791

After git init, I added and committed a few files, made some changes, added and committed. Set up the git daemon (running under Cygwin on WinXP) and cloned the repository once. Now, I get this error with the cloned repository:

$ git status
error: bad index file sha1 signature
fatal: index file corrupt

Is there any way to fix this, other than getting a new copy of the repository?

1
  • Is this in the cloned repository, or in the original repository? Did the clone command output any errors?
    – CB Bailey
    Jul 12, 2009 at 11:27

18 Answers 18

1652

If the problem is with the index as the staging area for commits (i.e. .git/index), you can simply remove the index (make a backup copy if you want), and then restore index to version in the last commit:

On OSX/Linux/Windows(With Git bash):

rm -f .git/index
git reset

On Windows (with CMD and not git bash):

del .git\index
git reset

(The reset command above is the same as git reset --mixed HEAD)

You can alternatively use lower level plumbing git read-tree instead of git reset.


If the problem is with index for packfile, you can recover it using git index-pack.

21
  • 31
    I accidentally did a :w! in a :Gstatus (from fugitive.vim). This answer saved me a lot of hair pulling. Feb 29, 2012 at 17:46
  • 6
    I know we don't like "me too" messages -- but "me too". Equivalent in Windows is erase /s .git\index, I needed a erase .git\index.lock too. Jun 15, 2012 at 7:23
  • 1
    Hi, I had the same problem with find and replace but git reset tells me there are two pack files in .git/objects/pack/ that can't be accessed. Do you have an idea ?
    – epsilones
    Jan 28, 2013 at 16:44
  • 14
    wouldn't it be safer to use git reset --keep instead? In the Tower Git Cheat Sheet it is explained as: Reset your HEAD pointer to a previous commit and preserve uncommitted local changes
    – Pjetr
    Jun 13, 2013 at 13:30
  • 15
    It didn't exist when I was writing this answer... Anyway git reset --keep is safer form of git reset --hard; git reset --mixed doesn't touch workdir at all. Jun 13, 2013 at 19:15
78

You may have accidentally corrupted the .git/index file with a sed on your project root (refactoring perhaps?) with something like:

sed -ri -e "s/$SEACHPATTERN/$REPLACEMENTTEXT/g" $(grep -Elr "$SEARCHPATERN" "$PROJECTROOT")

to avoid this in the future, just ignore binary files with your grep/sed:

sed -ri -e "s/$SEACHPATTERN/$REPLACEMENTTEXT/g" $(grep -Elr --binary-files=without-match "$SEARCHPATERN" "$PROJECTROOT")
5
  • 7
    If you don't mind losing changes in .git/index, you can always delete it and recreate with git reset (without --hard!). Mar 1, 2012 at 12:24
  • 2
    I broke it with # find ./ -type f -exec sed -i 's/Politician/Legislator/g' {} \; Doing what this answer recommends this would have not broken it in the first place, but the accepted answer repaired the damage that I did do. This is excellent prevention though. Mar 11, 2015 at 1:34
  • 1
    @RyanMortensen You could try inverting your sed with something like find .git/ -type f -exec sed -i 's/Legislator/Politician/g' {} \; This might help if your .git/ is so corrupted that git reset won't work. Or maybe you want to restore your existing .git/index without deleting it. This will fail, of course, if your original code or index already had some "Legislator"s in it.
    – hobs
    Feb 22, 2018 at 19:30
  • 2
    Thank you @hobs you saved me a lot of trouble - I solved it by inverting the sed by replacing my new_string with my old_string!
    – tsveti_iko
    Jul 11, 2018 at 8:20
  • 1
    I refactored my whole project instead of the 'src' folder in IntelliJ and had this problem. This explains why I had such strange errors!
    – Michael
    Jan 30, 2019 at 19:36
31

I had that problem, and I try ti fix with this:

rm -f .git/index
git reset

BUT it did not work. The solution? For some reason I had others .git folders in sub directories. I delete those .git folders (not the principal) and git reset again. Once they were deleted, everything worked again.

3
  • This answer really resolve problem if you have some .git folders in vendor/ (e.x.)
    – AlSan
    Dec 2, 2020 at 7:17
  • 'rm' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    – Dyno Cris
    Jun 9, 2021 at 23:30
  • @DynoCris im sure the rm command is for osx/linux... try the other answer above
    – AinulBedjo
    Feb 3 at 7:36
20

This sounds like a bad clone. You could try the following to get (possibly?) more information:

git fsck --full
17

Since the above solutions left me with continued problems, I used this dull solution:

  1. clone a new copy of the repo elsewhere
  2. copy the fresh .git directory into the (broken) repo that contained the changes I wanted to commit

Did the trick. Btw, I did a sed on the project root as @hobs guessed. Learned my lesson.

3
  • That's brilliant :) Feb 21, 2017 at 11:06
  • It's not really brilliant if you were in the middle of a merge, had created branches or had issued any commits since cloning, or any of a number of other scenarios... Cloning a new copy of the repo is hardly a solution and I daresay it smacks of impatience (best left when in a true pinch). It's much better to actually diagnose what's going on and repair the existing repo's index--that's usually relatively easy to do. Sometimes you can just rename the index file (or delete it, if you're sure you won't ever need it again) and let Git create a new one (using git-reset or git-checkout)..
    – Jazimov
    May 1, 2017 at 3:10
  • Only solution of all the suggestions that actually worked without major extra steps! Thanks.
    – vik
    Jun 25 at 7:17
16

This worked for me. Although i'm curious of the reason I started getting the errors in the first place. When I logged out yesterday, it was fine. Log in this morning, it wasn't.

rm .git/index

git reset
2
  • This worked for me, Although It removed all added files from git. I had to run git add for those files Oct 21, 2018 at 5:23
  • 'rm' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    – Dyno Cris
    Jun 9, 2021 at 23:30
8

Note for git submodule users - the solutions here will not work for you as-is.

Let's say you have a parent repository called dev, for example, and your submodule repository is called api.

if you are inside of api and you get the error mentioned in this question:

error: bad index file sha1 signature fatal: index file corrupt

The index file will NOT be inside of a .git folder. In fact, the .git won't even be a folder - it will will be a text document with the location of the real .git data for this repository. Likely something like this:

~/dev/api $ cat .git gitdir: ../.git/modules/api

So, instead of rm -f .git/index, you will need to do this:

rm -f ../.git/modules/api/index git reset

or, more generally,

rm -f ../.git/modules/INSERT_YOUR_REPO_NAME_HERE/index git reset

5

This issue can occur when there is a .git directory underneath one of the subdirectories. To fix it, check if there are other .git directories there, and remove them and try again.

1
  • 1
    Several other answers have already provided this information. Mar 26, 2018 at 19:49
2

This issue is occoured due to changes in git file or brach. Then you need to run this command on your cmd.

  1. del .git\index
  2. git reset --hard

After run 2 commands your Git Repo is working well

1

None of the existing answers worked for me.

I was using worktrees, so there is no .git folder.

You'll need to go back to your main repo. Inside that, delete .git/worktrees/<name_of_tree>/index

Then run git reset as per other answers.

1

Cloning remote repo and replacing the .git folder from it to problematic local directory solved the issue.

1

I committed my changes and suddenly my laptop went off due to battery issue and then I got this fatal index corrupt error and Desktop github couldn't locate this git repo. So I ran below mentioned commands using git-bash and everything went back fine.

rm -f .git/index
git reset
0

A repo may seem corrupted if you mix different git versions.

Local repositories touched by new git versions aren't backwards-compatible with old git versions. New git repos look corrupted to old git versions (in my case git 2.28 broke repo for git 2.11).

Updating old git version may solve the problem.

0

On Windows PowerShell, it should be

rm -Force .git/index
git reset
0

I had the same error and attempted to fix it as described in the accepted answer. However, immediately after resetting my index in .git/index it became corrupted again.

The problem was, that I was using git bisect yesterday to find a bug, but forgot to run git bisect reset to clean up afterwards at the end of the day. Today as I started making changes git got confused, as it was still in bisect mode and I was attempting to apply changes. I also couldn't just run git bisect reset, because there were already changes.

To fix this problem run the following in the git bash in your root directory:

git stash -m <message>
git bisect reset        # You are now most likely in detached head mode
git checkout <branch>
git stash apply         # If you have multiple stashes, make sure 
                          to apply the correct one

Note that there is no need to remove .git/index and reset the index in this case!

-2

I did a simple trick. I clone the repo to a new folder. Copied the .git folder from the new folder to repo's old folder, replacing .git there.

4
  • Very dangerous because it will delete data like unpublished commits, tags and branches as well as stashes and the reflog.
    – Koraktor
    May 28, 2020 at 7:42
  • Not sure about unpublished commits as I believe they are stored in .git folder and I copied .git folder. I didn't lose anything with this method. I don't know about stashes and reflog to make any comments on that. May 30, 2020 at 21:20
  • You‘re correct, but maybe you should emphasize that you did a local clone. But my comment ist still true for stashes and reflog.
    – Koraktor
    May 31, 2020 at 9:15
  • Okay, I don't have any experience on that comment anything further, however, it worked for me and some users might find it useful. There no need to downvote it. Jun 2, 2020 at 2:56
-4
rm -f .git/index
git reset

More info at https://www.chris-shaw.com/blog/quick-fix-for-git-corrupt-index

1
  • Several other answers have already provided this information. Mar 26, 2018 at 19:49
-9

You can also try for restore to previous version of the file (if you are using windows os)

1
  • 1
    Don't put answer you don't know. May 9, 2016 at 7:27

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