total git repo was around 6MB where the actual code (all except that folder) was only around 300 KB.

Now what I am looking for in the end is a way to get rid of details of that package folder from git's history so if someone clones it, they don't have to download 6mb worth of history where the only actual files they will be getting as of the last commit would be 300KB.

I looked up possible solutions for this and tried these 2 methods

The Gist seemed like it worked where after running the script, it showed that it got rid of that folder and after that it showed that 50 different commits were modified. But it didn't let me push that code. When I tried to push it, it said Branch up to date but showed 50 commits were modified upon a git status. The other 2 methods didn't help either.

Now even though it showed that it got rid of that folder's history, when I checked the size of that repo on my localhost, it was still around 6MB. (I also deleted the refs/originalfolder but didn't see the change in the size of the repo).

What I am looking to clarify is, if there's a way to get rid of not only the commit history (which is the only thing I think happened) but also those files git is keeping assuming one wants to rollback.

Lets say a solution is presented for this and is applied on my localhost but cant be reproduced to that GitHub repo, is it possible to clone that repo, rollback to the first commit perform the trick and push it (or does that mean that git will still have a history of all those commits? - aka. 6MB).

My end goal here is to basically find the best way to get rid of the folder contents from git so that a user doesn't have to download 6MB worth of stuff and still possibly have the other commits that never touched the modules folder (that's pretty much all of them) in git's history.

How can I do this?

Pennon answered 9/4, 2012 at 0:58 Comment(2)
If any of the answers below solved your problem, perhaps you should consider accepting one as the answer to your question. meta.stackexchange.com/questions/5234/…Shoifet
The best answer is: https://mcmap.net/q/12577/-remove-folder-and-its-contents-from-git-github-39-s-historyKatekatee
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692

WARNING: git filter-branch is no longer officially recommended. The official recommendation is to use git-filter-repo; see André Anjos' answer for details.


If you are here to copy-paste code:

This is an example which removes node_modules from history

git filter-branch --tree-filter "rm -rf node_modules" --prune-empty HEAD
git for-each-ref --format="%(refname)" refs/original/ | xargs -n 1 git update-ref -d
echo node_modules/ >> .gitignore
git add .gitignore
git commit -m 'Removing node_modules from git history'
git gc
git push origin main --force

What git actually does:

The first line iterates through all references on the same tree (--tree-filter) as HEAD (your current branch), running the command rm -rf node_modules. This command deletes the node_modules folder (-r, without -r, rm won't delete folders), with no prompt given to the user (-f). The added --prune-empty deletes useless (not changing anything) commits recursively.

The second line deletes the reference to that old branch.

The rest of the commands are relatively straightforward.

Erase answered 9/4, 2012 at 0:58 Comment(24)
Just a side note: I used git count-objects -v to check if the files was actually removed but the size of the repository remains the same until I cloned the repository again. Git mantains a copy of all the original files I think.Ballance
And how do we prevent others pushing that directory back?Comnenus
@Comnenus adding the folder to .gitignore should do itErase
@Erase But the next time the do a push it pushed the commits back as they are still in there history.Comnenus
With a non-ancient git, this should probably read --force-with-lease, not --force.Matrilocal
None of these commands work on windows. Or at least not Windows 10 please post the OS that the "cut and paste" works onPrognosis
there is a good guide on how to do it here: help.github.com/articles/…Disdain
stuck at git for-each-ref --format="%(refname)" refs/original/ | xargs -n 1 git update-ref -d echo node_modules/ >> .gitignoreDisrespectful
~\Documents\GitHub\fpo-patutu2\fpo-oms-new [master ↓2634 ↑2633]> git for-each-ref --format="%(refname)" refs/original/ | xargs -n 1 git update-ref -d .lock': Invalid argumentUsers/viavych/Documents/GitHub/fpo-patutu2/fpo-oms-new/.git/refs/original/refs/heads/master ~\Documents\GitHub\fpo-patutu2\fpo-oms-new [master ↓2634 ↑2633]>Disrespectful
For Windows 10 users, this works nicely under Bash for Windows (I used Ubuntu)Anguiano
git for-each-ref --format="%(refname)" refs/original/ | xargs -n 1 git update-ref -d command is not working in ubuntu.Eolithic
I tried it with windows shell and with git bash, and did not work. First command pass, second command fail!Trimming
@Prognosis This works perfectly on Windows using Git Bash. Used in Bash Terminal in PhpStorm. Bash shell installed from hereMedawar
I followed the same steps for bitbucket account but git count-objects -v still gives the old memory. Anyone knows what i am missing stackoverflow.com/questions/51761520/…Millenary
Not sure why this didn't work for me, but the answer below by Lee (https://mcmap.net/q/12577/-remove-folder-and-its-contents-from-git-github-39-s-history) workedHorvitz
Is this method restricted to work on the current branch only? I.e., if this method is applied from within another than the master branch, will it clean only the other branch and leave the master intact?Orpington
Add double quotes for window cmd.exe. git filter-branch --tree-filter "rm -rf node_modules" --prune-empty HEADWindburn
Would love some commentary about what each of the commands do before I copy-paste them.Shoffner
Unfortunately, it did not seem to delete a "node_modules" directory that was 6 levels deep into the git tree. Not sure why.Calling
I recieved a warning from git filter-branch that it does not recommend itself: WARNING: git-filter-branch has a glut of gotchas generating mangled history rewrites. Hit Ctrl-C before proceeding to abort, then use an alternative filtering tool such as 'git filter-repo' (https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/) instead. - therefore preferring the git filter-repo answer below: https://mcmap.net/q/12577/-remove-folder-and-its-contents-from-git-github-39-s-historyValentinavalentine
If I add back the folder then I can still see the history on github (is this a git thing or a github thing?) suppose I have sensitive information in this folder and would like to really scrub the history clean?Avirulent
although I also agree things should be understood, I think they only ought to be worked for understanding when relevant to the fellow engineer/developer's current (and personal) mission -- whatever it happens to be. So, I mean, yeah, mastering the internals of a tool written 15 years ago might yield fruit. But, I don't need to know how a hard drive works to use it, and that is kind of the point.Blinkers
I keep getting following warning message: WARNING: git-filter-branch has a glut of gotchas generating mangled history rewrites.Blueberry
I am having ` syntax error near unexpected token refname' errorBlueberry
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332

I find that the --tree-filter option used in other answers can be very slow, especially on larger repositories with lots of commits.

Here is the method I use to completely remove a directory from the git history using the --index-filter option, which runs much quicker:

# Make a fresh clone of YOUR_REPO
git clone YOUR_REPO
cd YOUR_REPO

# Create tracking branches of all branches
for remote in `git branch -r | grep -v /HEAD`; do git checkout --track $remote ; done

# Remove DIRECTORY_NAME from all commits, then remove the refs to the old commits
# (repeat these two commands for as many directories that you want to remove)
git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm -rf --cached --ignore-unmatch DIRECTORY_NAME/' --prune-empty --tag-name-filter cat -- --all
git for-each-ref --format="%(refname)" refs/original/ | xargs -n 1 git update-ref -d

# Ensure all old refs are fully removed
rm -Rf .git/logs .git/refs/original

# Perform a garbage collection to remove commits with no refs
git gc --prune=all --aggressive

# Force push all branches to overwrite their history
# (use with caution!)
git push origin --all --force
git push origin --tags --force

You can check the size of the repository before and after the gc with:

git count-objects -vH
Tavarez answered 1/10, 2015 at 11:26 Comment(19)
could you explain why this is much faster?Ferrous
@knocte: from the docs (git-scm.com/docs/git-filter-branch). "--index-filter: ... is similar to the tree filter but does not check out the tree, which makes it much faster"Tavarez
Why is this not the accepted answer? It is so thorough.Rimmer
If doing this in Windows, you need double quotes instead of single quotes.Quintile
And if you run into an xargs problem, you'll need to add it to your path (program files\git\usr\bin).Quintile
Passing --quiet to the git rm above sped up my rewrite at least by factor 4.Kodak
this worked! not the above solution mentioned by @mohsenMinardi
This is the only solution that worked flawlessly for me. Thanks!Reprobative
This answer was definitely much more useful.Brescia
The third line ("for remote ... ") leaves the current directory in the last found branch, propably not the master. a "git checkout master" is required if one won't operate on a feature branchExtremely
it has also generated many files .git-rewrite... should I commit them?Cosper
this answer is key. without doing this step: for remote in git branch -r | grep -v /HEAD; do git checkout --track $remote ; done the git push origin --all will not work correctly. this is a critical step. i would recommend following this entire answer instead of the other ones.Immoderate
If you have a message Did you intend to checkout 'origin/xxxxx' which can not be resolved as commit? after line 3, it's probably because of colors. Add --no-color to git branch -r --no-colorToole
This worked for me, partially. I was able to clean up my local git repository. First I deleted unnecessary branches from local and remote to make the process a bit cleaner. Then I ran the git rm, cleared refs, and gc. However, it did not fix the issue for Bitbucket remote. I had to recreate the entire repo with individual branches and tags.Bathelda
This worked perfectly for me! Make sure you have ForcePush permissionsAntiworld
Can DIR be a list of directories and/or files, in the git rm expression above? Given how long the history rewrite can take it might be useful to let it do the entire rewrite at once, if you want to throw away multiple directories.Illume
This worked for me but it force pushed master into open PR branches and then closed them. Luckily there were only two. In short... watch out.Moynahan
Seems this solution does not need the working trees files, how about adding a --mirror option in the git clone command.Sough
I'm getting error: invalid path 'DIRECTORY_NAME/FILE_IN_DIRECTORY' errors while using this solution.Trichromatism
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213

It appears that the up-to-date answer to this is to not use filter-branch directly (at least git itself does not recommend it anymore), and defer that work to an external tool. In particular, git-filter-repo is currently recommended. The author of that tool provides arguments on why using filter-branch directly can lead to issues.

Most of the multi-line scripts above to remove dir from the history could be re-written as:

git-filter-repo --path dir --invert-paths

The tool is more powerful than just that, apparently. You can apply filters by author, email, refname and more (full manpage here). Furthermore, it is fast. Installation is easy - it is distributed in a variety of formats.

Adali answered 1/5, 2020 at 14:58 Comment(13)
Nice tool! Works well on Ubuntu 20.04, you can just pip3 install git-filter-repo since it's stdlib-only and doesn't install any dependencies. On Ubuntu 18 it's incompatible with distro's git version Error: need a version of git whose diff-tree command has the --combined-all-paths option, but it's easy to enough to run it on a docker run -ti ubuntu:20.04Granulate
You're right! But please if you can separate the answer from the information about filter-repo.. I mean, maybe write all the information about the filter-repo replace filter-branch, then write a ------- operator, and then give us more info about the command itself- what is the --invert-paths for example. Thanks!Wafd
Important: if your directory is not on the toplevel, you have to provide the full path to it. dir/subdirectoryAnatola
re: --invert-paths, the filter is an include one. So you want to include all paths NOT matching dirMilne
Like the OP, I had a large directory I could eliminate.I tried filter-repo first because of git's built-in warning using filter-branch. However, I didn't see the expected reduction in size using git clone thereafter. Using filter-branch as described here did work, however. Maybe the reason lies elsewhere, like the --aggressive option to the GC.Goya
git: 'filter-repo' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.Blueberry
Thanks for this, this was fast and finished in seconds! A couple notes on usage: 1) you may need to install a newer version of git. If you're on ubuntu that may require setting up a new apt repository as i.e. Xenial repos are still on git 2.7.4 which is too old. 2) This DOES delete the folder locally as well. Back it up if you need it. 3) You'll need to re-add the remote url and do a force push (as always, carefully!). 4) You can install the tool with pip3 easily (mentioned above). 5) You may need to run with --force if you don't want to clone a fresh repo. Seems to have gone fine for me.Knit
The example should read git-filter-repo.py, not git filter-repo. It is not a native Git command.Farseeing
On OS X, has Homebrew link support. brew install git-filter-repoCaraviello
Tried it under windows env with this command line: python git-filter-repo.py --path my\path --invert-paths, it is fast but not doing anything. Checked git log and my\path files were still showing.Bootlick
In regards to @HughGuiney comment, depending on how you installed git-filter-repo the way you run it can change. git-filter-repo and git-filter-repo.py are both valid ways of running the script.Epicanthus
Do I have to push the changes? After running this command, the local repo no longer had any remotes.. and pushing gives an error after adding remotes.. is git push origin main --force required?Declination
Please explain the option --invert-pathsThermonuclear
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58

In addition to the popular answer above I would like to add a few notes for Windows-systems. The command

git filter-branch --tree-filter 'rm -rf node_modules' --prune-empty HEAD
  • works perfectly without any modification! Therefore, you must not use Remove-Item, del or anything else instead of rm -rf.

  • If you need to specify a path to a file or directory use slashes like ./path/to/node_modules

Florri answered 3/11, 2015 at 6:57 Comment(3)
This will not work on Windows if the directory contains a . (dot) in the name.Chavira
And I found the solution. Use double inverted-commas for rm command like this: "rm -rf node.modules".Chavira
@CorneliuSerediuc bro just say quotation marksVonnie
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The best and most accurate method I found was to download the bfg.jar file: https://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/

Then run the commands:

git clone --bare https://project/repository project-repository
cd project-repository
java -jar bfg.jar --delete-folders DIRECTORY_NAME
git reflog expire --expire=now --all && git gc --prune=now --aggressive
git push --mirror https://project/new-repository

If you want to delete files then use the delete-files option instead:

java -jar bfg.jar --delete-files *.pyc
Disdain answered 30/1, 2017 at 19:5 Comment(2)
very easy :) if you want to make shure that only a specific folder is removed, this will help: stackoverflow.com/questions/21142986/…Underpants
But using BFG may have trouble when there are several folders that have the same name as the specific one you want to delete, i.e., BFG can not accept path name for --delete-folders.Sough
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8

Complete copy&paste recipe, just adding the commands in the comments (for the copy-paste solution), after testing them:

git filter-branch --tree-filter 'rm -rf node_modules' --prune-empty HEAD
echo node_modules/ >> .gitignore
git add .gitignore
git commit -m 'Removing node_modules from git history'
git gc
git push origin master --force

After this, you can remove the line "node_modules/" from .gitignore

Suppository answered 22/1, 2015 at 18:12 Comment(1)
Second the question... "After this, you can remove the line "node_modules/" from .gitignore" This line in the answer (answer... not git commit message) says you can remove node_modules/... but why would you?Gen
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For Windows user, please note to use " instead of ' Also added -f to force the command if another backup is already there.

git filter-branch -f --tree-filter "rm -rf FOLDERNAME" --prune-empty HEAD
git for-each-ref --format="%(refname)" refs/original/ | xargs -n 1 git update-ref -d
echo FOLDERNAME/ >> .gitignore
git add .gitignore
git commit -m "Removing FOLDERNAME from git history"
git gc
git push origin master --force
Farouche answered 18/3, 2019 at 19:42 Comment(0)
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I removed the bin and obj folders from old C# projects using git on windows. Be careful with

git filter-branch --tree-filter "rm -rf bin" --prune-empty HEAD

It destroys the integrity of the git installation by deleting the usr/bin folder in the git install folder.

Earvin answered 4/1, 2018 at 21:58 Comment(0)
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For copypasters (from here):

git filter-repo --invert-paths --path PATH-TO-YOUR-FILE-WITH-SENSITIVE-DATA
echo "YOUR-FILE-WITH-SENSITIVE-DATA" >> .gitignore
git add .gitignore
git commit -m "Add YOUR-FILE-WITH-SENSITIVE-DATA to .gitignore"
git push origin --force --all
Lyra answered 2/9, 2021 at 20:50 Comment(0)

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