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NAME

       git-filter-branch - Rewrite branches

SYNOPSIS

       git filter-branch [--setup <command>] [--subdirectory-filter <directory>]
               [--env-filter <command>] [--tree-filter <command>]
               [--index-filter <command>] [--parent-filter <command>]
               [--msg-filter <command>] [--commit-filter <command>]
               [--tag-name-filter <command>] [--prune-empty]
               [--original <namespace>] [-d <directory>] [-f | --force]
               [--state-branch <branch>] [--] [<rev-list-options>...]

WARNING

       git filter-branch has a plethora of pitfalls that can produce non-obvious manglings of the intended
       history rewrite (and can leave you with little time to investigate such problems since it has such
       abysmal performance). These safety and performance issues cannot be backward compatibly fixed and as
       such, its use is not recommended. Please use an alternative history filtering tool such as git
       filter-repo[1]. If you still need to use git filter-branch, please carefully read the section called
       “SAFETY” (and the section called “PERFORMANCE”) to learn about the land mines of filter-branch, and then
       vigilantly avoid as many of the hazards listed there as reasonably possible.

DESCRIPTION

       Lets you rewrite Git revision history by rewriting the branches mentioned in the <rev-list-options>,
       applying custom filters on each revision. Those filters can modify each tree (e.g. removing a file or
       running a perl rewrite on all files) or information about each commit. Otherwise, all information
       (including original commit times or merge information) will be preserved.

       The command will only rewrite the positive refs mentioned in the command line (e.g. if you pass a..b,
       only b will be rewritten). If you specify no filters, the commits will be recommitted without any
       changes, which would normally have no effect. Nevertheless, this may be useful in the future for
       compensating for some Git bugs or such, therefore such a usage is permitted.

       NOTE: This command honors .git/info/grafts file and refs in the refs/replace/ namespace. If you have any
       grafts or replacement refs defined, running this command will make them permanent.

       WARNING! The rewritten history will have different object names for all the objects and will not converge
       with the original branch. You will not be able to easily push and distribute the rewritten branch on top
       of the original branch. Please do not use this command if you do not know the full implications, and
       avoid using it anyway, if a simple single commit would suffice to fix your problem. (See the "RECOVERING
       FROM UPSTREAM REBASE" section in git-rebase(1) for further information about rewriting published
       history.)

       Always verify that the rewritten version is correct: The original refs, if different from the rewritten
       ones, will be stored in the namespace refs/original/.

       Note that since this operation is very I/O expensive, it might be a good idea to redirect the temporary
       directory off-disk with the -d option, e.g. on tmpfs. Reportedly the speedup is very noticeable.

   Filters
       The filters are applied in the order as listed below. The <command> argument is always evaluated in the
       shell context using the eval command (with the notable exception of the commit filter, for technical
       reasons). Prior to that, the $GIT_COMMIT environment variable will be set to contain the id of the commit
       being rewritten. Also, GIT_AUTHOR_NAME, GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL, GIT_AUTHOR_DATE, GIT_COMMITTER_NAME,
       GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL, and GIT_COMMITTER_DATE are taken from the current commit and exported to the
       environment, in order to affect the author and committer identities of the replacement commit created by
       git-commit-tree(1) after the filters have run.

       If any evaluation of <command> returns a non-zero exit status, the whole operation will be aborted.

       A map function is available that takes an "original sha1 id" argument and outputs a "rewritten sha1 id"
       if the commit has been already rewritten, and "original sha1 id" otherwise; the map function can return
       several ids on separate lines if your commit filter emitted multiple commits.

OPTIONS

       --setup <command>
           This is not a real filter executed for each commit but a one time setup just before the loop.
           Therefore no commit-specific variables are defined yet. Functions or variables defined here can be
           used or modified in the following filter steps except the commit filter, for technical reasons.

       --subdirectory-filter <directory>
           Only look at the history which touches the given subdirectory. The result will contain that directory
           (and only that) as its project root. Implies the section called “Remap to ancestor”.

       --env-filter <command>
           This filter may be used if you only need to modify the environment in which the commit will be
           performed. Specifically, you might want to rewrite the author/committer name/email/time environment
           variables (see git-commit-tree(1) for details).

       --tree-filter <command>
           This is the filter for rewriting the tree and its contents. The argument is evaluated in shell with
           the working directory set to the root of the checked out tree. The new tree is then used as-is (new
           files are auto-added, disappeared files are auto-removed - neither .gitignore files nor any other
           ignore rules HAVE ANY EFFECT!).

       --index-filter <command>
           This is the filter for rewriting the index. It is similar to the tree filter but does not check out
           the tree, which makes it much faster. Frequently used with git rm --cached --ignore-unmatch ..., see
           EXAMPLES below. For hairy cases, see git-update-index(1).

       --parent-filter <command>
           This is the filter for rewriting the commit’s parent list. It will receive the parent string on stdin
           and shall output the new parent string on stdout. The parent string is in the format described in
           git-commit-tree(1): empty for the initial commit, "-p parent" for a normal commit and "-p parent1 -p
           parent2 -p parent3 ..." for a merge commit.

       --msg-filter <command>
           This is the filter for rewriting the commit messages. The argument is evaluated in the shell with the
           original commit message on standard input; its standard output is used as the new commit message.

       --commit-filter <command>
           This is the filter for performing the commit. If this filter is specified, it will be called instead
           of the git commit-tree command, with arguments of the form "<TREE_ID> [(-p <PARENT_COMMIT_ID>)...]"
           and the log message on stdin. The commit id is expected on stdout.

           As a special extension, the commit filter may emit multiple commit ids; in that case, the rewritten
           children of the original commit will have all of them as parents.

           You can use the map convenience function in this filter, and other convenience functions, too. For
           example, calling skip_commit "$@" will leave out the current commit (but not its changes! If you want
           that, use git rebase instead).

           You can also use the git_commit_non_empty_tree "$@" instead of git commit-tree "$@" if you don’t wish
           to keep commits with a single parent and that makes no change to the tree.

       --tag-name-filter <command>
           This is the filter for rewriting tag names. When passed, it will be called for every tag ref that
           points to a rewritten object (or to a tag object which points to a rewritten object). The original
           tag name is passed via standard input, and the new tag name is expected on standard output.

           The original tags are not deleted, but can be overwritten; use "--tag-name-filter cat" to simply
           update the tags. In this case, be very careful and make sure you have the old tags backed up in case
           the conversion has run afoul.

           Nearly proper rewriting of tag objects is supported. If the tag has a message attached, a new tag
           object will be created with the same message, author, and timestamp. If the tag has a signature
           attached, the signature will be stripped. It is by definition impossible to preserve signatures. The
           reason this is "nearly" proper, is because ideally if the tag did not change (points to the same
           object, has the same name, etc.) it should retain any signature. That is not the case, signatures
           will always be removed, buyer beware. There is also no support for changing the author or timestamp
           (or the tag message for that matter). Tags which point to other tags will be rewritten to point to
           the underlying commit.

       --prune-empty
           Some filters will generate empty commits that leave the tree untouched. This option instructs
           git-filter-branch to remove such commits if they have exactly one or zero non-pruned parents; merge
           commits will therefore remain intact. This option cannot be used together with --commit-filter,
           though the same effect can be achieved by using the provided git_commit_non_empty_tree function in a
           commit filter.

       --original <namespace>
           Use this option to set the namespace where the original commits will be stored. The default value is
           refs/original.

       -d <directory>
           Use this option to set the path to the temporary directory used for rewriting. When applying a tree
           filter, the command needs to temporarily check out the tree to some directory, which may consume
           considerable space in case of large projects. By default it does this in the .git-rewrite/ directory
           but you can override that choice by this parameter.

       -f, --force
           git filter-branch refuses to start with an existing temporary directory or when there are already
           refs starting with refs/original/, unless forced.

       --state-branch <branch>
           This option will cause the mapping from old to new objects to be loaded from named branch upon
           startup and saved as a new commit to that branch upon exit, enabling incremental of large trees. If
           <branch> does not exist it will be created.

       <rev-list options>...
           Arguments for git rev-list. All positive refs included by these options are rewritten. You may also
           specify options such as --all, but you must use -- to separate them from the git filter-branch
           options. Implies the section called “Remap to ancestor”.

   Remap to ancestor
       By using git-rev-list(1) arguments, e.g., path limiters, you can limit the set of revisions which get
       rewritten. However, positive refs on the command line are distinguished: we don’t let them be excluded by
       such limiters. For this purpose, they are instead rewritten to point at the nearest ancestor that was not
       excluded.

EXIT STATUS

       On success, the exit status is 0. If the filter can’t find any commits to rewrite, the exit status is 2.
       On any other error, the exit status may be any other non-zero value.

EXAMPLES

       Suppose you want to remove a file (containing confidential information or copyright violation) from all
       commits:

           git filter-branch --tree-filter 'rm filename' HEAD

       However, if the file is absent from the tree of some commit, a simple rm filename will fail for that tree
       and commit. Thus you may instead want to use rm -f filename as the script.

       Using --index-filter with git rm yields a significantly faster version. Like with using rm filename, git
       rm --cached filename will fail if the file is absent from the tree of a commit. If you want to
       "completely forget" a file, it does not matter when it entered history, so we also add --ignore-unmatch:

           git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm --cached --ignore-unmatch filename' HEAD

       Now, you will get the rewritten history saved in HEAD.

       To rewrite the repository to look as if foodir/ had been its project root, and discard all other history:

           git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter foodir -- --all

       Thus you can, e.g., turn a library subdirectory into a repository of its own. Note the -- that separates
       filter-branch options from revision options, and the --all to rewrite all branches and tags.

       To set a commit (which typically is at the tip of another history) to be the parent of the current
       initial commit, in order to paste the other history behind the current history:

           git filter-branch --parent-filter 'sed "s/^\$/-p <graft-id>/"' HEAD

       (if the parent string is empty - which happens when we are dealing with the initial commit - add
       graftcommit as a parent). Note that this assumes history with a single root (that is, no merge without
       common ancestors happened). If this is not the case, use:

           git filter-branch --parent-filter \
                   'test $GIT_COMMIT = <commit-id> && echo "-p <graft-id>" || cat' HEAD

       or even simpler:

           git replace --graft $commit-id $graft-id
           git filter-branch $graft-id..HEAD

       To remove commits authored by "Darl McBribe" from the history:

           git filter-branch --commit-filter '
                   if [ "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME" = "Darl McBribe" ];
                   then
                           skip_commit "$@";
                   else
                           git commit-tree "$@";
                   fi' HEAD

       The function skip_commit is defined as follows:

           skip_commit()
           {
                   shift;
                   while [ -n "$1" ];
                   do
                           shift;
                           map "$1";
                           shift;
                   done;
           }

       The shift magic first throws away the tree id and then the -p parameters. Note that this handles merges
       properly! In case Darl committed a merge between P1 and P2, it will be propagated properly and all
       children of the merge will become merge commits with P1,P2 as their parents instead of the merge commit.

       NOTE the changes introduced by the commits, and which are not reverted by subsequent commits, will still
       be in the rewritten branch. If you want to throw out changes together with the commits, you should use
       the interactive mode of git rebase.

       You can rewrite the commit log messages using --msg-filter. For example, git svn-id strings in a
       repository created by git svn can be removed this way:

           git filter-branch --msg-filter '
                   sed -e "/^git-svn-id:/d"
           '

       If you need to add Acked-by lines to, say, the last 10 commits (none of which is a merge), use this
       command:

           git filter-branch --msg-filter '
                   cat &&
                   echo "Acked-by: Bugs Bunny <bunny@bugzilla.org>"
           ' HEAD~10..HEAD

       The --env-filter option can be used to modify committer and/or author identity. For example, if you found
       out that your commits have the wrong identity due to a misconfigured user.email, you can make a
       correction, before publishing the project, like this:

           git filter-branch --env-filter '
                   if test "$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL" = "root@localhost"
                   then
                           GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL=john@example.com
                   fi
                   if test "$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL" = "root@localhost"
                   then
                           GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL=john@example.com
                   fi
           ' -- --all

       To restrict rewriting to only part of the history, specify a revision range in addition to the new branch
       name. The new branch name will point to the top-most revision that a git rev-list of this range will
       print.

       Consider this history:

                D--E--F--G--H
               /     /
           A--B-----C

       To rewrite only commits D,E,F,G,H, but leave A, B and C alone, use:

           git filter-branch ... C..H

       To rewrite commits E,F,G,H, use one of these:

           git filter-branch ... C..H --not D
           git filter-branch ... D..H --not C

       To move the whole tree into a subdirectory, or remove it from there:

           git filter-branch --index-filter \
                   'git ls-files -s | sed "s-\t\"*-&newsubdir/-" |
                           GIT_INDEX_FILE=$GIT_INDEX_FILE.new \
                                   git update-index --index-info &&
                    mv "$GIT_INDEX_FILE.new" "$GIT_INDEX_FILE"' HEAD

CHECKLIST FOR SHRINKING A REPOSITORY

       git-filter-branch can be used to get rid of a subset of files, usually with some combination of
       --index-filter and --subdirectory-filter. People expect the resulting repository to be smaller than the
       original, but you need a few more steps to actually make it smaller, because Git tries hard not to lose
       your objects until you tell it to. First make sure that:

       •   You really removed all variants of a filename, if a blob was moved over its lifetime.  git log
           --name-only --follow --all -- filename can help you find renames.

       •   You really filtered all refs: use --tag-name-filter cat -- --all when calling git-filter-branch.

       Then there are two ways to get a smaller repository. A safer way is to clone, that keeps your original
       intact.

       •   Clone it with git clone file:///path/to/repo. The clone will not have the removed objects. See git-
           clone(1). (Note that cloning with a plain path just hardlinks everything!)

       If you really don’t want to clone it, for whatever reasons, check the following points instead (in this
       order). This is a very destructive approach, so make a backup or go back to cloning it. You have been
       warned.

       •   Remove the original refs backed up by git-filter-branch: say git for-each-ref --format="%(refname)"
           refs/original/ | xargs -n 1 git update-ref -d.

       •   Expire all reflogs with git reflog expire --expire=now --all.

       •   Garbage collect all unreferenced objects with git gc --prune=now (or if your git-gc is not new enough
           to support arguments to --prune, use git repack -ad; git prune instead).

PERFORMANCE

       The performance of git-filter-branch is glacially slow; its design makes it impossible for a
       backward-compatible implementation to ever be fast:

       •   In editing files, git-filter-branch by design checks out each and every commit as it existed in the
           original repo. If your repo has 10^5 files and 10^5 commits, but each commit only modifies five
           files, then git-filter-branch will make you do 10^10 modifications, despite only having (at most)
           5*10^5 unique blobs.

       •   If you try and cheat and try to make git-filter-branch only work on files modified in a commit, then
           two things happen

           •   you run into problems with deletions whenever the user is simply trying to rename files (because
               attempting to delete files that don’t exist looks like a no-op; it takes some chicanery to remap
               deletes across file renames when the renames happen via arbitrary user-provided shell)

           •   even if you succeed at the map-deletes-for-renames chicanery, you still technically violate
               backward compatibility because users are allowed to filter files in ways that depend upon
               topology of commits instead of filtering solely based on file contents or names (though this has
               not been observed in the wild).

       •   Even if you don’t need to edit files but only want to e.g. rename or remove some and thus can avoid
           checking out each file (i.e. you can use --index-filter), you still are passing shell snippets for
           your filters. This means that for every commit, you have to have a prepared git repo where those
           filters can be run. That’s a significant setup.

       •   Further, several additional files are created or updated per commit by git-filter-branch. Some of
           these are for supporting the convenience functions provided by git-filter-branch (such as map()),
           while others are for keeping track of internal state (but could have also been accessed by user
           filters; one of git-filter-branch’s regression tests does so). This essentially amounts to using the
           filesystem as an IPC mechanism between git-filter-branch and the user-provided filters. Disks tend to
           be a slow IPC mechanism, and writing these files also effectively represents a forced synchronization
           point between separate processes that we hit with every commit.

       •   The user-provided shell commands will likely involve a pipeline of commands, resulting in the
           creation of many processes per commit. Creating and running another process takes a widely varying
           amount of time between operating systems, but on any platform it is very slow relative to invoking a
           function.

       •   git-filter-branch itself is written in shell, which is kind of slow. This is the one performance
           issue that could be backward-compatibly fixed, but compared to the above problems that are intrinsic
           to the design of git-filter-branch, the language of the tool itself is a relatively minor issue.

           •   Side note: Unfortunately, people tend to fixate on the written-in-shell aspect and periodically
               ask if git-filter-branch could be rewritten in another language to fix the performance issues.
               Not only does that ignore the bigger intrinsic problems with the design, it’d help less than
               you’d expect: if git-filter-branch itself were not shell, then the convenience functions (map(),
               skip_commit(), etc) and the --setup argument could no longer be executed once at the beginning of
               the program but would instead need to be prepended to every user filter (and thus re-executed
               with every commit).

       The git filter-repo[1] tool is an alternative to git-filter-branch which does not suffer from these
       performance problems or the safety problems (mentioned below). For those with existing tooling which
       relies upon git-filter-branch, git filter-repo also provides filter-lamely[2], a drop-in
       git-filter-branch replacement (with a few caveats). While filter-lamely suffers from all the same safety
       issues as git-filter-branch, it at least ameliorates the performance issues a little.

SAFETY

       git-filter-branch is riddled with gotchas resulting in various ways to easily corrupt repos or end up
       with a mess worse than what you started with:

       •   Someone can have a set of "working and tested filters" which they document or provide to a coworker,
           who then runs them on a different OS where the same commands are not working/tested (some examples in
           the git-filter-branch manpage are also affected by this). BSD vs. GNU userland differences can really
           bite. If lucky, error messages are spewed. But just as likely, the commands either don’t do the
           filtering requested, or silently corrupt by making some unwanted change. The unwanted change may only
           affect a few commits, so it’s not necessarily obvious either. (The fact that problems won’t
           necessarily be obvious means they are likely to go unnoticed until the rewritten history is in use
           for quite a while, at which point it’s really hard to justify another flag-day for another rewrite.)

       •   Filenames with spaces are often mishandled by shell snippets since they cause problems for shell
           pipelines. Not everyone is familiar with find -print0, xargs -0, git-ls-files -z, etc. Even people
           who are familiar with these may assume such flags are not relevant because someone else renamed any
           such files in their repo back before the person doing the filtering joined the project. And often,
           even those familiar with handling arguments with spaces may not do so just because they aren’t in the
           mindset of thinking about everything that could possibly go wrong.

       •   Non-ascii filenames can be silently removed despite being in a desired directory. Keeping only wanted
           paths is often done using pipelines like git ls-files | grep -v ^WANTED_DIR/ | xargs git rm. ls-files
           will only quote filenames if needed, so folks may not notice that one of the files didn’t match the
           regex (at least not until it’s much too late). Yes, someone who knows about core.quotePath can avoid
           this (unless they have other special characters like \t, \n, or "), and people who use ls-files -z
           with something other than grep can avoid this, but that doesn’t mean they will.

       •   Similarly, when moving files around, one can find that filenames with non-ascii or special characters
           end up in a different directory, one that includes a double quote character. (This is technically the
           same issue as above with quoting, but perhaps an interesting different way that it can and has
           manifested as a problem.)

       •   It’s far too easy to accidentally mix up old and new history. It’s still possible with any tool, but
           git-filter-branch almost invites it. If lucky, the only downside is users getting frustrated that
           they don’t know how to shrink their repo and remove the old stuff. If unlucky, they merge old and new
           history and end up with multiple "copies" of each commit, some of which have unwanted or sensitive
           files and others which don’t. This comes about in multiple different ways:

           •   the default to only doing a partial history rewrite (--all is not the default and few examples
               show it)

           •   the fact that there’s no automatic post-run cleanup

           •   the fact that --tag-name-filter (when used to rename tags) doesn’t remove the old tags but just
               adds new ones with the new name

           •   the fact that little educational information is provided to inform users of the ramifications of
               a rewrite and how to avoid mixing old and new history. For example, this man page discusses how
               users need to understand that they need to rebase their changes for all their branches on top of
               new history (or delete and reclone), but that’s only one of multiple concerns to consider. See
               the "DISCUSSION" section of the git filter-repo manual page for more details.

       •   Annotated tags can be accidentally converted to lightweight tags, due to either of two issues:

           •   Someone can do a history rewrite, realize they messed up, restore from the backups in
               refs/original/, and then redo their git-filter-branch command. (The backup in refs/original/ is
               not a real backup; it dereferences tags first.)

           •   Running git-filter-branch with either --tags or --all in your <rev-list-options>. In order to
               retain annotated tags as annotated, you must use --tag-name-filter (and must not have restored
               from refs/original/ in a previously botched rewrite).

       •   Any commit messages that specify an encoding will become corrupted by the rewrite; git-filter-branch
           ignores the encoding, takes the original bytes, and feeds it to commit-tree without telling it the
           proper encoding. (This happens whether or not --msg-filter is used.)

       •   Commit messages (even if they are all UTF-8) by default become corrupted due to not being updated —
           any references to other commit hashes in commit messages will now refer to no-longer-extant commits.

       •   There are no facilities for helping users find what unwanted crud they should delete, which means
           they are much more likely to have incomplete or partial cleanups that sometimes result in confusion
           and people wasting time trying to understand. (For example, folks tend to just look for big files to
           delete instead of big directories or extensions, and once they do so, then sometime later folks using
           the new repository who are going through history will notice a build artifact directory that has some
           files but not others, or a cache of dependencies (node_modules or similar) which couldn’t have ever
           been functional since it’s missing some files.)

       •   If --prune-empty isn’t specified, then the filtering process can create hoards of confusing empty
           commits

       •   If --prune-empty is specified, then intentionally placed empty commits from before the filtering
           operation are also pruned instead of just pruning commits that became empty due to filtering rules.

       •   If --prune-empty is specified, sometimes empty commits are missed and left around anyway (a somewhat
           rare bug, but it happens...)

       •   A minor issue, but users who have a goal to update all names and emails in a repository may be led to
           --env-filter which will only update authors and committers, missing taggers.

       •   If the user provides a --tag-name-filter that maps multiple tags to the same name, no warning or
           error is provided; git-filter-branch simply overwrites each tag in some undocumented pre-defined
           order resulting in only one tag at the end. (A git-filter-branch regression test requires this
           surprising behavior.)

       Also, the poor performance of git-filter-branch often leads to safety issues:

       •   Coming up with the correct shell snippet to do the filtering you want is sometimes difficult unless
           you’re just doing a trivial modification such as deleting a couple files. Unfortunately, people often
           learn if the snippet is right or wrong by trying it out, but the rightness or wrongness can vary
           depending on special circumstances (spaces in filenames, non-ascii filenames, funny author names or
           emails, invalid timezones, presence of grafts or replace objects, etc.), meaning they may have to
           wait a long time, hit an error, then restart. The performance of git-filter-branch is so bad that
           this cycle is painful, reducing the time available to carefully re-check (to say nothing about what
           it does to the patience of the person doing the rewrite even if they do technically have more time
           available). This problem is extra compounded because errors from broken filters may not be shown for
           a long time and/or get lost in a sea of output. Even worse, broken filters often just result in
           silent incorrect rewrites.

       •   To top it all off, even when users finally find working commands, they naturally want to share them.
           But they may be unaware that their repo didn’t have some special cases that someone else’s does. So,
           when someone else with a different repository runs the same commands, they get hit by the problems
           above. Or, the user just runs commands that really were vetted for special cases, but they run it on
           a different OS where it doesn’t work, as noted above.

GIT

       Part of the git(1) suite

NOTES

        1. git filter-repo
           https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/

        2. filter-lamely
           https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/blob/master/contrib/filter-repo-demos/filter-lamely