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I am asking to stop tracking because in my concrete case, I want to delete the local branch but not the remote one. Deleting the local one and pushing the deletion to remote will delete the remote branch as well:

Can I just do git branch -d the_branch and it won't get propagated when I later git push?

Will it only propagate if I were to run git push origin :the_branch later on?

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5 Answers

up vote 54 down vote accepted

You don't have to delete your local branch.

Simply delete your remote tracking branch:

git branch -d -r origin/<remote branch name>

(This will not delete the branch on the remote repo!)

See "Having a hard time understanding git-fetch"

there's no such concept of local tracking branches, only remote tracking branches.
So origin/master is a remote tracking branch for master in the origin repo

As mentioned in Dobes Vandermeer's answer, you also need to reset the configuration associated to the local branch:

git config --unset branch.<branch>.remote
git config --unset branch.<branch>.merge

That will make any push/pull completely unaware of origin/<remote branch name>.

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3  
The remote tracking branch is recreated after git fetch. Is it possible to exclude these? – Matt R Aug 6 '10 at 10:46
1  
@Matt: I believe this would be done by setting the remote.<name>.fetch refspec config setting, but I am not sure if you can exclude a branch when specifying a refspec. – VonC Aug 6 '10 at 11:04
It appeared that way to me too; I was able to rebase my local branch though and after the fast-forward the apparent connection between the branches disappeared. – willoller Aug 30 '10 at 21:18
Didn't work for me. When pushing, I'm still getting warnings about the branches I deleted. As the OP, I want to stop tracking some of the remote branches I pushed to in the past. So after git branch -d -r origin/development, when I git push I still get ! [rejected] development -> development (non-fast-forward) – ruffin May 15 '12 at 15:59
1  
@ruffin: this is completely normal: git branch -d -r origin/<remote branch name> will delete a remote tracking branch as declared locally, in your repo. It will not delete the branch on the remote repo itself (only a git push :development would do that). So when you are pushing your local development, with an history different than the remote development branch (on the remote repo), you will still get the non-fast-forward warning. – VonC May 15 '12 at 18:06
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To remove the association between the local and remote branch, and delete the local branch, run:

git config --unset branch.<branch>.remote
git config --unset branch.<branch>.merge

Worked for me ....

Optionally afterwards:

git branch -d <branch>

to delete the local branch if you don't need it any longer. This won't delete the remote branch any longer.

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worked great! Thanks! – Jason T Featheringham Dec 17 '12 at 22:59
1  
git branch -d <branch> is not required to remove the association. – Marco Mar 11 at 15:27

The simplest way is to edit .git/config

Here is an example file

[core]
        repositoryformatversion = 0
        filemode = true
        bare = false
        logallrefupdates = true
        ignorecase = true
[remote "origin"]
        url = git@example.com:repo-name
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
[branch "test1"]
        remote = origin
        merge = refs/heads/test1
[branch "master"]
        remote = origin
        merge = refs/heads/master

Delete the line merge = refs/heads/test1 in the test1 branch section

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1  
+1 I cannot say definitively that this is the easiest method, but it certainly proves the easiest for me to understand (and hopefully therefor to remember)! – sage Jan 9 at 20:07
Nice solution +1. This is actually the place where the tracking is registered, easy to change, clear what it does. Commandline .git/config is available, too. – hakre Apr 24 at 13:43

The easiest way to do this is to delete the branch remotely and then use:

git fetch --prune (aka git fetch -p)

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You can delete the remote-tracking branch using

git branch -d -r origin/<remote branch name>

as VonC mentions above. However, if you keep your local copy of the branch, git push will still try to push that branch (which could give you a non-fast-forward error as it did for ruffin). This is because the config push.default defaults to matching which means:

matching - push all matching branches. All branches having the same name in both ends are considered to be matching. This is the default.

(see http://git-scm.com/docs/git-config under push.default)

Seeing as this is probably not what you wanted when you deleted the remote-tracking branch, you can set push.default to upstream (or tracking if you have git < 1.7.4.3)

upstream - push the current branch to its upstream branch.

using

git config push.default upstream

and git will stop trying to push branches that you have "stopped tracking."

Note: The simpler solution would be to just rename your local branch to something else. That would eliminate some potential for confusion, as well.

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