I'm getting ready to start version 2.0 of a library, a complete rewrite. I'll basically start from scratch, but I'd like to keep working within the same Git repository. I'm trying to figure out how to approach creating a clean new brach for the rewrite.
The naive way to start would be to create a new branch, and delete everything:
$ git checkout -b v2
Switched to a new branch 'v2'
$ rm -rf *
$ git commit -m "empty the branch for a clean slate"
$ git push origin v2
However, it's not ideal to have this commit that deletes everything in the branch. I'd like to be able to create a new empty branch, while keeping the commit history.
It seems like git checkout --orphan v2
will create a new empty branch, but it also has no parent.
Is there another way to create a clean empty branch without losing commit history?
git branch master <sha1-of-very-first-commit>
)? Of course, it won't share the history ofmaster
, and I'm not sure if that's what you mean by "without losing commit history", but it would be in the same tree at least.