22

How do I remove all of a certain type of file from the Repository? I'm using

git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm -rf --cached **/*.jar'

Either git is not expanding globs, or it isn't expanding ** in the way I'm expecting.

2
  • Do you want to remove them from the index or form the repo? filter-branch will "clean" your repo
    – CodeWizard
    Aug 10, 2016 at 20:24
  • @CodeWizard You're right, I had misstated the question! Mar 23, 2018 at 18:45

5 Answers 5

26

You simply have to run this in order to remove all your jars from the index:

git rm -r --cached **/*.jar

Run this command from your root directory of the project and it will clean up and will remove all your file only from the staging area.

2
  • 1
    What expands **? Bash (or some other shell) or git? Since index-filter doesn't check out the code, bash expansion is not helpful here. Aug 11, 2016 at 16:23
  • 1
    If I understand properly, ** is not necessary there because in git, * matches path separators :-o. (see pathspec under git help glossary.) Aug 12, 2016 at 15:03
24

With Git 2.24 (Q4 2019), git filter-branch is deprecated.

The equivalent would be, using newren/git-filter-repo, and its example section:

cd repo
git filter-repo --path-glob '*.jar' --invert-paths

That will remove any jar file from the repository history.

14

The easiest way I've found is to use the BFG Repo-Cleaner

The instructions on the project page are clear. The command you would use is something like:

bfg --delete-files "*.jar"  my-repo.git

BFG will clean the history of the repo of all files ending in the .jar extension. You can then inspect the result before pushing it back to the server.

3
  • 1
    on a 700G .git folder, BFG barfs with org.eclipse.jgit.errors.LargeObjectException: baa7b692c1a57f577770b6eefab3e8eb16e10d54 exceeds size limit Feb 18, 2020 at 2:47
  • @zumalifeguard have you tried this?: --massive-non-file-objects-sized-up-to <size> increase memory usage to handle over-size Commits, Tags, and Trees that are up to X in size (eg '10M')
    – hoijui
    Apr 28, 2020 at 6:14
  • It may be of interest that bfg is available for mac via brew (brew install bfg) and WinX via choco (choco install bfg-repo-cleaner).
    – User51
    Mar 24, 2021 at 0:38
10
git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm -rf --cached **/*.jar'

should work, but it's a bit silly because git globs (*) match path separators. So, **/*.jar is equivalent to *.jar.

This also means that */a*.jar matches dir1/abc/dir2/log4j.jar. If you want to match something like **/a*.jar (all jars whose name starts with a in any directory), you should use find. Here's a command to remove any jars whose names start with a or b, and any jars in dir1/dir2, and any .txt file in any directory:

git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm -rf --cached "*.txt" "dir1/dir2/*.jar" $(find -type f -name "a*.jar" -o -name "b*.jar")'

References: pathspec section of git help glossary.

2

Although it's not a git command, but for those who are interested in how to accomplish that on linux machine, you can use

git ls-files | grep "\.sh$" | { while IFS= read -r line; do git rm --cached "$line"; done }

Here we list all of files in git index and forward that output to grep command to filter only .sh files and than for each file we perform git rm --cached <file>.

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