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I want to remove all version tracking from a project's directory.

What is the correct method to do this?

Can I do a shell command such as:

rm -rf .git

from my projects directory or is there a way to do this as a Git command?

I used this project to learn Git and realize I made some mistakes early on in the project with moved, renamed and deleted files. I'd like to remove all Git tracking and start fresh with git init.

3
  • 1
    Consider git-archive. Jan 21, 2011 at 0:19
  • 2
    Depending on how bad the mistakes were, you might actually want to do an interactive rebase of the whole thing and just squash together a ton of commits early on, but save more recent good history.
    – Cascabel
    Jan 21, 2011 at 0:21
  • 12
    for windows users: rd /s /q .git
    – Soorena
    May 24, 2017 at 19:50

13 Answers 13

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+200

All the data Git uses for information is stored in .git/, so removing it should work just fine. Of course, make sure that your working copy is in the exact state that you want it, because everything else will be lost. .git folder is hidden so make sure you turn on the "Show hidden files, folders and disks" option.

From there, you can run git init to create a fresh repository.

4
  • 1
    I am certain that my subfolders do not have their own hidden .git directory, but I still get the greyed out icon when pushing those folders to github... is there anything else I can try?
    – Kokodoko
    May 11, 2016 at 11:10
  • 1
    There is also .gitconfig, so you should also remove it. Apr 26, 2019 at 16:43
  • 1
    consider 'code'git rm -r --cached your_folder/ my goal was to turn a tracked git folder into a child folder of another tracked git folder. The new parent wouldn't recognize the new child until I removed the cache of the child folder. Sep 30, 2019 at 3:29
  • I wish all other stuff could be as easily removed as deleting a single directory. Usually you end up with trash all over the place from the "deleted" part.
    – Chapz
    Feb 18, 2022 at 19:45
576

rm -rf .git should suffice. That will blow away all Git-related information.

9
  • 1
    If you get some cannot unlink Permission denied in windows, you can kill explorer process in task manager, rerun the rm -rf .git and reopen explorer after that. it works for me!
    – Michael
    Apr 8, 2016 at 12:58
  • 11
    If you have Git Bash on windows, it will also work.
    – viral
    Jun 24, 2016 at 6:34
  • 2
    what does -rf mean?
    – nilon
    Feb 8, 2017 at 22:26
  • 25
    -r means "recursive", so it will delete the entire contents of the folder instead of erroring out because the folder isn't empty, and -f makes it not ask if you're really sure about deleting stuff. Feb 10, 2017 at 0:04
  • 1
    @Lucky_girl It will remove all Git state from your checkout. No branches, no history, no remotes, nothing at all. All of that stuff is stored in the .git directory. Without it, you literally don't have a git repository anymore. May 6, 2020 at 21:35
165

In addition to the steps below, you may want to also remove the .gitignore file.

  • Consider removing the .gitignore file if you want to remove any trace of Git in your project.

  • ** Consider leaving the .gitignore file if you would ever want reincorporate Git into the project.

Some frameworks may automatically produce the .gitignore file so you may want to leave it.


Linux, Mac, or Unix based operating systems

Open a terminal and navigate to the directory of your project, i.e. - cd path_to_your_project.

Run this command:

rm -rf .git*

This will remove the Git tracking and metadata from your project. If you want to keep the metadata (such as .gitignore and .gitkeep), you can delete only the tracking by running rm -rf .git.


Windows

Using the command prompt

The rmdir or rd command will not delete/remove any hidden files or folders within the directory you specify, so you should use the del command to be sure that all files are removed from the .git folder.

  1. Open the command prompt

    1. Either click Start then Run or hit the Windows key key and r at the same time.

    2. Type cmd and hit enter

  2. Navigate to the project directory, i.e. - cd path_to_your_project

  1. Run these commands

    1. del /F /S /Q /A .git

    2. rmdir .git

The first command removes all files and folder within the .git folder. The second removes the .git folder itself.

No command prompt

  1. Open the file explorer and navigate to your project

  2. Show hidden files and folders - refer to this article for a visual guide

    1. In the view menu on the toolbar, select Options

    2. In the Advanced Settings section, find Hidden files and Folders under the Files and Folders list and select Show hidden files and folders

  3. Close the options menu and you should see all hidden folders and files including the .git folder.

    Delete the .git folder Delete the .gitignore file ** (see note at the top of this answer)

4
  • 1
    rmdir .git doesn't work because there are folders under it.
    – Dale
    Apr 8, 2019 at 21:44
  • Dale, check out the line under rmdir .git. It explains that the command above rmdir .git is used to remove all files and folders within the .git folder, before the rmdir command removes the folder itself.
    – Matt C
    Apr 10, 2019 at 6:59
  • 2
    you might as well do rd /s /q .git, which will blow away the folder and everything in it
    – Greg
    Aug 28, 2019 at 0:59
  • For windows, rmdir /S .git got the job done. Thanks for this. Apr 23, 2020 at 14:49
77

It's not a clever choice to move all .git* by hand, particularly when these .git files are hidden in sub-folders just like my condition: when I installed Skeleton Zend 2 by composer+git, there are quite a number of .git files created in folders and sub-folders.

I tried rm -rf .git on my GitHub shell, but the shell can not recognize the parameter -rf of Remove-Item.

www.montanaflynn.me introduces the following shell command to remove all .git files one time, recursively! It's really working!

find . | grep "\.git/" | xargs rm -rf
5
  • 5
    "I tried 'rm -rf .git' on my Github shell, but the shell can not recognize the parameter '-rf' of Remove-Item." - that's because rm is a PowerShell alias for remove-item. And -rf is *nix shell rm arguments. For PowerShell, use rm -recursive -force instead.
    – KFL
    Nov 1, 2015 at 6:09
  • 17
    DANGEROUS! grep .git would match files like legit.gif or anithing with "git" in the middle of the filename! Please remove or edit the answer!!!
    – pamatt
    Oct 6, 2016 at 18:51
  • 4
    Update to match only on git dirs: find . | grep "\.git/"
    – Andrew
    Jan 5, 2017 at 17:04
  • 3
    Still not safe enough: this will catch files and directories that end with .git. It should be grep "^\.git/"; even better (and faster) would be to filter by name in find invocation: find . -name .git.
    – pvgoran
    Dec 9, 2017 at 4:39
  • 1
    Do execute following commands: find -name .git | xargs rm -rf and find -name .gitignore | xargs rm -rf. Mar 21, 2018 at 6:39
20

I am working with a Linux environment. I removed all Git files and folders in a recursive way:

rm -rf .git

rm -rf .gitkeep
18

The easiest way to solve this problem is to use a command line. Type this command

rm -R .git/

OR

rm -rf .git/
14

In a Windows environment you can remove Git tracking from a project's directory by simply typing the below.

rd .git /S/Q
0
12

MacOS: To remove version tracking, you need to remove Git directories. For that, open terminal and enter your project file. After that, you need to remove Git directories.

Example:

enter image description here

Shortly write in terminal (-r: recursive, -f: force, star is start with .git directories):

rm -rf .git* 

Result is that Git directories and version tracking removed.

enter image description here

9

From root folder run

find . | grep .git

Review the matches and confirm it only contains those files you want to delete and adjust to suit. Once satisfied, run

find . | grep .git | xargs rm -rf

0
3

Windows Command Prompt (cmd) User: Use the below option If "rm -r" is NOT available.

You could delete '.git' recursively inside the source project folder using a single line command.

FOR /F "tokens=*" %G IN ('DIR /B /AD /S *.git*') DO RMDIR /S /Q "%G"
1

You can also remove all the git related stuff using one command. The .gitignore file will also be deleted with this one.

rm -rf .git*
-1

I tried everything for removing version tracking for windows in Powershell but nothing worked. However, when I tried this:

 rm -force .git*

It worked. Hope it helps you.

1
  • 1
    This has already been mentioned in previous answers
    – klutt
    Aug 10, 2022 at 10:43
-1

I have found this super easy even for rails new projects so that I can have a new git history and branching as I want and customize.

rm -rf .git
1
  • This command has already been mentioned many times in the other answers.
    – Eric Aya
    Dec 7, 2022 at 23:29

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