2029

I have my Git repository which, at the root, has two subdirectories:

/finisht
/static

When this was in SVN, /finisht was checked out in one place, while /static was checked out elsewhere, like so:

svn co svn+ssh://[email protected]/home/admin/repos/finisht/static static

Is there a way to do this with Git?

10
  • 18
    possible duplicate of Checkout subdirectories in Git? Jul 4, 2013 at 8:43
  • 2
    For a 2014's user, what the git clone simplest command?? I used this simple answer. If there are something more simple, please comment Nov 1, 2014 at 12:00
  • 1
    For those trying to clone the contents of the repository (not creating the root folder), this is a very easy solution: stackoverflow.com/questions/6224626/…
    – Marc
    Mar 29, 2015 at 12:38
  • 2
    @NickSergeant: As of Git 2.19, released 3 weeks ago, this is finally possible, as can be seen in this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/52269934/2988 Consider accepting that one now. Note: in Git 2.19, only client-side support is implemented, server-side support is still missing, so it only works when cloning local repositories. Also note that large Git hosters, e.g. GitHub don't actually use the Git server, they use their own implementation, so even if support shows up in the Git server, it does not automatically mean that it works on Git hosters. (OTOH, they could implement it faster.) Nov 4, 2018 at 9:22
  • 5
    If you want to download a folder from a GitHub repo, download-directory.github.io might be just the thing
    – jemand771
    May 4, 2021 at 6:40

31 Answers 31

1855

What you are trying to do is called a sparse checkout, and that feature was added in Git 1.7.0 (Feb. 2012). The steps to do a sparse clone are as follows:

mkdir <repo>
cd <repo>
git init
git remote add -f origin <url>

This creates an empty repository with your remote, and fetches all objects but doesn't check them out. Then do:

git config core.sparseCheckout true

Now you need to define which files/folders you want to actually check out. This is done by listing them in .git/info/sparse-checkout, eg:

echo "some/dir/" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
echo "another/sub/tree" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout

Last but not least, update your empty repo with the state from the remote:

git pull origin master

You will now have files "checked out" for some/dir and another/sub/tree on your file system (with those paths still), and no other paths present.

You might want to have a look at the extended tutorial and you should probably read the official documentation for sparse checkout and read-tree.

As a function:

function git_sparse_clone() (
  rurl="$1" localdir="$2" && shift 2

  mkdir -p "$localdir"
  cd "$localdir"

  git init
  git remote add -f origin "$rurl"

  git config core.sparseCheckout true

  # Loops over remaining args
  for i; do
    echo "$i" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
  done

  git pull origin master
)

Usage:

git_sparse_clone "http://github.com/tj/n" "./local/location" "/bin"

Note that this will still download the whole repository from the server – only the checkout is reduced in size. At the moment it is not possible to clone only a single directory. But if you don't need the history of the repository, you can at least save on bandwidth by creating a shallow clone. See udondan's answer below for information on how to combine shallow clone and sparse checkout.


As of Git 2.25.0 (Jan 2020) an experimental sparse-checkout command is added in Git:

git sparse-checkout init
# same as:
# git config core.sparseCheckout true

git sparse-checkout set "A/B"
# same as:
# echo "A/B" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout

git sparse-checkout list
# same as:
# cat .git/info/sparse-checkout
33
  • 19
    on Apple the '-f' perimeter does not work. just do git remote add origin <url> without -f
    – Anno2001
    Feb 17, 2013 at 10:58
  • 171
    It is an improvement but still needs to download and store a full copy of the remote repository in origin, which one might like to avoid at all if he is interested only in portions of the codebase (or if there is documentation subfolders as in my case)
    – a1an
    Jun 13, 2013 at 12:42
  • 65
    Is there a way to clone desired directory contents (not directory itself) right into my repository? For example I want clone contents of https://github.com/Umkus/nginx-boilerplate/tree/master/src right into /etc/nginx
    – mac
    Apr 10, 2014 at 5:40
  • 28
    @Chronial, @ErikE: you're both right / wrong :P The git remote add command does not imply a fetch, but git remote add -f, as used here, does! That's what the -f means.
    – ntc2
    May 16, 2014 at 0:02
  • 26
    Using this and --depth=1 I cloned Chromium Devtools in 338 MB instead of 4.9 GB of full Blink source + history. Excellent.
    – Rudie
    Oct 22, 2014 at 19:26
1253

git clone --filter + git sparse-checkout downloads only the required files

E.g., to clone only files in subdirectory small/ in this test repository: https://github.com/cirosantilli/test-git-partial-clone-big-small-no-bigtree

git clone -n --depth=1 --filter=tree:0 \
  https://github.com/cirosantilli/test-git-partial-clone-big-small-no-bigtree
cd test-git-partial-clone-big-small-no-bigtree
git sparse-checkout set --no-cone small
git checkout

You could also select multiple directories for download with:

git sparse-checkout set --no-cone small small2

This method doesn't work for individual files however, but here is another method that does: How to sparsely checkout only one single file from a git repository?

In this test, clone is basically instantaneous, and we can confirm that the cloned repository is very small as desired:

du --apparent-size -hs * .* | sort -hs

giving:

2.0K    small
226K    .git

That test repository contains:

  • a big/ subdirectory with 10x 10MB files
  • 10x 10MB files 0, 1, ... 9 on toplevel (this is because certain previous attempts would download toplevel files)
  • a small/ and small2/ subdirectories with 1000 files of size one byte each

All contents are pseudo-random and therefore incompressible, so we can easily notice if any of the big files were downloaded, e.g. with ncdu.

So if you download anything you didn't want, you would get 100 MB extra, and it would be very noticeable.

On the above, git clone downloads a single object, presumably the commit:

Cloning into 'test-git-partial-clone-big-small'...
remote: Enumerating objects: 1, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (1/1), done.
remote: Total 1 (delta 0), reused 1 (delta 0), pack-reused 0
Receiving objects: 100% (1/1), done.

and then the final checkout downloads the files we requested:

remote: Enumerating objects: 3, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (3/3), done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (3/3), done.
remote: Total 3 (delta 0), reused 3 (delta 0), pack-reused 0
Receiving objects: 100% (3/3), 10.19 KiB | 2.04 MiB/s, done.
remote: Enumerating objects: 253, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (253/253), done.
Receiving objects: 100% (253/253), 2.50 KiB | 2.50 MiB/s, done.
remote: Total 253 (delta 0), reused 253 (delta 0), pack-reused 0
Your branch is up to date with 'origin/master'.

Tested on git 2.37.2, Ubuntu 22.10, on January 2023.

TODO also prevent download of unneeded tree objects

The above method downloads all Git tree objects (i.e. directory listings, but not actual file contents). We can confirm that by running:

git ls-files

and seeing that it contains the directories large files such as:

big/0

In most projects this won't be an issue, as these should be small compared to the actual file contents, but the perfectionist in me would like to avoid them.

I've also created a very extreme repository with some very large tree objects (100 MB) under the directory big_tree: https://github.com/cirosantilli/test-git-partial-clone-big-small

Let me know if anyone finds a way to clone just the small/ directory from it!

About the commands

The --filter option was added together with an update to the remote protocol, and it truly prevents objects from being downloaded from the server.

The sparse-checkout part is also needed unfortunately. You can also only download certain files with the much more understandable:

git clone --depth 1  --filter=blob:none  --no-checkout \
  https://github.com/cirosantilli/test-git-partial-clone-big-small
cd test-git-partial-clone-big-small
git checkout master -- d1

but that method for some reason downloads files one by one very slowly, making it unusable unless you have very few files in the directory.

Another less verbose but failed attempt was:

git clone --depth 1 --filter=blob:none --sparse \
  https://github.com/cirosantilli/test-git-partial-clone-big-small
cd test-git-partial-clone-big-small
git sparse-checkout set small

but that downloads all files in the toplevel directory: How to prevent git clone --filter=blob:none --sparse from downloading files on the root directory?

The dream: any directory can have web interface metadata

This feature could revolutionize Git.

Imagine having all the code base of your enterprise in a single monorepo without ugly third-party tools like repo.

Imagine storing huge blobs directly in the repo without any ugly third party extensions.

Imagine if GitHub would allow per file / directory metadata like stars and permissions, so you can store all your personal stuff under a single repo.

Imagine if submodules were treated exactly like regular directories: just request a tree SHA, and a DNS-like mechanism resolves your request, first looking on your local ~/.git, then first to closer servers (your enterprise's mirror / cache) and ending up on GitHub.

I have a dream.

The test cone monorepo philosophy

This is a possible philosophy for monorepo maintenance without submodules.

We want to avoid submodules because it is annoying to have to commit to two separate repositories every time you make a change that has a submodule and non-submodule component.

Every directory with a Makefile or analogous should build and test itself.

Such directories can depend on either:

  • every file and subdirectory under it directly at their latest versions
  • external directories can be relied upon only at specified versions

Until git starts supporting this natively (i.e. submodules that can track only subdirectories), we can support this with some metadata in a git tracked file:

monorepo.json

{
    "path": "some/useful/lib",
    "sha": 12341234123412341234,
}

where sha refers to the usual SHA of the entire repository. Then we need scripts that will checkout such directories e.g. under a gitignored monorepo folder:

monorepo/som/useful/lib

Whenever you change a file, you have to go up the tree and test all directories that have Makefile. This is because directories can depend on subdirectories at their latest versions, so you could always break something above you.

Related:

34
  • 3
    Sadly, no luck with the macOS git version. fatal: invalid filter-spec 'combine:blob:none+tree:0' Thanks anyway! Maybe it will work with newer versions.
    – muru
    Dec 6, 2019 at 7:51
  • 2
    This fails when trying it on Windows 10 using GIT 2.24.1 (throws tons of "unable to read sha1 file of.." + "Unlink of file xxx failed."). Worked as a charm with same version on Linux.
    – Oyvind
    Dec 16, 2019 at 11:40
  • 3
    @Ciro Santilli This still fails with "unable to read sha1 file of..." in git version 2.26.1.windows.1. I opened a bug report: github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/2590
    – nharrer
    Apr 18, 2020 at 16:43
  • 2
    @CiroSantilli郝海东冠状病六四事件法轮功 some/path is a directory and git checkout master -- some/path correctly clones only files in that directory and its subdirs - but it does it one by one with a message like: remote: Enumerating objects: 1, done. remote: Counting objects: 100% (1/1), done. remote: Total 1 (delta 0), reused 1 (delta 0), pack-reused 0 Receiving objects: 100% (1/1), 51 bytes | 51.00 KiB/s, done. These 4 lines repeated for each of the 90 files in the dir and its subdirs (this is on git version 2.24.3 (Apple Git-128))
    – Faboor
    Jan 6, 2021 at 11:33
  • 4
    @CiroSantilli新疆棉花TRUMPBANBAD - you've already found the solution! Just remove the --cone line and it will work fine. In your test repository try creating an additional file at the top level. If you follow your instructions, then you'll also get a copy of that file as well as the directory you want. Remove the 'git sparse-checkout init --cone' but follow all your other instructions, and you'll just get the directory tree you want. I'm not quite sure in what circumstances you'd want to use --cone! Apr 13, 2021 at 11:57
775

As of Git 2.19, this is finally possible, as can be seen in this answer.

Consider upvoting that answer.

Note: in Git 2.19, only client-side support is implemented, server-side support is still missing, so it only works when cloning local repositories. Also note that large Git hosters, e.g. GitHub, don't actually use the Git server, they use their own implementation, so even if support shows up in the Git server, it does not automatically mean that it works on Git hosters. (On the other hand, since they don't use the Git server, they could implement it faster in their own implementations before it shows up in Git server.)


No, that's not possible in Git.

Implementing something like this in Git would be a substantial effort and it would mean that the integrity of the client-side repository could no longer be guaranteed. If you are interested, search for discussions on "sparse clone" and "sparse fetch" on the Git mailing list.

In general, the consensus in the Git community is that if you have several directories that are always checked out independently, then these are really two different projects and should live in two different repositories. You can glue them back together using Git Submodules.

12
  • 6
    Depending on the scenario, you may want to use git subtree instead of git submodule. See alumnit.ca/~apenwarr/log/?m=200904#30
    – C Pirate
    Aug 3, 2009 at 17:12
  • 10
    @StijndeWitt: Sparse checkouts happen during git-read-tree, which is long after get-fetch. The question was not about checking out only a subdirectory, it was about cloning only a subdirectory. I don't see how sparse checkouts could possibly do that, since git-read-tree runs after the clone has already completed. Mar 6, 2014 at 14:53
  • 15
    Rather than this "stub", would you like for me to delete this answer so Chronial's can float to the top? You can't delete it yourself, because it's accepted, but a moderator can. You would keep the reputation you've earned from it, since it's so old. (I came across this because someone flagged it as "link-only". :-) Aug 21, 2017 at 17:49
  • 1
    @CodyGray: Chronial answer still clones the entire repository, and not only a subdirectory. (The last paragraph even explicitly says so.) Cloning only a subdirectory is not possible in Git. The network protocol doesn't support it, the storage format doesn't support it. Every single answer to this question always clones the whole repository. The question is a simple Yes/No question, and the answer is two characters: No. If at all, my answer is unnecessarily long, not short. Aug 31, 2018 at 14:45
  • 2
    @JörgWMittag: Ciro Santili's answer seems to contradict you. Nov 4, 2018 at 0:53
450

You can combine the sparse checkout and the shallow clone features. The shallow clone cuts off the history and the sparse checkout only pulls the files matching your patterns.

git init <repo>
cd <repo>
git remote add origin <url>
git config core.sparsecheckout true
echo "finisht/*" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
git pull --depth=1 origin master

You'll need minimum git 1.9 for this to work. Tested it myself only with 2.2.0 and 2.2.2.

This way you'll be still able to push, which is not possible with git archive.

17
  • 28
    This is useful, and may be the best available answer, but it still clones the content that you don't care about (if it is on the branch that you pull), even though it doesn't show up in the checkout. Aug 25, 2015 at 21:54
  • 1
    This does not work for me. --depth=1 is ignored, still tries to pull several thousand commits and about 100x too many files.
    – Tyguy7
    Sep 18, 2015 at 21:46
  • 2
    doesn't work for me when the last command is not git pull --depth=1 origin master but git pull --depth=1 origin <any-other-branch>. this is so strange, see my question here: stackoverflow.com/questions/35820630/…
    – Shuman
    Mar 6, 2016 at 0:15
  • 5
    On Windows, the second-to-last line needs to omit the quotes, or the pull fails.
    – nateirvin
    Mar 31, 2016 at 17:01
  • 4
    This still downloads all data! Found this solution, using svn: stackoverflow.com/a/18324458/2302437 May 18, 2016 at 0:09
204

For other users who just want to download a file/folder from github, simply use:

svn export <repo>/trunk/<folder>

e.g.

svn export https://github.com/lodash/lodash.com/trunk/docs

(yes, that's svn here. apparently in 2016 you still need svn to simply download some github files)

Courtesy: Download a single folder or directory from a GitHub repo

Important - Make sure you update the github URL and replace /tree/master/ with '/trunk/'.

As bash script:

git-download(){
    folder=${@/tree\/master/trunk}
    folder=${folder/blob\/master/trunk}
    svn export $folder
}

Note This method downloads a folder, does not clone/checkout it. You can't push changes back to the repository. On the other hand - this results in smaller download compared to sparse checkout or shallow checkout.

13
  • 15
    only version which worked for me with github. The git commands checked out >10k files, the svn export only the 700 i wanted. Thanks! Feb 1, 2017 at 18:19
  • 4
    Tried doing this with https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/tree/master/tensorflow/examples/trunk/udacity but got svn: E170000: URL 'https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/tree/master/tensorflow/examples/trunk/udacity' doesn't exist error :(
    – zthomas.nc
    Feb 19, 2017 at 21:55
  • 12
    @zthomas.nc You need to remove the 'trunk' preceding udacity, and replace /tree/master/ with /trunk/ instead.
    – Speedy
    Mar 22, 2017 at 17:01
  • 4
    This command was the one that worked for me! I just wanted to get a copy of a file from a repo so I could modify it locally. Good old SVN to the rescue!
    – Michael J
    Jun 2, 2017 at 0:32
  • 3
    it works, but seems slow. takes a bit to start and then the files roll by relatively slowly Dec 24, 2017 at 10:15
135
+500

2022 Answer

I'm not sure why there are so many complicated answers to this question. It can be done easily by doing a sparse cloning of the repo, to the folder that you want.

  1. Navigate to the folder where you'd like to clone the subdirectory.
  2. Open cmd and run the following commands.
  3. git clone --filter=blob:none --sparse %your-git-repo-url%
  4. cd %the repository directory%
  5. git sparse-checkout add %subdirectory-to-be-cloned%
  6. cd %your-subdirectory%

Voila! Now you have cloned only the subdirectory that you want!

Explanation - What are these commands doing really?

git clone --filter=blob:none --sparse %your-git-repo-url%

In the above command,

  • --filter=blob:none => You tell git that you only want to clone the metadata files. This way git collects the basic branch details and other meta from remote, which will ensure that your future checkouts from origin are smooth.
  • --sparse => Tell git that this is a sparse clone. Git will checkout only the root directory in this case.

Now git is informed with the metadata and ready to checkout any subdirectories/files that you want to work with.

git sparse-checkout add gui-workspace ==> Checkout folder

git sparse-checkout add gui-workspace/assets/logo.png ==> Checkout a file

Sparse clone is particularly useful when there is a large repo with several subdirectories and you're not always working on them all. Saves a lot of time and bandwidth when you do a sparse clone on a large repo.

Additionally, now in this partially cloned repo you can continue to checkout and work like you normally would. All these commands work perfectly.

git switch -c  %new-branch-name% origin/%parent-branch-name% (or) git checkout -b %new-branch-name% origin/%parent-branch-name% 
git commit -m "Initial changes in sparse clone branch"
git push origin %new-branch-name%
8
  • 6
    Good update. Could you replace the old, confusing and obsolete command git checkout with the more modern git switch? git switch -c %new-branch-name% origin/%parent-branch-name%
    – VonC
    Aug 5, 2022 at 19:33
  • Good catch, added that as well. @VonC
    – Evan MJ
    Aug 5, 2022 at 19:44
  • 7
    If I clone from $CLONEDIR, the cloning creates another directory with the .git dir in it. lets call it REPO_DIRNAME. I have to cd $CLONEDIR/$REPO_DIRNAME before I can execute the git sparse-checkout ... bit. Could you amend? Ta :-)
    – Paddy3118
    Aug 12, 2022 at 11:02
  • I updated the "this is an older answer" headline you chose to add, and reduced its formatting. I am not sure why you did it, but with a more recent answer from 2022 it seems that it needed an update. But maybe you want to remove it altogether.
    – Yunnosch
    Sep 29, 2022 at 6:19
  • 2
    This is the best answer so far. for me, it worked flawlessly as expected. Thank you. Feb 11 at 22:19
81

If you never plan to interact with the repository from which you cloned, you can do a full git clone and rewrite your repository using

git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter <subdirectory>

This way, at least the history will be preserved.

4
  • 13
    For people that doesn't know the command, it is git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter <subdirectory> Oct 26, 2014 at 14:32
  • 10
    This method has the advantage that the subdirectory you choose becomes the root of the new repository, which happens to be exactly what I want. Dec 23, 2014 at 21:27
  • That's defenitly the best and easiest approach to use. Here's a one-step command using subdirectory-filter git clone https://github.com/your/repo_xx.git && cd repo_xx && git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter repo_xx_subdir
    – Alex
    Nov 3, 2019 at 4:55
  • 3
    If you repo is tens of GB big, this would not help too much. Nov 11, 2021 at 10:12
70

This looks far simpler:

git archive --remote=<repo_url> <branch> <path> | tar xvf -
7
  • 19
    When I do this on github I get fatal: Operation not supported by protocol. Unexpected end of command stream Sep 25, 2014 at 17:37
  • 1
    The protocol error could be because of HTTPS or : in the repo url. It could also be because of missing ssh key.
    – Umair A.
    Dec 7, 2014 at 17:34
  • 2
    If you're using github you can use svn export instead Jul 5, 2015 at 15:25
  • 3
    Won't work wiht Github --> Invalid command: 'git-upload-archive 'xxx/yyy.git'' You appear to be using ssh to clone a git:// URL. Make sure your core.gitProxy config option and the GIT_PROXY_COMMAND environment variable are NOT set. fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
    – Nianliang
    Jul 14, 2015 at 15:19
  • 4
    The reason why this doesn't work with GitHub: "We don't support using git-archive to pull an archive directly from GitHub. You can either clone the repo locally and run git-archive, or click on the Download ZIP button on the repo page." github.com/xuwupeng2000/capistrano-scm-gitcopy/issues/16
    – Donn Lee
    Aug 29, 2016 at 23:17
64

Git 1.7.0 has “sparse checkouts”. See “core.sparseCheckout” in the git config manpage, “Sparse checkout” in the git read-tree manpage, and “Skip-worktree bit” in the git update-index manpage.

The interface is not as convenient as SVN’s (e.g. there is no way to make a sparse checkout at the time of an initial clone), but the base functionality upon which simpler interfaces could be built is now available.

41

It's not possible to clone subdirectory only with Git, but below are few workarounds.

Filter branch

You may want to rewrite the repository to look as if trunk/public_html/ had been its project root, and discard all other history (using filter-branch), try on already checkout branch:

git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter trunk/public_html -- --all

Notes: The -- that separates filter-branch options from revision options, and the --all to rewrite all branches and tags. All information including original commit times or merge information will be preserved. This command honors .git/info/grafts file and refs in the refs/replace/ namespace, so 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.


Sparse checkout

Here are simple steps with sparse checkout approach which will populate the working directory sparsely, so you can tell Git which folder(s) or file(s) in the working directory are worth checking out.

  1. Clone repository as usual (--no-checkout is optional):

    git clone --no-checkout git@foo/bar.git
    cd bar
    

    You may skip this step, if you've your repository already cloned.

    Hint: For large repos, consider shallow clone (--depth 1) to checkout only latest revision or/and --single-branch only.

  2. Enable sparseCheckout option:

    git config core.sparseCheckout true
    
  3. Specify folder(s) for sparse checkout (without space at the end):

    echo "trunk/public_html/*"> .git/info/sparse-checkout
    

    or edit .git/info/sparse-checkout.

  4. Checkout the branch (e.g. master):

    git checkout master
    

Now you should have selected folders in your current directory.

You may consider symbolic links if you've too many levels of directories or filtering branch instead.


3
  • Would Filter branch still allow you to pull?
    – sam
    Dec 17, 2016 at 19:21
  • 2
    @sam: no. filter-branch would rewrite the parent commits so they'd have different SHA1 IDs, and thus your filtered tree would have no commits in common with the remote tree. git pull wouldn't know where to try to merge from. Jun 15, 2017 at 4:06
  • This approach is mostly satisfying answer to my case.
    – Abbas
    Dec 15, 2019 at 11:16
11

This will clone a specific folder and remove all history not related to it.

git clone --single-branch -b {branch} [email protected]:{user}/{repo}.git
git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter {path/to/folder} HEAD
git remote remove origin
git remote add origin [email protected]:{user}/{new-repo}.git
git push -u origin master
1
  • 2
    Here be dragons. You get greeted by WARNING: git-filter-branch has a glut of gotchas generating mangled history rewrites... Then the git-filter-branch docs has a rather long warning list.
    – Oyvind
    Dec 16, 2019 at 12:05
10

here is what I do

git init
git sparse-checkout init
git sparse-checkout set "YOUR_DIR_PATH"
git remote add origin https://github.com/AUTH/REPO.git
git pull --depth 1 origin <SHA1_or_BRANCH_NAME>

Simple note

  • sparse-checkout

  • git sparse-checkout init many articles will tell you to set git sparse-checkout init --cone If I add --cone will get some files that I don't want.

  • git sparse-checkout set "..." will set the .git\info\sparse-checkout file contents as ...

    Suppose you don't want to use this command. Instead, you can open the git\info\sparse-checkout and then edit.


Example

Suppose I want to get 2 folderfull repo size>10GB↑ (include git), as below total size < 2MB

  1. chrome/common/extensions/api
  2. chrome/common/extensions/permissions
git init
git sparse-checkout init
// git sparse-checkout set "chrome/common/extensions/api/"
start .git\info\sparse-checkout   👈 open the "sparse-checkut" file

/* .git\info\sparse-checkout  for example you can input the contents as below 👇
chrome/common/extensions/api/
!chrome/common/extensions/api/commands/     👈 ! unwanted : https://www.git-scm.com/docs/git-sparse-checkout#_full_pattern_set
!chrome/common/extensions/api/devtools/
chrome/common/extensions/permissions/
*/

git remote add origin https://github.com/chromium/chromium.git
start .git\config

/* .git\config
[core]
    repositoryformatversion = 1
    filemode = false
    bare = false
    logallrefupdates = true
    symlinks = false
    ignorecase = true
[extensions]
    worktreeConfig = true
[remote "origin"]
    url = https://github.com/chromium/chromium.git
    fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/Github/*
    partialclonefilter = blob:none  // 👈 Add this line, This is important. Otherwise, your ".git" folder is still large (about 1GB)
*/
git pull --depth 1 origin 2d4a97f1ed2dd875557849b4281c599a7ffaba03
// or
// git pull --depth 1 origin master

  • partialclonefilter = blob:none

    I know to add this line because I know from: git clone --filter=blob:none it will write this line. so I imitate it.

git version: git version 2.29.2.windows.3

1
  • this gives me error "Sparse checkout leaves no entry on working directory" on linux git pull --depth 1 origin dev
    – Sudhir N
    Apr 12, 2023 at 7:28
10

It worked for me- (git version 2.35.1)

git init
git remote add origin <YourRepoUrl>
git config core.sparseCheckout true
git sparse-checkout set <YourSubfolderName>
git pull origin <YourBranchName>
1
  • It seems this is the fastest and shortest approach. Sep 29, 2022 at 10:54
10

I wrote a script for downloading a subdirectory from GitHub.

Usage:

python get_git_sub_dir.py path/to/sub/dir <RECURSIVE>
5
  • 14
    FYI, that's for GitHub only.
    – Sz.
    May 25, 2014 at 14:49
  • 10
    And apparently this is for downloading a directory, not cloning a piece of a repo with all its metadata... right?
    – LarsH
    Oct 15, 2015 at 19:18
  • 14
    You should include you code here and not somewhere else.
    – jww
    Dec 31, 2018 at 7:13
  • urllib2.HTTPError: HTTP Error 403: rate limit exceeded
    – diyism
    May 18, 2020 at 9:32
  • For downloading a directory, check stackoverflow.com/a/50925766/12649675 for a better script, in Python. Oct 25, 2023 at 13:40
7

Using Linux? And only want easy to access and clean working tree ? without bothering rest of code on your machine. try symlinks!

git clone https://github.com:{user}/{repo}.git ~/my-project
ln -s ~/my-project/my-subfolder ~/Desktop/my-subfolder

Test

cd ~/Desktop/my-subfolder
git status
7

Just to clarify some of the great answers here, the steps outlined in many of the answers assume that you already have a remote repository somewhere.

Given: an existing git repository, e.g. [email protected]:some-user/full-repo.git, with one or more directories that you wish to pull independently of the rest of the repo, e.g. directories named app1 and app2

Assuming you have a git repository as the above...

Then: you can run steps like the following to pull only specific directories from that larger repo:

mkdir app1
cd app1
git init
git remote add origin [email protected]:some-user/full-repo.git
git config core.sparsecheckout true
echo "app1/" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
git pull origin master

I had mistakenly thought that the sparse-checkout options had to be set on the original repository, but this is not the case: you define which directories you want locally, prior to pulling from the remote. The remote repo doesn't know or care about your only wanting to track a part of the repo.

Hope this clarification helps someone else.

3
  • this is a bit late but what do i do if i need all contents inside app1 and not the app1 directory Aug 3, 2020 at 15:26
  • That seems more like a cosmetic question, although it does seem like you don't have full freedom to "escape" the structure of the original repo. Maybe you could use symlinks?
    – Everett
    Dec 21, 2020 at 13:23
  • you still have to download the whole repo it seems ``` $ mkdir com.unity.render-pipelines.core $ cd com.unity.render-pipelines.core/ $ git init $ git remote add origin github.com/Oculus-VR/Unity-Graphics.git $ git config core.sparsecheckout true $ echo "com.unity.render-pipelines.core/" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout $ git pull origin 2021.2/oculus-appsw-particles ``` The folder size is around 7mb , however ... ``` $ ... $ Receiving objects: 6% (24305/375290), 27.30 MiB | 121.00 KiB/s ```
    – Vlad
    Apr 15, 2022 at 21:50
6

Here's a shell script I wrote for the use case of a single subdirectory sparse checkout

coSubDir.sh

localRepo=$1
remoteRepo=$2
subDir=$3


# Create local repository for subdirectory checkout, make it hidden to avoid having to drill down to the subfolder
mkdir ./.$localRepo
cd ./.$localRepo
git init
git remote add -f origin $remoteRepo
git config core.sparseCheckout true

# Add the subdirectory of interest to the sparse checkout.
echo $subDir >> .git/info/sparse-checkout

git pull origin master

# Create convenience symlink to the subdirectory of interest
cd ..
ln -s ./.$localRepo/$subDir $localRepo
1
  • 2
    Nice script, only something which should be fixed is the symlink, should be ln -s ./.$localRepo/$subDir $localRepo instead of ln -s ./.$localRepo$subDir $localRepo Mar 16, 2018 at 8:33
5
git init <repo>
cd <repo>
git remote add origin <url>
git config core.sparsecheckout true
echo "<path you want to clone>/*" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
git pull --depth=1 origin <branch you want to fetch>

Example for cloning only Jetsurvey Folder from this repo

git init MyFolder
cd MyFolder 
git remote add origin [email protected]:android/compose-samples.git
git config core.sparsecheckout true
echo "Jetsurvey/*" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
git pull --depth=1 origin main
0
4

@Chronial 's anwser is no longer applicable to recent versions, but it was a useful anwser as it proposed a script.

Given information I gathered and the fact that I wanted to checkout only a subdirectory of a branch, I created the following shell function. It gets a shallow copy of only the most recent version in the branch for the provided directories.

function git_sparse_clone_branch() (
  local rurl="$1" localdir="$2" branch="$3" && shift 3

  git clone "$rurl" --branch "$branch" --no-checkout "$localdir" --depth 1  # limit history
  cd "$localdir" || return
  
  # git sparse-checkout init --cone  # fetch only root file

  # Loops over remaining args
  for i; do
    git sparse-checkout set "$i"
  done

  git checkout --ignore-other-worktrees "$branch"
)

So example use:

git_sparse_clone_branch [email protected]:user/repo.git localpath branch-to-clone path1_to_fetch path2_to_fetch

In my case the clone was "only" 23MB versus 385MB for the full clone.

Tested with git version 2.36.1 .

3

I wrote a .gitconfig [alias] for performing a "sparse checkout". Check it out (no pun intended):

On Windows run in cmd.exe

git config --global alias.sparse-checkout "!f(){ [ $# -eq 2 ] && L=${1##*/} L=${L%.git} || L=$2; mkdir -p \"$L/.git/info\" && cd \"$L\" && git init --template= && git remote add origin \"$1\" && git config core.sparseCheckout 1; [ $# -eq 2 ] && echo \"$2\" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout || { shift 2; for i; do echo $i >> .git/info/sparse-checkout; done }; git pull --depth 1 origin master;};f"

Otherwise:

git config --global alias.sparse-checkout '!f(){ [ $# -eq 2 ] && L=${1##*/} L=${L%.git} || L=$2; mkdir -p "$L/.git/info" && cd "$L" && git init --template= && git remote add origin "$1" && git config core.sparseCheckout 1; [ $# -eq 2 ] && echo "$2" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout || { shift 2; for i; do echo $i >> .git/info/sparse-checkout; done }; git pull --depth 1 origin master;};f'

Usage:

# Makes a directory ForStackExchange with Plug checked out
git sparse-checkout https://github.com/YenForYang/ForStackExchange Plug

# To do more than 1 directory, you have to specify the local directory:
git sparse-checkout https://github.com/YenForYang/ForStackExchange ForStackExchange Plug Folder

The git config commands are 'minified' for convenience and storage, but here is the alias expanded:

# Note the --template= is for disabling templates.
# Feel free to remove it if you don't have issues with them (like I did)
# `mkdir` makes the .git/info directory ahead of time, as I've found it missing sometimes for some reason
f(){
    [ "$#" -eq 2 ] && L="${1##*/}" L=${L%.git} || L=$2;
    mkdir -p "$L/.git/info"
        && cd "$L"
        && git init --template=
        && git remote add origin "$1"
        && git config core.sparseCheckout 1;
    [ "$#" -eq 2 ]
        && echo "$2" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
        || {
            shift 2;
            for i; do
                echo $i >> .git/info/sparse-checkout;
            done
        };
    git pull --depth 1 origin master;
};
f
2
  • Why does this work: L=${1##*/} L=${L%.git} ? Is space an operator?
    – Gulzt
    Dec 13, 2019 at 12:33
  • You ought to mention this is for git < 2.25.0 (Jan 2020), which includes its own version of git sparse-checkout.
    – Nickolay
    Aug 19, 2020 at 19:09
3

Lots of great responses here, but I wanted to add that using the quotations around the directory names was failing for me on Windows Sever 2016. The files simply were not being downloaded.

Instead of

"mydir/myfolder"

I had to use

mydir/myfolder

Also, if you want to simply download all sub directories just use

git sparse-checkout set *
2

If you're actually ony interested in the latest revision files of a directory, Github lets you download a repository as Zip file, which does not contain history. So downloading is very much faster.

1

While I hate actually having to use svn when dealing with git repos :/ I use this all the time;

function git-scp() (
  URL="$1" && shift 1
  svn export ${URL/blob\/master/trunk}
)

This allows you to copy out from the github url without modification. Usage;

--- /tmp » git-scp https://github.com/dgraph-io/dgraph/blob/master/contrib/config/kubernetes/helm                                                                                                                  1 ↵
A    helm
A    helm/Chart.yaml
A    helm/README.md
A    helm/values.yaml
Exported revision 6367.

--- /tmp » ls | grep helm
Permissions Size User    Date Modified    Name
drwxr-xr-x     - anthony 2020-01-07 15:53 helm/
1

Lots of good ideas and scripts above. I could not help myself and combined them into a bash script with help and error checking:

#!/bin/bash

function help {
  printf "$1
Clones a specific directory from the master branch of a git repository.

Syntax:
  $(basename $0) [--delrepo] repoUrl sourceDirectory [targetDirectory]

If targetDirectory is not specified it will be set to sourceDirectory.
Downloads a sourceDirectory from a Git repository into targetdirectory.
If targetDirectory is not specified, a directory named after `basename sourceDirectory`
will be created under the current directory.

If --delrepo is specified then the .git subdirectory in the clone will be removed after cloning.


Example 1:
Clone the tree/master/django/conf/app_template directory from the master branch of
[email protected]:django/django.git into ./app_template:

\$ $(basename $0) [email protected]:django/django.git django/conf/app_template

\$ ls app_template/django/conf/app_template/
__init__.py-tpl  admin.py-tpl  apps.py-tpl  migrations  models.py-tpl  tests.py-tpl  views.py-tpl


Example 2:
Clone the django/conf/app_template directory from the master branch of
https://github.com/django/django/tree/master/django/conf/app_template into ~/test:

\$ $(basename $0) [email protected]:django/django.git django/conf/app_template ~/test

\$ ls test/django/conf/app_template/
__init__.py-tpl  admin.py-tpl  apps.py-tpl  migrations  models.py-tpl  tests.py-tpl  views.py-tpl

"
  exit 1
}

if [ -z "$1" ]; then help "Error: repoUrl was not specified.\n"; fi
if [ -z "$2" ]; then help "Error: sourceDirectory was not specified."; fi

if [ "$1" == --delrepo ]; then
  DEL_REPO=true
  shift
fi

REPO_URL="$1"
SOURCE_DIRECTORY="$2"
if [ "$3" ]; then
  TARGET_DIRECTORY="$3"
else
  TARGET_DIRECTORY="$(basename $2)"
fi

echo "Cloning into $TARGET_DIRECTORY"
mkdir -p "$TARGET_DIRECTORY"
cd "$TARGET_DIRECTORY"
git init
git remote add origin -f "$REPO_URL"
git config core.sparseCheckout true

echo "$SOURCE_DIRECTORY" > .git/info/sparse-checkout
git pull --depth=1 origin master

if [ "$DEL_REPO" ]; then rm -rf .git; fi
1

degit makes copies of git repositories. When you run degit some-user/some-repo, it will find the latest commit on https://github.com/some-user/some-repo and download the associated tar file to ~/.degit/some-user/some-repo/commithash.tar.gz if it doesn't already exist locally. (This is much quicker than using git clone, because you're not downloading the entire git history.)

degit <https://github.com/user/repo/subdirectory> <output folder>

Find out more https://www.npmjs.com/package/degit

1

You can still use svn:

svn export https://[email protected]/home/admin/repos/finisht/static static --force

to "git clone" a subdirectory and then to "git pull" this subdirectory.

(It is not intended to commit & push.)

1

(extending this answer )

Cloning subdirectory in specific tag

If you want to clone a specific subdirectory of a specific tag you can follow the steps below.

I clone the distribution/src/main/release/samples/ subdirectory of cxf github repo in cxf-3.5.4 tag.

Note: if you attempt to just clone the above repo you will see that it is very big. The commands below clones only what is needed.

git clone --depth 1 --filter=blob:none --sparse https://github.com/apache/cxf
cd cxf/
git sparse-checkout set distribution/src/main/release/samples/
git fetch --depth 1 origin cxf-3.5.4
# This is the hash on which the tag points, however using the tag does not work.
git switch --detach 3ef4fde

Cloning subdirectory in specific branch

I clone the distribution/src/main/release/samples/ subdirectory of cxf github repo in 2.6.x-fixes branch.

git clone --depth 1 --filter=blob:none --sparse https://github.com/apache/cxf --branch 2.6.x-fixes
cd cxf/
git sparse-checkout set distribution/src/main/release/samples/
0
  • If you want to clone

    git clone --no-checkout <REPOSITORY_URL>
    cd <REPOSITORY_NAME>
    
    1. Now set the specific file / directory you wish to pull into the working-directory:
      git sparse-checkout set <PATH_TO_A_SPECIFIC_DIRECTORY_OR_FILE_TO_PULL>
      
    2. Afterwards, you should reset hard your working-directory to the commit you wish to pull.

      For example, we will reset it to the default origin/master's HEAD commit.

      git reset --hard HEAD
      
  • If you want to git init and then remote add

    git init
    git remote add origin <REPOSITORY_URL>
    
    1. Now set the specific file / directory you wish to pull into the working-directory:
      git sparse-checkout set <PATH_TO_A_SPECIFIC_DIRECTORY_OR_FILE_TO_PULL>
      
    2. Pull the last commit:
      git pull origin master
      

NOTE:

If you want to add another directory/file to your working-directory, you may do it like so:

git sparse-checkout add <PATH_TO_ANOTHER_SPECIFIC_DIRECTORY_OR_FILE_TO_PULL>

If you want to add all the repository to the working-directory, do it like so:

git sparse-checkout add *

If you want to empty the working-directory, do it like so:

git sparse-checkout set empty

If you want, you can view the status of the tracked files you have specified, by running:

git status

If you want to exit the sparse mode and clone all the repository, you should run:

git sparse-checkout set *
git sparse-checkout set init
git sparse-checkout set disable
0

I don't know if anyone succeeded pulling specific directory, here is my experience: git clone --filter=blob:none --single-branch <repo>, cancel immediately while downloading objects, enter repo, then git checkout origin/master <dir>, ignore errors (sha1), enter dir, repeat checkout (using new dir) for every sub-directory. I managed to quickly get source files in this way

0

For macOS users

For zsh users (macOS users, specifically) cloning Repos with ssh, I just create a zsh command based on the answer by @Ciro Santilli:

requirement: The version of git matters. It doesn't work on 2.25.1 because of the --sparse option. Try upgrade your git to the latest version. (e.g. tested 2.36.1)

example usage:

git clone [email protected]:google-research/google-research.git etcmodel

code:

function gitclone {
    readonly repo_root=${1?Usage: gitclone repo.git sub_dir}
    readonly repo_sub=${2?Usage: gitclone repo.git sub_dir}
    echo "-- Cloning $repo_root/$repo_sub"
    git clone \
      --depth 1 \
      --filter=tree:0 \
      --sparse \
      $repo_root \
    ;
    repo_folder=${repo_root#*/}
    repo_folder=${repo_folder%.*}
    cd $repo_folder
    git sparse-checkout set $repo_sub
    cd -
}


gitclone "$@"

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