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1 git-filter-branch(1)
2 ====================
3
4 NAME
5 ----
6 git-filter-branch - Rewrite branches
7
8 SYNOPSIS
9 --------
10 [verse]
11 'git filter-branch' [--env-filter <command>] [--tree-filter <command>]
12 [--index-filter <command>] [--parent-filter <command>]
13 [--msg-filter <command>] [--commit-filter <command>]
14 [--tag-name-filter <command>] [--subdirectory-filter <directory>]
15 [--original <namespace>] [-d <directory>] [-f | --force]
16 [--] [<rev-list options>...]
17
18 DESCRIPTION
19 -----------
20 Lets you rewrite git revision history by rewriting the branches mentioned
21 in the <rev-list options>, applying custom filters on each revision.
22 Those filters can modify each tree (e.g. removing a file or running
23 a perl rewrite on all files) or information about each commit.
24 Otherwise, all information (including original commit times or merge
25 information) will be preserved.
26
27 The command will only rewrite the _positive_ refs mentioned in the
28 command line (e.g. if you pass 'a..b', only 'b' will be rewritten).
29 If you specify no filters, the commits will be recommitted without any
30 changes, which would normally have no effect. Nevertheless, this may be
31 useful in the future for compensating for some git bugs or such,
32 therefore such a usage is permitted.
33
34 *NOTE*: This command honors `.git/info/grafts`. If you have any grafts
35 defined, running this command will make them permanent.
36
37 *WARNING*! The rewritten history will have different object names for all
38 the objects and will not converge with the original branch. You will not
39 be able to easily push and distribute the rewritten branch on top of the
40 original branch. Please do not use this command if you do not know the
41 full implications, and avoid using it anyway, if a simple single commit
42 would suffice to fix your problem. (See the "RECOVERING FROM UPSTREAM
43 REBASE" section in linkgit:git-rebase[1] for further information about
44 rewriting published history.)
45
46 Always verify that the rewritten version is correct: The original refs,
47 if different from the rewritten ones, will be stored in the namespace
48 'refs/original/'.
49
50 Note that since this operation is very I/O expensive, it might
51 be a good idea to redirect the temporary directory off-disk with the
52 '-d' option, e.g. on tmpfs. Reportedly the speedup is very noticeable.
53
54
55 Filters
56 ~~~~~~~
57
58 The filters are applied in the order as listed below. The <command>
59 argument is always evaluated in the shell context using the 'eval' command
60 (with the notable exception of the commit filter, for technical reasons).
61 Prior to that, the $GIT_COMMIT environment variable will be set to contain
62 the id of the commit being rewritten. Also, GIT_AUTHOR_NAME,
63 GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL, GIT_AUTHOR_DATE, GIT_COMMITTER_NAME, GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL,
64 and GIT_COMMITTER_DATE are set according to the current commit. The values
65 of these variables after the filters have run, are used for the new commit.
66 If any evaluation of <command> returns a non-zero exit status, the whole
67 operation will be aborted.
68
69 A 'map' function is available that takes an "original sha1 id" argument
70 and outputs a "rewritten sha1 id" if the commit has been already
71 rewritten, and "original sha1 id" otherwise; the 'map' function can
72 return several ids on separate lines if your commit filter emitted
73 multiple commits.
74
75
76 OPTIONS
77 -------
78
79 --env-filter <command>::
80 This filter may be used if you only need to modify the environment
81 in which the commit will be performed. Specifically, you might
82 want to rewrite the author/committer name/email/time environment
83 variables (see linkgit:git-commit[1] for details). Do not forget
84 to re-export the variables.
85
86 --tree-filter <command>::
87 This is the filter for rewriting the tree and its contents.
88 The argument is evaluated in shell with the working
89 directory set to the root of the checked out tree. The new tree
90 is then used as-is (new files are auto-added, disappeared files
91 are auto-removed - neither .gitignore files nor any other ignore
92 rules *HAVE ANY EFFECT*!).
93
94 --index-filter <command>::
95 This is the filter for rewriting the index. It is similar to the
96 tree filter but does not check out the tree, which makes it much
97 faster. For hairy cases, see linkgit:git-update-index[1].
98
99 --parent-filter <command>::
100 This is the filter for rewriting the commit's parent list.
101 It will receive the parent string on stdin and shall output
102 the new parent string on stdout. The parent string is in
103 the format described in linkgit:git-commit-tree[1]: empty for
104 the initial commit, "-p parent" for a normal commit and
105 "-p parent1 -p parent2 -p parent3 ..." for a merge commit.
106
107 --msg-filter <command>::
108 This is the filter for rewriting the commit messages.
109 The argument is evaluated in the shell with the original
110 commit message on standard input; its standard output is
111 used as the new commit message.
112
113 --commit-filter <command>::
114 This is the filter for performing the commit.
115 If this filter is specified, it will be called instead of the
116 'git-commit-tree' command, with arguments of the form
117 "<TREE_ID> [-p <PARENT_COMMIT_ID>]..." and the log message on
118 stdin. The commit id is expected on stdout.
119 +
120 As a special extension, the commit filter may emit multiple
121 commit ids; in that case, the rewritten children of the original commit will
122 have all of them as parents.
123 +
124 You can use the 'map' convenience function in this filter, and other
125 convenience functions, too. For example, calling 'skip_commit "$@"'
126 will leave out the current commit (but not its changes! If you want
127 that, use 'git-rebase' instead).
128
129 --tag-name-filter <command>::
130 This is the filter for rewriting tag names. When passed,
131 it will be called for every tag ref that points to a rewritten
132 object (or to a tag object which points to a rewritten object).
133 The original tag name is passed via standard input, and the new
134 tag name is expected on standard output.
135 +
136 The original tags are not deleted, but can be overwritten;
137 use "--tag-name-filter cat" to simply update the tags. In this
138 case, be very careful and make sure you have the old tags
139 backed up in case the conversion has run afoul.
140 +
141 Nearly proper rewriting of tag objects is supported. If the tag has
142 a message attached, a new tag object will be created with the same message,
143 author, and timestamp. If the tag has a signature attached, the
144 signature will be stripped. It is by definition impossible to preserve
145 signatures. The reason this is "nearly" proper, is because ideally if
146 the tag did not change (points to the same object, has the same name, etc.)
147 it should retain any signature. That is not the case, signatures will always
148 be removed, buyer beware. There is also no support for changing the
149 author or timestamp (or the tag message for that matter). Tags which point
150 to other tags will be rewritten to point to the underlying commit.
151
152 --subdirectory-filter <directory>::
153 Only look at the history which touches the given subdirectory.
154 The result will contain that directory (and only that) as its
155 project root.
156
157 --original <namespace>::
158 Use this option to set the namespace where the original commits
159 will be stored. The default value is 'refs/original'.
160
161 -d <directory>::
162 Use this option to set the path to the temporary directory used for
163 rewriting. When applying a tree filter, the command needs to
164 temporarily check out the tree to some directory, which may consume
165 considerable space in case of large projects. By default it
166 does this in the '.git-rewrite/' directory but you can override
167 that choice by this parameter.
168
169 -f::
170 --force::
171 'git-filter-branch' refuses to start with an existing temporary
172 directory or when there are already refs starting with
173 'refs/original/', unless forced.
174
175 <rev-list options>...::
176 Arguments for 'git-rev-list'. All positive refs included by
177 these options are rewritten. You may also specify options
178 such as '--all', but you must use '--' to separate them from
179 the 'git-filter-branch' options.
180
181
182 Examples
183 --------
184
185 Suppose you want to remove a file (containing confidential information
186 or copyright violation) from all commits:
187
188 -------------------------------------------------------
189 git filter-branch --tree-filter 'rm filename' HEAD
190 -------------------------------------------------------
191
192 However, if the file is absent from the tree of some commit,
193 a simple `rm filename` will fail for that tree and commit.
194 Thus you may instead want to use `rm -f filename` as the script.
195
196 A significantly faster version:
197
198 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
199 git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm --cached filename' HEAD
200 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
201
202 Now, you will get the rewritten history saved in HEAD.
203
204 To rewrite the repository to look as if `foodir/` had been its project
205 root, and discard all other history:
206
207 -------------------------------------------------------
208 git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter foodir -- --all
209 -------------------------------------------------------
210
211 Thus you can, e.g., turn a library subdirectory into a repository of
212 its own. Note the `\--` that separates 'filter-branch' options from
213 revision options, and the `\--all` to rewrite all branches and tags.
214
215 To set a commit (which typically is at the tip of another
216 history) to be the parent of the current initial commit, in
217 order to paste the other history behind the current history:
218
219 -------------------------------------------------------------------
220 git filter-branch --parent-filter 'sed "s/^\$/-p <graft-id>/"' HEAD
221 -------------------------------------------------------------------
222
223 (if the parent string is empty - which happens when we are dealing with
224 the initial commit - add graftcommit as a parent). Note that this assumes
225 history with a single root (that is, no merge without common ancestors
226 happened). If this is not the case, use:
227
228 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
229 git filter-branch --parent-filter \
230 'test $GIT_COMMIT = <commit-id> && echo "-p <graft-id>" || cat' HEAD
231 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
232
233 or even simpler:
234
235 -----------------------------------------------
236 echo "$commit-id $graft-id" >> .git/info/grafts
237 git filter-branch $graft-id..HEAD
238 -----------------------------------------------
239
240 To remove commits authored by "Darl McBribe" from the history:
241
242 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243 git filter-branch --commit-filter '
244 if [ "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME" = "Darl McBribe" ];
245 then
246 skip_commit "$@";
247 else
248 git commit-tree "$@";
249 fi' HEAD
250 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
251
252 The function 'skip_commit' is defined as follows:
253
254 --------------------------
255 skip_commit()
256 {
257 shift;
258 while [ -n "$1" ];
259 do
260 shift;
261 map "$1";
262 shift;
263 done;
264 }
265 --------------------------
266
267 The shift magic first throws away the tree id and then the -p
268 parameters. Note that this handles merges properly! In case Darl
269 committed a merge between P1 and P2, it will be propagated properly
270 and all children of the merge will become merge commits with P1,P2
271 as their parents instead of the merge commit.
272
273 You can rewrite the commit log messages using `--msg-filter`. For
274 example, 'git-svn-id' strings in a repository created by 'git-svn' can
275 be removed this way:
276
277 -------------------------------------------------------
278 git filter-branch --msg-filter '
279 sed -e "/^git-svn-id:/d"
280 '
281 -------------------------------------------------------
282
283 To restrict rewriting to only part of the history, specify a revision
284 range in addition to the new branch name. The new branch name will
285 point to the top-most revision that a 'git-rev-list' of this range
286 will print.
287
288 *NOTE* the changes introduced by the commits, and which are not reverted
289 by subsequent commits, will still be in the rewritten branch. If you want
290 to throw out _changes_ together with the commits, you should use the
291 interactive mode of 'git-rebase'.
292
293
294 Consider this history:
295
296 ------------------
297 D--E--F--G--H
298 / /
299 A--B-----C
300 ------------------
301
302 To rewrite only commits D,E,F,G,H, but leave A, B and C alone, use:
303
304 --------------------------------
305 git filter-branch ... C..H
306 --------------------------------
307
308 To rewrite commits E,F,G,H, use one of these:
309
310 ----------------------------------------
311 git filter-branch ... C..H --not D
312 git filter-branch ... D..H --not C
313 ----------------------------------------
314
315 To move the whole tree into a subdirectory, or remove it from there:
316
317 ---------------------------------------------------------------
318 git filter-branch --index-filter \
319 'git ls-files -s | sed "s-\t-&newsubdir/-" |
320 GIT_INDEX_FILE=$GIT_INDEX_FILE.new \
321 git update-index --index-info &&
322 mv $GIT_INDEX_FILE.new $GIT_INDEX_FILE' HEAD
323 ---------------------------------------------------------------
324
325
326 Author
327 ------
328 Written by Petr "Pasky" Baudis <pasky@suse.cz>,
329 and the git list <git@vger.kernel.org>
330
331 Documentation
332 --------------
333 Documentation by Petr Baudis and the git list.
334
335 GIT
336 ---
337 Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite