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Lets say I had the following files on my local machine's repo:

index.php
home.php
text.php

I committed the all changes and the Github repo (origin) was an exact replica of my this local machine's repo.

Next, I renamed text.php to unit_test.php. I committed it. So, now my Github repo has 4 files: index.php, home.php test.php & unit_test.php. Whereas, current;y, the local machine repo doesn't have any test.php file. So, how do I remove this file from Github repo as doing git rm test.php gives No such file or directory error.

2 Answers 2

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Assuming you haven't made any further commits locally yet, I would back up and try again:

git reset --hard HEAD^         # revert index and tree one commit - to before the rename
git mv text.php unit_test.php  # rename file in a manner git can track
git commit                     # The rename should staged automatically
git push
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  • Can I delete this particular local branch, do checkout and then do git mv? This will work I hope?
    – xan
    Jun 7, 2013 at 8:18
  • Yes. I did that (deleted the branch and again checkout that branch from origin) and it worked. I'll remember git mv. Thanks.
    – xan
    Jun 7, 2013 at 8:24
  • Excellent. Glad to help. In my experience, git tends to have versions of most normal bash file-system commands (ls, mv, rm...)
    – Chowlett
    Jun 7, 2013 at 8:25
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git rm tells git to not push a certain file from your computer to the repo, which you don't have on your computer anymore, so it gives you an error.

What you need to do is pull the repository first then git rm test.php and commit and push.

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