How to push a shallow clone to a new repo?

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难免孤独
难免孤独 2020-12-28 23:53

I wish to get rid of a lot of my repo\'s old history, so I did a shallow clone to get the last 50 commits only:

git clone --depth=50 https://my.repo
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  • 2020-12-29 00:32

    You can't push a shallow clone into a new remote. You have to unshallow your clone first. Do a fetch from the old remote with the --unshallow parameter:

    git fetch --unshallow old

    and you should be able to push to your new remote. Note that you will need to add back your old remote first to fetch from it.

    BUT...

    That isn't what you want though. To remove the history from a full clone you would need to use git rebase to effectively remove the old history. There are other methods but since you only want the last 50 commits, this will be the easiest solution. Assuming the master branch:

    git rebase --onto master~y master~x master

    where x is the number of the first commit to be kept, and y is the number of the first commit you want to remove. At this point you can push to your new remote with only the history you want to keep. Note you will need to enumerate the commit numbers in git log yourself, as it wants an index (starting at 1) and not a commit hash.


    Take care, as rewriting history can be a dangerous thing in Git, and has other implications you will need to consider. Also make sure not to push the changes to the old remote unless you want to remove the old history there as well.

    Source: https://www.clock.co.uk/insight/deleting-a-git-commit

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  • 2020-12-29 00:34

    Here's what I ended up doing - it worked perfectly. Note that I was moving from my old host (Bitbucket) to my new one (Gitlab). My comments are above the commands:

    # First, shallow-clone the old repo to the depth we want to keep
    git clone --depth=50 https://...@bitbucket.org/....git
    
    # Go into the directory of the clone
    cd clonedrepo
    
    # Once in the clone's repo directory, remove the old origin
    git remote remove origin
    
    # Store the hash of the oldest commit (ie. in this case, the 50th) in a var
    START_COMMIT=$(git rev-list master|tail -n 1)
    
    # Checkout the oldest commit; detached HEAD
    git checkout $START_COMMIT
    
    # Create a new orphaned branch, which will be temporary
    git checkout --orphan temp_branch
    
    # Commit the initial commit for our new truncated history; it will be the state of the tree at the time of the oldest commit (the 50th)
    git commit -m "Initial commit"
    
    # Now that we have that initial commit, we're ready to replay all the other commits on top of it, in order, so rebase master onto it, except for the oldest commit whose parents don't exist in the shallow clone... it has been replaced by our 'initial commit'
    git rebase --onto temp_branch $START_COMMIT master
    
    # We're now ready to push this to the new remote repo... add the remote...
    git remote add origin https://gitlab.com/....git
    
    # ... and push.  We don't need to push the temp branch, only master, the beginning of whose commit chain will be our 'initial commit'
    git push -u origin master
    

    After that, I did a fresh clone of the new repo and I got just the master branch with the 50 most recent commits - exactly what I wanted! :-) Commit history has gone from 250MB to 50MB. Woot.

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