I have a testcase shell script.
I have a bloated repository, call it "oldrepo", that I'm trying to refactor. The repository contains several directories of large files that I'm not interested in keeping. I want them completely removed from history. I know how to remove specific files using filter-branch, but I don't know how to remove everything EXCEPT for a specific directory or set of directories without going through and removing every file individually.
I thought I could fool git into doing this by creating a new repo and only merging the files that I want to keep:
mkdir newrepo
git init; touch README; git add .; git commit -m "initial"
git remote add oldrepo /path/to/oldrepo
git merge -s ours --no-commit
git read-tree --prefix=subdir1 -u
git commit -m "merged subdir1"
git remote rm oldrepo
git prune --verbose
Unfortunately, the prune command prunes nothing. I was hoping that it would prune every object that had never been a child of SUBDIR1-TREE. Is there a way to remove all history outside of a directory without individually removing each offending file?