53

I have a git repo in /foo/bar/baz with a large commit history and multiple branches.

I now want /foo/qux to be in the same repo as /foo/bar/baz, which means that I need them both to be in a repo rooted at /foo. However, I want to preserve history of changes that I've made to /foo/bar/baz.

I first thought of git format-patch followed by apply, but commit messages aren't preserved.

So,

I need to reroot the repo

(1) to an arbitrarily higher ancestor directory (2) while preserving my commit history by making it look like I've been comitting to /foo/bar/baz all along

9
  • Thanks guys, I'm working through your suggestions now. I can't move /foo/baz, but the other two seem promising.
    – masonk
    Jul 9, 2010 at 15:22
  • 1
    I do not believe this question is a duplicate, as there are actually 4 different questions and answers detailed by these two questions: 1a. How do I move my git repo down one directory? 1b. How do I move my git repo down one directory and make it look like it was always that way? 2a. How do I move my git repo up one directory? 2b. How do I move my git repo up one directory and make it look like it was always that way? The answer to 1a and 2a are basically the same, but 1b and 2b are entirely different, yielding 3 different valuable answers.
    – TTT
    Feb 8, 2019 at 20:50
  • As pointed out by the OP and others, the labelling of this question having answers elsewhere is incorrect; the question linked-to, is in fact the reversal of this one. Moreover, the accepted answer given here is both unique and superior to any that can be found there or at other candidates.
    – cueedee
    Feb 24, 2020 at 7:58
  • I voted to reopen
    – masonk
    Feb 24, 2020 at 19:31
  • 1
    @DanielW: Your way would work, if I am at liberty to restructure the file layouts. In the OP that wasn't an option.
    – masonk
    Feb 26, 2020 at 21:37

8 Answers 8

25

What you want is git filter-branch, which can move a whole repository into a subtree, preserving history by making it look as if it's always been that way. Back up your repository before using this!

Here's the magic. In /foo/bar, run:

git filter-branch --commit-filter '
    TREE="$1";
    shift;
    SUBTREE=`echo -e 040000 tree $TREE"\tbar" | git mktree`
    git commit-tree $SUBTREE "$@"' -- --all

That will make the /foo/bar repository have another 'bar' subdirectory with all its contents throughout its whole history. Then you can move the entire repo up to the foo level and add baz code to it.

Update:

Okay, here's what's going on. A commit is a link to a "tree" (think of it as a SHA representing a whole filesystem subdirectory's contents) plus some "parent" SHA's and some metadata link author/message/etc. The git commit-tree command is the low-level bit that wraps all this together. The parameter to --commit-filter gets treated as a shell function and run in place of git commit-tree during the filter process, and has to act like it.

What I'm doing is taking the first parameter, the original tree to commit, and building a new "tree object" that says it's in a subfolder via git mktree, another low-level git command. To do that, I have to pipe into it something that looks like a git tree i.e. a set of (mode SP type SP SHA TAB filename) lines; thus the echo command. The output of mktree is then substituted for the first parameter when I chain to the real commit-tree; "$@" is a way to pass all the other parameters intact, having stripped the first off with shift. See git help mktree and git help commit-tree for info.

So, if you need multiple levels, you have to nest a few extra levels of tree objects (this isn't tested but is the general idea):

git filter-branch --commit-filter '
    TREE="$1"
    shift
    SUBTREE1=`echo -e 040000 tree $TREE"\tbar" | git mktree`
    SUBTREE2=`echo -e 040000 tree $SUBTREE1"\tb" | git mktree`
    SUBTREE3=`echo -e 040000 tree $SUBTREE2"\ta" | git mktree`
    git commit-tree $SUBTREE3 "$@"' -- --all

That should shift the real contents down into a/b/bar (note the reversed order).

Update: Integrated improvements From Matthew Alpert's answer below. Without -- --all this only works on the currently-checked out branch, but since the question is asking about a whole repo, it makes more sense to do it this way than branch-by-branch.

12
  • Hi, I ran into a snag by oversimplifying the situation. The repo I want to move to /foo is not /foo/bar; it is actually /foo/a/b/bar. I think the basic idea behind your approach still works, but I can't rewrite a nested path: git filter-branch --commit-filter ' TREE="$1"; shift; SUBTREE=echo -e 040000 tree $TREE"\ta/b/bar" | git mktree git commit-tree $SUBTREE "$@"' Rewrite 27814f8d447ca9a4b61ed17a33912bee41e2e00e (1/68)fatal: path a/b/bar contains slash Also, I can't figure out what your script does...could you explain? Thanks for your help so far.
    – masonk
    Jul 13, 2010 at 15:58
  • I figured it out. Nope, nevermind, I didn't figure it out.
    – masonk
    Jul 13, 2010 at 16:02
  • 1
    Okay, I've added a section explaining what's going on, and providing a way to do what you really want, more or less. Jul 13, 2010 at 17:01
  • 2
    Should use /bin/echo else echo -e may not work. And maybe also --tag-name-filter cat to avoid "WARNING: You said to rewrite tagged commits, but not the corresponding tag."? Sep 11, 2014 at 14:28
  • 2
    On MacOSX, I firstly had to download the gnu coreutils (I used homebrew) and then I replaced echo -e with /usr/local/bin/gecho -e to remove the input format error message — and then this works great.
    – Screenack
    Dec 8, 2014 at 19:21
16

Rather than create a new repository, move what's in your current repository into the right place: create a new directory bar in your current directory and move the current content in (so your code is in /foo/bar/bar). Then create a baz directory next to your new bar directory (/foo/bar/baz). mv /foo /foo2; mv /foo2/bar /foo; rmdir /foo2 and you're done :).

Git's rename tracking means that your history will still work and Git's hashing of content means that even though you've moved things around, you're still referencing the same objects in the repository.

5
  • 1
    I can't move things at will. I initialized my repo in the wrong place, but the file hierarchy is correct as it is. Thank you for suggest though.
    – masonk
    Jul 13, 2010 at 16:11
  • 1
    I'm not suggesting that the end result look any different than you start with, just that moving things around as an intermediate step might help you get what you need. Sorry if my answer wasn't very clear on that. Note that the filter-branch answer also winds up with the repository that should be in /foo being in /foo/bar and needing to be moved. Jul 13, 2010 at 21:58
  • I can’t easily follow your description, could you somehow reformat it? It’s rather dense and hard to see what you are doing exactly.
    – Profpatsch
    Jul 4, 2013 at 21:49
  • Where does foo2 come from?
    – Profpatsch
    Jul 4, 2013 at 21:56
  • 3
    Oh, I got it. Maybe doing a graphic would simplify the process. I think it’s not half as hacky as the accepted answer, since it doesn’t involve the risk of screwing up the internals of your whole repository.
    – Profpatsch
    Jul 4, 2013 at 22:02
8

This specifically answers "how do I move my git repo up one or more directories and make it look like it was always that way?"

With the advent of git >= 2.22.0 git filter-repo can be leveraged to rewrite history to appear as if that parent directory had always been part of it.

This is the same thing that @Walter-Mundt's answer accomplishes using git filter-branch, but is simpler and not as fragile to execute.

Note that these days git filter-repo is advertised by git filter-branch itself as the safer alternative.


So, given that your repo lives in /foo/bar/baz and you want to move it up to /foo

First, to prevent any changes to the files in the workspace while history is being rewritten, temporarily turn the repository into a so-called "bare" one like this:

cd /foo/bar/baz
git config --local --bool core.bare true

The actual history rewriting can now be done directly in the .git directory itself:

cd ./.git
git filter-repo --path-rename :bar/baz/

This will rewrite the repo's complete history as if every path has always had bar/baz/ prepended to it (which they would have had, had the repo's root been two levels up). The actual files are untouched by this operation because this is a bare repository now.

To wrap up, turn it un-bare again, move the .git directory up to its designated position, and reset:

git config --local --bool core.bare false
cd ..
mv ./.git ../..
cd ../..
git reset

I think, the git reset cancels the after-effects of the repository having been turned bare and back again. Try a git status before doing git reset to see what I mean.

A final git status should now prove that all is well, modulo some new untracked files in /foo/qux to deal with.

CAVEAT - if you try the above on an un-cloned repository, git filter-repo will refuse to do its magic unless you --force it to... Have a backup at the ready and consider yourself warned.

0
6

I had a solution no one seems to have said yet:

What I specifically needed was to include files from the parent directory in my repository (effectively moving the repo up one directory).

I achieved this via:

  • move all files (except for .git) into a new subdirectory with the same name. And tell git about it (with git mv)
  • move all files from the parent directory into the now empty (except for .git/) current directory and tell git about it (with git add)
  • commit the whole thing into the repo, which hasn't moved (git commit).
  • move the current directory up one level in the directory hierarchy. (with command line jiggery-pokery)

I hope this helps the next guy to come along -- I'm probably just having a brainless day, but I found the answers above over-elaborate and scary (for what I needed.) I know this is similar to Andrew Aylett's answer above, but my situation seemed a little different and I wanted a more general view.

9
  • 1
    Sheesh. It's a lot easier to just move the .git directory up one directory, and commit -a on that. I have got to stop being afraid of git!
    – Jon Carter
    Aug 28, 2013 at 20:18
  • 2
    I can't believe it was that simple--thank you for this! Also--be careful w/your .gitignore. Folder paths in that are also relative & the first time I tried this I wound up missing a dir I wanted b/c it was listed in .gitignore.
    – Roy Pardee
    May 12, 2014 at 16:11
  • 1
    This is better than the accepted answer. Should have more up votes for this. Sep 6, 2015 at 8:16
  • 2
    It's been a while since I did this, and my first comment came after I realized an easier way to do almost the same thing. Try this: Just move the .git folder up one directory, and then tell git about everything with git add . and git commit. You could, indeed, move the directory using a gui window, and exactly how you do the git stuff depends on how you're using git. The commands I give are how you'd do it from a terminal window (probably Git Bash, if you're using Windows.)
    – Jon Carter
    Apr 2, 2016 at 0:21
  • 1
    Oh, and @Vic, as Roy says, if you have ignored files or anything else in your .gitignore, you should keep an eye on what you're committing to make sure it's correct. You'd probably need to change your .gitignore entries (just prefixing them with the new directory) in that case.
    – Jon Carter
    Apr 2, 2016 at 0:24
6

Most common solution

In most normal situations, git looks at all files relatively to its location (meaning the .git directory), as opposed to using absolute file paths.

Thus, if you don't mind having a commit in your history which shows that you have moved everything up, there is a very simple solution, which consists in moving the git directory. The only slightly tricky thing is to make sure git understands that the files are the same and that they only moved relatively to him :

# Create sub-directory with the same name in /foo/bar
mkdir bar

# Move everything down, notifying git :
git mv file1 file2 file3 bar/

# Then move everything up one level :
mv .git ../.git
mv bar/* .
mv .gitignore ../

# Here, take care to move untracked files

# Then delete unused directory
rmdir bar

# and commit
cd ../
git commit

The only thing to be careful, is to correctly update .gitignore when moving to the new directory, to avoid staging unwanted files, or forgetting some.

Bonus solution

In some settings, git manages to figure out by itself that files have been moved when it sees new files that are exactly the same as deleted files. In that case, the solution is even simpler :

mv .git ../.git
mv .gitignore ../.gitignore

cd ../
git commit

Again, be careful with your .gitignore

1
  • I did that with success to add a second part of an application, thanks
    – bcag2
    Jul 25, 2019 at 7:56
5

This adds to Walter Mundt's accepted answer. I would have rather commented on his answer, but I don't have the reputation.

So Walter Mundt's method works great, but it works only for one branch at a time. And after the first branch, there may be warnings that require -f to force the action through. So to do this for all branches at once, simply add "-- --all" to the end:

git filter-branch --commit-filter '
    tree="$1";
    shift;
    subtree=`echo -e 040000 tree $tree"\tsrc" | git mktree`
    git commit-tree $subtree "$@"' -- --all

And to do this for specific branches, add their names to the end instead, although I can't imagine why you would change the directory structure of only some of the branches.

Read more about this in the man page for git filter-branch. However, please notice the warning about possible difficulties pushing after using such a command. Just make sure you know what you're doing.

I'd appreciate more input on any potential problems with this method.

1
  • 3
    This one best worked for me. However my bash (Ubuntu Server 12.04) wouldn't parse echo -e parameter properly (I got fatal: "... input format error: -e 040000 tree ..."), so I've created alias echo='echo -e' and removed parameter from the command to get it to work.
    – tishma
    Jan 25, 2014 at 14:45
2

1 addition to the accepted answer, which helped me get it to work: when I put the listed text in a shell script, for some reason the -e was kept. (quite likely because I am too thick to work with shell scripts)

when I removed the -e , and moved the quotes to encompass everything, it worked. SUBTREE2=echo "040000 tree $SUBTREE1 modules" | git mktree

note that there is a tab between $SUBTREE1 and modules , which is the same \t that -e should interpret.

2
  • 2
    You could use /bin/echo instead of echo and keep the -e Sep 11, 2014 at 14:23
  • 1
    To elaborate on Julien's comment here, the echo command is often, in various shells, implemented as a builtin. Depending on how it's implemented, the options may work differently. As Julien recommended, it's possible to skip the issue of which echo you're using by calling /bin/echo, which is a standalone executable with standard behavior that is not dependent on any particulars of whatever shell the user may be running.
    – Jon Carter
    Oct 8, 2015 at 15:47
0

You could create a git repo in foo and reference both baz and bar through git submodules.

Then both bar and baz coexist with their full history preserved.


If you really want only one repo (foo), with both bar and baz history in it, then some grafts technique or subtree merge strategy are in order.

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