I would like to know how I could clone only one branch instead of cloning the whole Git repository.
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3What a couple others pointed out is very true: unless there are large files committed to some branches and never to others, this isn't actually going to make much of any difference. – Cascabel Jan 27 '11 at 6:35
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3@Jefromi: It really makes difference when you clone it.. See this link: stackoverflow.com/questions/14682245/… – Amol M Kulkarni Feb 4 '13 at 8:04
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6@AmolMKulkarni Like I said two years ago, only if some branches contain a lot of data that others don't. The question you linked to doesn't actually say that just one branch is smaller - if all of that enormous size is just in the common history of all branches, cloning one branch will be just as big. – Cascabel Feb 4 '13 at 8:25
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2This also makes a difference when certain recipients are intended only to see certain branches and their histories. – Old McStopher Aug 10 '14 at 9:30
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2Super complete answer by VonC here : stackoverflow.com/a/9920956/1579667 – Benj Apr 26 '16 at 8:46
From the announcement Git 1.7.10 (April 2012):
git clone
learned--single-branch
option to limit cloning to a single branch (surprise!); tags that do not point into the history of the branch are not fetched.
Git actually allows you to clone only one branch, for example:
git clone -b mybranch --single-branch git://sub.domain.com/repo.git
Note: Also you can add another single branch or "undo" this action.
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5Thank you,! If --single-branch gives you an error just remove that and keep the -b :) – Braunson Mar 8 '13 at 17:20
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22@Brauson if you just put -b then you clone all the branches, and after it checkout that branch. This is not the result expected. So I recommend you, if it is possible update git to lastest (or >=1.7.10) and the command wouldn't give a error. – shakaran Mar 9 '13 at 1:23
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5Anyone know how to clone two branches - or add another single branch to the single branch cloned repo? – Billy Moon Sep 26 '13 at 10:55
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1Just a tidbit, if you are seeing any access related problems use https URL instead of git@ URL(i.e ssh URL) – phoenix Nov 18 '14 at 20:07
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@BillyMoon did you find an answer to cloning only a set of branches (not just one and not all)? please share if you did – thesummersign Apr 27 '15 at 9:59
You could create a new repo with
git init
and then use
git fetch url-to-repo branchname:refs/remotes/origin/branchname
to fetch just that one branch into a local remote-tracking branch.
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3Did you replace "branchname" with the name of the branch you want? – Lily Ballard Jan 26 '11 at 23:53
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1@Xcode: If you do this, you might want to do
git remote add origin <url>
, so that you'll get a remote just as if you'd cloned. (You could then go edit the refspec in .git/config to avoid fetching it all.) – Cascabel Jan 27 '11 at 6:34 -
3Using git fetch directly will not add a remote. I just used: git init ; git remote add origin git@github.com:... ; git fetch origin <branch>:refs/remotes/origin/<branch> ; git checkout <branch> – Eric Darchis Feb 28 '12 at 14:49
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1@hugemeow: You could use
git pull
, but the question was how to clone one branch.git pull
will also merge that branch into your local branch, which may or may not be desired. And ifgit remote -v
has no output, then I guess you have no remotes. – Lily Ballard Oct 17 '12 at 20:22 -
1It maybe worth pointing out that you have to replace both instances of "branchname" with the actual name of your branch. – infiniteloop Apr 24 '14 at 5:07
“--single-branch” switch is your answer, but it only works if you have git version 1.8.X onwards, first check
#git --version
If you already have git version 1.8.X installed then simply use "-b branch and --single branch" to clone a single branch
#git clone -b branch --single-branch git://github/repository.git
By default in Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.10 and Debian 7 the default git installation is for version 1.7.x only, where --single-branch is an unknown switch. In that case you need to install newer git first from a non-default ppa as below.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:pdoes/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install git
git --version
Once 1.8.X is installed now simply do:
git clone -b branch --single-branch git://github/repository.git
Git will now only download a single branch from the server.
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3+1 for quick instructions of how to update git in older versions of Debian distributions. – Dielson Sales Oct 29 '13 at 19:10
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Small addition: To get the add-apt-repository command, install the software-properties-common package, I also had to install python-software-properties. (I know this is an old answer but it's still relevant; at least it was for me!). – Graftak Feb 26 '18 at 8:40
I have done with below single git command:
git clone [url] -b [branch-name] --single-branch