Git clone will clone remote branch into local.
Is there any way to clone a specific branch by myself without switching branches on the remote repository?
git clone -b <branch> <remote_repo>
Example:
git clone -b my-branch [email protected]:user/myproject.git
With Git 1.7.10 and later, add --single-branch
to prevent fetching of all branches. Example, with OpenCV 2.4 branch:
git clone -b opencv-2.4 --single-branch https://github.com/Itseez/opencv.git
--single-branch
; git 2.5 is out at time of writing this. Don't care for older versions.
Aug 20, 2015 at 10:46
-b
option requires a separate --single-branch
flag? Does -b
alone clones all branches?
git clone --single-branch --branch <branchname> <remote-repo>
The --single-branch
option is valid from version 1.7.10 and later.
Please see also the other answer which many people prefer.
You may also want to make sure you understand the difference. And the difference is: by invoking git clone --branch <branchname> url
you're fetching all the branches and checking out one. That may, for instance, mean that your repository has a 5kB documentation or wiki branch and 5GB data branch. And whenever you want to edit your frontpage, you may end up cloning 5GB of data.
Again, that is not to say git clone --branch
is not the way to accomplish that, it's just that it's not always what you want to accomplish, when you're asking about cloning a specific branch.
git fetch
does not — it does not check out files, but that's not about the transfer.
Jul 16, 2020 at 13:07
--depth 1
so that you only get the latest. This can save a lot of downloading time.
Here is a really simple way to do it :)
Clone the repository
git clone <repository_url>
List all branches
git branch -a
Checkout the branch that you want
git checkout <name_of_branch>
To clone a branch without fetching other branches:
mkdir $BRANCH
cd $BRANCH
git init
git remote add -t $BRANCH -f origin $REMOTE_REPO
git checkout $BRANCH
remote add
and checkout
as here, then git remote rm origin
to clean up.)
Sep 3, 2014 at 1:45
-f
from the git remote command, then using git fetch --depth=1 $BRANCH $TAG
, then git checkout FETCH_HEAD
. The init is innocuous, and changing tags will automatically update the checked out code.
Use:
git checkout -b <branch-name> <origin/branch_name>
For example in my case:
git branch -a
* master
origin/HEAD
origin/enum-account-number
origin/master
origin/rel_table_play
origin/sugarfield_customer_number_show_c
So to create a new branch based on my enum-account-number branch, I do:
git checkout -b enum-account-number origin/enum-account-number
After you hit Return, the following happens:
Branch enum-account-number set up to track remote branch refs/remotes/origin/enum-account-number.
Switched to a new branch "enum-account-number"
git pull origin
first so that git branch -a
can list all new (current) remote branches.
Oct 12, 2012 at 4:13
git fetch
is better so that the auto merge doesn't happen, though.
Create a branch on the local system with that name. e.g. say you want to get the branch named branch-05142011
git branch branch-05142011 origin/branch-05142011
It'll give you a message:
$ git checkout --track origin/branch-05142011
Branch branch-05142011 set up to track remote branch refs/remotes/origin/branch-05142011.
Switched to a new branch "branch-05142011"
Now just checkout the branch like below and you have the code
git checkout branch-05142011
git fetch origin [remote-branch]:[new-local-branch]
, I love that!
Mar 9, 2012 at 5:49
git branch ue5-early-access origin/ue5-early-access
and it errors: "fatal: Not a valid object name: 'origin/ue5-early-access'.", any tip?
Aug 19, 2021 at 1:21