1352

With git remote prune origin I can remove the local branches that are not on the remote any more.

But I also want to remove local branches that were created from those remote branches (a check if they are unmerged would be nice).

How can I do this?

4
  • 12
    Possible duplicate of Remove local branches no longer on remote
    – kolen
    Mar 30, 2017 at 18:18
  • 7
    One-liner, cross platform, doesn't look like the cat slept on your keyboard: npx git-removed-branches (dry-run) or npx git-removed-branches --prune (for real). You need to already have node.js installed. See answers below for details. Apr 20, 2020 at 22:04
  • I usually think these things should be done deliberately not automatic otherwise you open yourself to deleting something you didn't want to delete. So I'd stick with git branch -d localBranchName and git push origin --delete remoteBranchName
    – Epirocks
    Nov 16, 2020 at 12:51
  • 3
    For IntelliJ users the following plugin does exactly what you need: plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/10059-git-branch-cleaner
    – Daniel
    Feb 14, 2022 at 9:00

40 Answers 40

1458
+50

After pruning, you can get the list of remote branches with git branch -r. The list of branches with their remote tracking branch can be retrieved with git branch -vv. So using these two lists you can find the remote tracking branches that are not in the list of remotes.

This line should do the trick (requires bash or zsh, won't work with standard Bourne shell):

git fetch -p ; git branch -r | awk '{print $1}' | egrep -v -f /dev/fd/0 <(git branch -vv | grep origin) | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d

This string gets the list of remote branches and passes it into egrep through the standard input. And filters the branches that have a remote tracking branch (using git branch -vv and filtering for those that have origin) then getting the first column of that output which will be the branch name. Finally passing all the branch names into the delete branch command.

Since it is using the -d option, it will not delete branches that have not been merged into the branch that you are on when you run this command.

38
  • 26
    This worked for me perfectly. Somehow, git fetch -p is not always enough? Aug 30, 2013 at 20:22
  • 29
    Unfortunately this doesn't work in Git Bash on Windows. sh.exe": cannot make pipe for process substitution: Function not implemented sh.exe": egrep -v -f /dev/fd/0: No such file or directory fatal: branch name required Any ideas?
    – Ludder
    Feb 7, 2014 at 11:30
  • 56
    To add it as an alias: alias git-remove-untracked='git fetch --prune && git branch -r | awk "{print \$1}" | egrep -v -f /dev/fd/0 <(git branch -vv | grep origin) | awk "{print \$1}" | xargs git branch -d'
    – bryant1410
    Aug 11, 2016 at 19:13
  • 244
    Is there any proposed command for a future git release that will do this? This command looks like my cat has been on my laptop Sep 14, 2016 at 20:02
  • 47
    using git branch -D at the end of the command worked better for us, as we tend to squash commits on merge, which gets us The branch x is not fully merged errors when running with -d. Mar 9, 2018 at 13:40
646

If you want to delete all local branches that are already merged into master, you can use the following command:

git branch --merged master | grep -v '^[ *]*master$' | xargs -d'\n' git branch -d

If you are using main as your master branch, you should modify the command accordingly:

git branch --merged main | grep -v '^[ *]*main$' | xargs -d'\n' git branch -d

More info.

NOTE: xargs -d'\n' parameter is used to allow proper deletion of branches with an apostrophe in the name, see https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/38148/why-does-xargs-strip-quotes-from-input.

20
  • 6
    Worked perfect, I think! Could anyone explain if this answer does anything differently than the accepted answer?
    – Andrew
    Oct 7, 2015 at 16:00
  • 13
    Minor improvement: use xargs -r git branch -d so that nothing is run if there are no branches to delete. Note that the -r flag may not be available everywhere
    – Jacob Wang
    Jul 11, 2016 at 2:20
  • 8
    Since grep may not match due to git colors: git branch --merged master --no-color | grep -v '^* master$' | xargs -n1 -r git branch -d
    – Mike D
    Jan 17, 2017 at 16:14
  • 6
    @NickRes seeing as you asked so nicely, git branch --merged master lists branches that are merged into master, then the middle grep part excludes master itself (we don't want to delete master!), and the last xargs part executes git branch -d (delete branch) on each of the results. Or you could just read the More info link provided in the answer ;)
    – jackocnr
    Mar 14, 2017 at 23:09
  • 20
    Improvement: git branch --merged master | egrep -v '^\s*\*?\s*master$' | xargs git branch -d. Output from git v2.10.1 will display "* master" when master is checked out. I get rid of master both with or without an asterisk.
    – Esteban
    May 16, 2017 at 19:12
272

Amidst the information presented by git help fetch, there is this little item:

 -p, --prune
        After fetching, remove any remote-tracking branches which no longer exist on the remote.

So, perhaps, git fetch -p is what you are looking for?

EDIT: Ok, for those still debating this answer 3 years after the fact, here's a little more information on why I presented this answer...

First, the OP says they want to "remove also those local branches that were created from those remote branches [that are not any more on the remote]". This is not unambiguously possible in git. Here's an example.

Let's say I have a repo on a central server, and it has two branches, called A and B. If I clone that repo to my local system, my clone will have local refs (not actual branches yet) called origin/A and origin/B. Now let's say I do the following:

git checkout -b A origin/A
git checkout -b Z origin/B
git checkout -b C <some hash>

The pertinent facts here are that I for some reason chose to create a branch on my local repo that has a different name than its origin, and I also have a local branch that does not (yet) exist on the origin repo.

Now let's say I remove both the A and B branches on the remote repo and update my local repo (git fetch of some form), which causes my local refs origin/A and origin/B to disappear. Now, my local repo has three branches still, A, Z, and C. None of these have a corresponding branch on the remote repo. Two of them were "created from ... remote branches", but even if I know that there used to be a branch called B on the origin, I have no way to know that Z was created from B, because it was renamed in the process, probably for a good reason. So, really, without some external process recording branch origin metadata, or a human who knows the history, it is impossible to tell which of the three branches, if any, the OP is targeting for removal. Without some external information that git does not automatically maintain for you, git fetch -p is about as close as you can get, and any automatic method for literally attempting what the OP asked runs the risk of either deleting too many branches, or missing some that the OP would otherwise want deleted.

There are other scenarios, as well, such as if I create three separate branches off origin/A to test three different approaches to something, and then origin/A goes away. Now I have three branches, which obviously can't all match name-wise, but they were created from origin/A, and so a literal interpretation of the OPs question would require removing all three. However, that may not be desirable, if you could even find a reliable way to match them...

9
  • 135
    This doesn't delete the local branches, only the remote pointers to the branches
    – Jaap
    Nov 1, 2013 at 13:11
  • 7
    It deletes only these local branches, which does not exist in remote AND you never did a checkout on them. Mar 11, 2015 at 10:59
  • 18
    You should read the question more carefully as Jaap notes. People voting for this answer should also read what the question is really about. May 19, 2015 at 17:52
  • 12
    Yes, this was actually exactly what I wanted to do! @SørenBoisen I hope in the last two years you've had time to revisit that opinion of yours... If content posted on SO should always be only related to what sometimes really confused OPs ask, we would remove a lot of information. Please don't presume to instruct people how they can use this site, other than the official guidelines, and they clearly do not prevent orthogonal yet useful answers. Jun 11, 2017 at 20:40
  • 9
    @FélixGagnon-Grenier Here is my issue with this answer: 1) The question is crystal clear, OP is clearly not confused. 2) This answer does not mention that it does not answer the question! 3) The question already states a way to prune remote-tracking branches which no longer exist, so it adds zero value. Jun 12, 2017 at 9:14
216

There's a neat npm package that does it for you (and it should work cross platform).

Install it with: npm install -g git-removed-branches

And then git removed-branches will show you all the stale local branches, and git removed-branches --prune to actually delete them.

More info here.

8
  • 7
    This should really have more upvotes. Thanks for making life easy, regardless of platform.
    – Encryption
    Dec 18, 2019 at 13:31
  • 17
    This is my favorite answer. npx git-removed-branches works like a dream.
    – Drazisil
    Mar 1, 2020 at 23:21
  • 5
    yes! This should have more upvotes! so simple and intuitive solution for cli's newbie
    – geoseong
    Mar 11, 2020 at 7:20
  • 8
    It would be useful to give an overview of what the tool is doing from git's perspective. May 6, 2020 at 19:59
  • 2
    @ryanwebjackson The project is on Github: github.com/nemisj/git-removed-branches Aug 15, 2022 at 10:29
179

This will delete the local branches for which the remote tracking branches have been pruned. (Make sure you are on master branch!)

git checkout master
git branch -vv | grep ': gone]' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d

Details:

  • git branch -vv displays "gone" for local branches that the remote has been pruned.

    mybranch abc1234 [origin/mybranch: gone] commit comments
    
  • -d will check if it has been merged (-D will delete it regardless)

    error: The branch 'mybranch' is not fully merged.
    
11
  • 20
    You can even make the command shorter with git branch -vv | awk '/: gone]/{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d
    – chiborg
    Jul 30, 2015 at 11:52
  • 11
    Just pointing out that you should be on master before doing this, because git branch -d compares branches against HEAD. Oct 15, 2015 at 0:38
  • 5
    Oh dude... wisbucky you NEED to update your answer to tell people they should be on master. Just did this from a different branch. @stevebennet2 thanks for the informative comment
    – GrayedFox
    May 31, 2017 at 13:29
  • 2
    The : gone] part is a localized string. For french version you must use : disparue]. Aug 17, 2020 at 13:35
  • 3
    For anyone deciding to use xargs git branch -D, note that -D flag is essentially a "force-delete" but is necessary for deleting branches where the remote branch was squash-merged or rebased, so as a good middleground, I would suggest prompting for user confirmation before each delete (safer); using xargs -p git branch -D
    – ksgj1
    Mar 14, 2022 at 1:44
97

Windows Solution

For Microsoft Windows Powershell:

git checkout master; git remote update origin --prune; git branch -vv | Select-String -Pattern ": gone]" | % { $_.toString().Trim().Split(" ")[0]} | % {git branch -d $_}

Explanation

git checkout master switches to the master branch

git remote update origin --prune prunes remote branches

git branch -vv gets a verbose output of all branches (git reference)

Select-String -Pattern ": gone]" gets only the records where they have been removed from remote.

% { $_.toString().Split(" ")[0]} get the branch name

% {git branch -d $_} deletes the branch

8
  • Nice example. alternatively use git remote prune origin, also select-string doesn't seem to match with the latest version of git. Consider using ConvertFrom-String -TemplateContent May 24, 2018 at 2:50
  • 4
    Looks like the latest version of git adds some trailing spaces, so the Split doesn't work to get the branch name. Do .toString().Trim().Split(" ") and it will Oct 26, 2018 at 12:25
  • 1
    @chris31389, i have the pull in there to get everything that i am missing from master, and i changed the branch to --merged and not master, i want to make sure that i only delete the --merged branches. It just makes me feel better ;)
    – Omzig
    Feb 27, 2019 at 20:33
  • 1
    This works quite nicely for PowerShell Core i.e., it's a cross platform solution. Jul 23, 2019 at 15:41
  • 1
    I got: error: The branch 'bugfix/foobar' is not fully merged. If you are sure you want to delete it, run 'git branch -D bugfix/foobar'., so for me it worked using a upper case d at the end {git branch -D $_}
    – Kraego
    Feb 22, 2022 at 9:03
70

One can configure Git to automatically remove references to deleted remote branches when fetching:

git config --global fetch.prune true

When calling git fetch or git pull afterwards, references to deleted remote branches get removed automatically.

2
  • 19
    this does not remove local branches, just references to them, right? Jun 19, 2017 at 18:20
  • @ClintEastwood It only deletes references to remote branches. You can list references to remote branches using git branch -r.
    – wedesoft
    Jun 20, 2017 at 19:28
60

As @tzacks notes... there is an npm package that is handy for this. Just do:

npx git-removed-branches --prune

(I would have commented but not enough reputation)

3
  • 3
    Gorgeous. No hassle whatsoever. Glad this was a full answer!
    – Dan Rayson
    Oct 1, 2019 at 9:25
  • 4
    This should be at the top. Works in Windows too.
    – tomups
    Dec 6, 2019 at 11:04
  • 2
    zero hassle! it'd be at the top if it didn't require npx Jan 25, 2021 at 22:59
54

It will list the local branches whose remote tracking branch is deleted from remote

$ git remote prune origin --dry-run

If you want to de-reference these local branches from local which are un tracked

$ git remote prune origin
5
  • 27
    This doesn't answer the question, this is what the OP already knew. Nov 11, 2016 at 18:39
  • 6
    I also agree, but when you search "How to prune local tracking branches that do not exist on remote anymore", this is the top link and this answer matches with the title (not if one has read the full description in question), that is the reason for up votes:)
    – 027
    Jul 21, 2017 at 7:03
  • This does not remove the local branches. Still there after running this
    – Xin
    Sep 18, 2018 at 22:59
  • 1
    @Xin try running the command without --dry-run argument as it will not actually execute the command, but show you what it will change. Nov 23, 2018 at 13:50
  • This is precisely what I needed. I had an old branch showing up as a remote branch locally that didn't exist on the server. May 30, 2023 at 5:57
24

If using Windows and Powershell, you can use the following to delete all local branches that have been merged into the branch currently checked out:

git branch --merged | ? {$_[0] -ne '*'} | % {$_.trim()} | % {git branch -d $_}

Explanation

  • Lists the current branch and the branches that have been merged into it
  • Filters out the current branch
  • Cleans up any leading or trailing spaces from the git output for each remaining branch name
  • Deletes the merged local branches

It's worth running git branch --merged by itself first just to make sure it's only going to remove what you expect it to.

(Ported/automated from http://railsware.com/blog/2014/08/11/git-housekeeping-tutorial-clean-up-outdated-branches-in-local-and-remote-repositories/.)

1
  • This will delete all merged branches versus just those that are marked as deleted on the remote. This could be undesirable if you have environment or release branches that have been merged but we want to keep around (like uat prod etc).
    – Shanerk
    Apr 13, 2023 at 14:30
20

I wanted something that would purge all local branches that were tracking a remote branch, on origin, where the remote branch has been deleted (gone). I did not want to delete local branches that were never set up to track a remote branch (i.e.: my local dev branches). Also, I wanted a simple one-liner that just uses git, or other simple CLI tools, rather than writing custom scripts. I ended up using a bit of grep and awk to make this simple command, then added it as an alias in my ~/.gitconfig.

[alias]
  prune-branches = !git remote prune origin && git branch -vv | grep ': gone]' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs -r git branch -D

Here is a git config --global ... command for easily adding this as git prune-branches:

git config --global alias.prune-branches '!git remote prune origin && git branch -vv | grep '"'"': gone]'"'"' | awk '"'"'{print $1}'"'"' | xargs -r git branch -d'

NOTE: Use of the -D flag to git branch can be very dangerous. So, in the config command above I use the -d option to git branch rather than -D; I use -D in my actual config. I use -D because I don't want to hear Git complain about unmerged branches, I just want them to go away. You may want this functionality as well. If so, simply use -D instead of -d at the end of that config command.

20

Even shorter and safer one-liner:

git branch -d $(git branch --merged | cut -c 3- | grep -v master)

Be sure to checkout to branch that is not merged yet, before run it. Because you can not delete branch that you are currently checked in.

6
  • 3
    will this also remove your 'master' ?
    – dcsan
    Sep 1, 2016 at 17:26
  • 2
    If you currently checked into master then no, otherwise yea
    – FelikZ
    Sep 1, 2016 at 17:27
  • 2
    To skip master you could just pipe to grep and select the inverse, like so - git branch -d $(git branch --merged | cut -c 3- | grep -v master) Jun 15, 2017 at 20:04
  • This is unsafe and someone in the future will unknowingly delete their master branch Aug 20, 2019 at 14:53
  • 2
    @jasonseminara #dcsan I have updated snippet, so it skips master branch. #mozillalives thanks
    – FelikZ
    Aug 23, 2019 at 12:32
14

Here is my solution :

git fetch -p
git branch -vv | grep ": gone" | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d
  • -p is to remove any remote-tracking references that no longer exist on the remote. So first step will remove references to remote branches.

  • -vv is for showing sha1 and commit subject line for each head, along with relationship to upstream branch (if any). 2nd step will get all the local branches and grep command will filter out branches that have been deleted.

2
  • Even smaller (as described in another comment) git branch -vv | awk '/: gone]/{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d
    – mrroboaat
    Jun 5, 2020 at 8:13
  • I had to make the final -d a -D, otherwise your second line would give me this output on each branch: error: The branch 'your-branch' is not fully merged. If you are sure you want to delete it, run 'git branch -D your-branch'.
    – NateH06
    Feb 24, 2021 at 15:06
12

There doesn't seem to be a safe one-liner, too many edge cases (like a branch having "master" as part of its name, etc). Safest is these steps:

  1. git branch -vv | grep 'gone]' > stale_branches.txt
  2. view the file and remove lines for branches you want to keep (such as master branch!); you don't need to edit the contents of any line
  3. awk '{print $1}' stale_branches.txt | xargs git branch -d
9

To remove remote branches:

$git remote prune origin

To remove local branches that are already merged:

$git branch -D $(git branch --merged)
5
  • Works for me. Thanks. May 9, 2019 at 16:33
  • 9
    (git branch --merged) also returns 'master' for me. And other branches that haven't been deleted on the remote.
    – Tom G
    Aug 6, 2019 at 14:12
  • 46
    This deleted my master branch.
    – Greg
    Nov 27, 2019 at 20:37
  • 1
    Maybe better: $git branch -D $(git branch --merged | egrep -v '^\*|^\s+master$') thus filtering out master and the current branch.
    – Skeeve
    Nov 18, 2020 at 10:24
  • does git branch --no-contains <main_or_master> --merged work here?
    – bluesmonk
    Jul 15, 2023 at 15:09
8

This command and the script below work in Linux and Windows with Git Bash (MinGW).

It is best to use git's internal commands so that comments or names don't accidentally match and delete a branch that you don't want to delete. There are many internal "atoms" that can be used with git for-each-ref's format option to output the desired information. This way we don't have to rely on piping to awk or grep to check a regular expression on output that may contain unnecessary information.

The command below uses only git for-each-ref's internal low level commands to list only orphaned local branches. Once you have these you can pipe to git branch -D. Also, don't forget to prune and fetch your remote references first, or it won't find any matches:

git fetch -p
git for-each-ref --format '%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)' 'refs/heads/**' | xargs -r git branch -D

Here is a breakdown:

git fetch -p - prune removed references and fetch new ones from the remote

git for-each-ref --format - lists all references using a specific output format.

%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track) - only output if the upstream tracking branch is "[gone]".

%(then)%(refname:short)%(end) - output the branch name (when tracking is gone).

refs/heads/** - limit to head references (for efficiency).

| xargs -r git branch -D - pipe output as parameters for deletion. The -r indicates to ignore blank input.


By itself, this solution is long, ridiculous to type, and hard to remember. Luckily, adding custom commands to git is easy. Below is a script that uses the same command above, but it allows the user to see which branches will be selected with a --dry-run option.

I named my file git-prune-local and dropped it in a folder that was included on my PATH. It also needs execution permissions (chmod 755 git-prune-local).

Git automatically looks for executable files like git-[command]. With this, you only need to type git prune-local for the correct branches to be deleted.

git-prune-local

#!/bin/sh

if [ $# -gt 1 ] || ([ ! -z $1 ] && [ $1 != "--dry-run" ])
then
    echo "Usage: git prune-local [--dry-run]"
    exit
fi

git fetch -p --quiet
branchesToDelete=$(git for-each-ref --format '%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)' 'refs/heads/**')

while read -r branch
do
    if [ ! -z $branch ]
    then
        if [ ! -z $1 ]
        then
            echo $branch
        else
            git branch -D $branch
        fi
    fi
done <<< "$branchesToDelete"
8

You can use the --no-contains option to avoid removing your master branch when using branch --merged.

Running alone this looks like

$ git branch --no-contains master --merged master
    old-branch1
    old-branch2
    old-branch3

To delete the branches in Unix shell using xargs

git branch --no-contains master --merged master | xargs git branch -d

To delete the branches in Powershell using Pipes

git.exe branch --no-contains master --merged master `
    | foreach { git.exe branch -v -d $_.Trim() }
6

In Powershell:

git branch -D (git branch --merged |% { $_.trim() } )
5

Based on the answers above I'm using this shorter one liner:

git remote prune origin | awk 'BEGIN{FS="origin/"};/pruned/{print $2}' | xargs -r git branch -d

Also, if you already pruned and have local dangling branches, then this will clean them up:

git branch -vv | awk '/^ .*gone/{print $1}' | xargs -r git branch -d
1
  • 1
    Doesn't work if your branch names have a / in them
    – theicfire
    Feb 28, 2019 at 22:56
5

On OS X, which supports cut -w

git branch -d $(git branch -vv | grep ': gone]' | cut -w -f 2 )

explanation

delete following branches
git branch -d ...

show removed branches

$ git branch -vv | grep ': gone]'
  chore/TECH-456   a4bdac8ac8 [origin/TECH-456: gone] chore: syntax error
  feature/TECH-678 0342f8e277 [origin/feature/TECH-678: gone] Added IsGross in new Income Details

keep the branch name

$ git branch -vv | grep ': gone]' | cut -w -f 2
chore/TECH-456
feature/TECH-678
4

not sure how to do it all at once, but git git branch -d <branchname> will delete a local branch ONLY if it is completely merged. Note the lowercase d.

git branch -D <branchname> (note the capital D) will delete a local branch regardless of its merged status.

2
  • On Windows, the other answers did not work for me. Using this answer with the simple -D switch did (even though the branch had already been "deleted").
    – user4275029
    Oct 6, 2015 at 12:08
  • Can we do it for all branches at once? Oct 19, 2017 at 19:41
4

You can do this by a few simple actions:

  • Output your all branches into a temp file:
git branch > branches.tmp
  • Open the file and remove branches to exclude them from being deleted from your local (branches like develop/master/main/...)
  • Pass branches name to xargs by cat command and remove branches:
cat branches.tmp | xargs git branch -D
3

Schleis' variant does not work for me (Ubuntu 12.04), so let me propose my (clear and shiny :) variants:

Variant 1 (I would prefer this option):

git for-each-ref --format='%(refname:short) %(upstream)' refs/heads/ | awk '$2 !~/^refs\/remotes/' | xargs git branch -D 

Variant 2:

a. Dry-run:

comm -23 <( git branch | grep -v "/" | grep -v "*" | sort ) <( git br -r | awk -F '/' '{print $2}' | sort ) | awk '{print "git branch -D " $1}'

b. Remove branches:

comm -23 <( git branch | grep -v "/" | grep -v "*" | sort ) <( git br -r | awk -F '/' '{print $2}' | sort ) | xargs git branch -D
3

You can use this command:

git branch --merged master | grep -v "\* master" | xargs -n 1 git branch -d

Git Clean: Delete Already-Merged Branches including break down of command

3
  • You don't really need to filter out any branches (ex master). If it's "merged" then that just means it'll remove your local copy, but "git checkout dev" will create a local branch from remote if not already present
    – csga5000
    Sep 24, 2018 at 21:34
  • But the local branch list are still there even if they are merged. This command is to remove these branches which have been deleted from remote.
    – sendon1982
    Sep 25, 2018 at 2:44
  • asterisk on the beginning means current branch, when you run that command on different branch will not works well
    – OzzyCzech
    Mar 26, 2019 at 11:15
3

This works for me using git 2.21.0 - it deletes local tracking branches which are merged into HEAD where I have previously --set-upstream on push (I use push.default=upstream because it works best with multiple remotes) and that upstream branch has since been deleted by a fetch --prune (or implicitly if fetch.prune=true in git config):

git branch -vv --merged | grep ': gone]' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d

The use of --merged and -d make this a very 'safe' delete. A more aggressive version could drop the --merged and use -D

1
  • Note you have to checkout a branch that tracks an existing remote branch, else the command right before piping to xargs will return * instead of the branch name. My suggestion is to use git checkout master; git branch -vv --merged | grep ': gone]' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d
    – Tian
    Jul 9, 2020 at 2:03
3

On Windows with Powershell, to delete all local branches that have been deleted on the remote, regardless of merge status, this will do the trick:

git fetch -p
git branch --v | ? {$_.contains('[gone]')} | % {$_.trim().split()[0].trim()} | % {git branch -D $_}
  • git branch --v Gives verbose list of your branches, critically including the [gone] status
  • ? {$_.contains('[gone]')} True if [gone] is present
  • % {$_.trim().split()[0].trim()} Gives us just the branch name
  • % {git branch -D $_} Forced delete of local branch, even if unmerged

If you want to avoid unmerged branches change -D to -d and handle those manually.

2

Based on the answers above I came with this one line solution:

git remote prune origin; git branch -r | awk '{print $1}' | egrep -v -f /dev/fd/0 <(git branch -vv | grep origin) | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d
2

Using a variant on @wisbucky's answer, I added the following as an alias to my ~/.gitconfig file:

pruneitgood = "!f() { \
    git remote prune origin; \
    git branch -vv | perl -nae 'system(qw(git branch -d), $F[0]) if $F[3] eq q{gone]}'; \
}; f"

With this, a simple git pruneitgood will clean up both local & remote branches that are no longer needed after merges.

2

Following is an adaptation of @wisbucky's answer for Windows users:

for /f "tokens=1" %i in ('git branch -vv ^| findstr ": gone]"') DO git branch %i -d

I use posh-git and unfortunately PS doesn't like the naked for, so I created a plain 'ol command script named PruneOrphanBranches.cmd:

@ECHO OFF
for /f "tokens=1" %%i in ('git branch -vv ^| findstr ": gone]"') DO CALL :ProcessBranch %%i %1

GOTO :EOF

:ProcessBranch
IF /I "%2%"=="-d" (
    git branch %1 %2
) ELSE (
    CALL :OutputMessage %1
)
GOTO :EOF

:OutputMessage
ECHO Will delete branch [%1] 
GOTO :EOF

:EOF

Call it with no parameters to see a list, and then call it with "-d" to perform the actual deletion or "-D" for any branches that are not fully merged but which you want to delete anyway.

1
  • This didn't work for me, somehow the : or : (with a space) in findstr caused it to match everything every time--I almost deleted master. However, using a regex worked fine: git branch -vv ^| findstr /R " \[origin/[0-9]+: gone\] "
    – Josh
    Apr 3, 2017 at 14:10
2

The Powershell Version of git branch --merged master | grep -v '^[ *]*master$' | xargs git branch -d

git branch --merged master | %{ if($_ -notmatch '\*.*master'){ git branch -d "$($_.Trim())" }}

This will remove any local branches that have been merged into master, while you are on the master branch.

git checkout master to switch.

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