How do I delete branches which have already been merged? Can I delete them all at once, instead of deleting each branch one-by-one?
51 Answers
NOTE: You can add other branches to exclude like master and dev if your workflow has those as a possible ancestor. Usually I branch off of a "sprint-start" tag and master, dev and qa are not ancestors.
First, list locally-tracking branches that were merged in remote (consider using -r
flag to list all remote-tracking branches).
git branch --merged
You might see few branches you don't want to remove. We can add few arguments to skip important branches that we don't want to delete like master or a develop. The following command will skip master branch and anything that has dev in it.
git branch --merged| grep -Ev "(^\*|master|main|dev)"
If you want to skip, you can add it to the egrep command like the following. The branch skip_branch_name
will not be deleted.
git branch --merged| grep -Ev "(^\*|master|main|dev|skip_branch_name)"
To delete all local branches that are already merged into the currently checked out branch:
git branch --merged | grep -Ev "(^\*|master|main|dev)" | xargs git branch -d
You can see that master and dev are excluded in case they are an ancestor.
You can delete a merged local branch with:
git branch -d branchname
If it's not merged, use:
git branch -D branchname
To delete it from the remote use:
git push --delete origin branchname
git push origin :branchname # for really old git
Once you delete the branch from the remote, you can prune to get rid of remote tracking branches with:
git remote prune origin
or prune individual remote tracking branches, as the other answer suggests, with:
git branch -dr branchname
-
82WARNING: If you just created a branch it will also delete that one. Make sure to not have a newly created branch in the list before you run the top most command. Commented May 24, 2013 at 14:01
-
228OPPOSITE OF WARNING: reflog will save your bacon. So don't worry. Commented Aug 20, 2014 at 1:05
-
41Keep in mind that the first command only deletes local branches, so it isn't as 'dangerous' as some have pointed out. Commented Sep 15, 2014 at 23:21
-
115PowerShell variant, so that I could find it here next time I googled the answer:
git branch --merged | %{$_.trim()} | ?{$_ -notmatch 'develop' -and $_ -notmatch 'master'} | %{git branch -d $_}
– vorouCommented Dec 20, 2015 at 8:12 -
35This produces an error
fatal: branch name required
if you have no branches that should be deleted. To avoid that you can pass-r
toxargs
so it won't rungit branch -d
if the stdin is empty. (This a GNU xargs extension, according to the man page). Commented Feb 9, 2016 at 14:40
To delete all branches on remote that are already merged:
git branch -r --merged | grep -v master | sed 's/origin\//:/' | xargs -n 1 git push origin
In more recent versions of Git
git branch -r --merged | grep -v master | sed 's/origin\///' | xargs -n 1 git push --delete origin
UPDATE (by @oliver; since does not fit in comment, but enough answers already): if you are on branch ABC then ABC will appear in the results of git branch -r --merged
because the branch is not specified, so branch defaults to current branch, and a branch always qualifies as merged to itself (because there are no differences between a branch and itself!).
So either specify the branch:
git branch -r --merged master | grep -v master ...
OR first checkout master:
git checkout master | git branch -r --merged | grep -v ...
-
22Best answer by far. Just a note, my master branch is named
dev
so I had to change that– DorianCommented Feb 13, 2014 at 21:33 -
46I had to add
| grep origin
aftergrep -v master
to prevent pushing branches of other remotes to origin. Highly recommending testing the output beforehand, usinggit branch -r --merged | grep -v master | grep origin | sed 's/origin\//:/' | xargs -n 1 echo
– L0LN1NJ4Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 8:06 -
10I slightly modified to exclude
develop
branch as well.git branch -r --merged | grep -v master | grep -v develop | sed 's/origin\///' | xargs -n 1 git push --delete origin
. Now this turned out to be my alias.– saratCommented Aug 15, 2015 at 12:19 -
9What made this the best answer I've read, is the
-r
argument, which I've not seen mentioned anywhere else. It's taken for granted that only local branches are worth doing some housekeeping on. But remotes are full of garbage too. Commented Nov 2, 2015 at 17:49 -
21Caution - just realized: this will obviously find branches merged to current branch, not master, so if you are on
myFeatureBranch
it will wipeorigin/myFeatureBranch
. Probably it's best togit checkout master
first.– jakub.gCommented Feb 5, 2016 at 14:40
Just extending Adam's answer a little bit:
Add this to your Git configuration by running git config -e --global
[alias]
cleanup = "!git branch --merged | grep -v '\\*\\|master\\|develop' | xargs -n 1 -r git branch -d"
And then you can delete all the local merged branches doing a simple git cleanup
.
-
15shouldn't the first command be:
git branch --merged master
since you want to look at what has been merged into master, not currently checked out branch? Commented Aug 12, 2016 at 16:23 -
@JoePhilllips Some people has the main branch not master but instead
develop
ordev
and in that case the command will fail withfatal: malformed object name
it's better to have a generic command and you have the responsibility to run it– smohamedCommented Aug 13, 2016 at 1:14 -
1@JoePhilllips the point of this answer is to package up Adam's answer (the top answer for this question) in helpful git alias. Adam's answer doesn't have what you are suggesting and so many people have found that useful so I would be inclined not to change mine. I would recommend opening the discussion on Adam's answer if you feel strongly about it– real_ateCommented Aug 16, 2016 at 7:39
-
20Adding
-r
toxargs
will prevent unnecessary errors (branch name required
) when running this alias multiple times or when there is no branch left to be deleted. My alias looks like this:cleanup = "!git branch --merged | grep -v -P '^\\*|master|develop' | xargs -n1 -r git branch -d"
Commented Jun 23, 2017 at 9:14 -
3Current command doesn't filter out master and develop branches Commented Mar 2, 2019 at 9:52
You'll want to exclude the master
, main
& develop
branches from those commands.
Local git clear:
git branch --merged | grep -v '\*\|master\|main\|develop' | xargs -n 1 git branch -d
Remote git clear:
git branch -r --merged | grep -v '\*\|master\|main\|develop' | sed 's/origin\///' | xargs -n 1 git push --delete origin
Sync local registry of remote branches:
git fetch -p
-
3+1 for the remote version as well (but less needed as we have remote --prune). Also worth noting that thoose won't work with older git version– malkoCommented Jun 11, 2015 at 8:09
-
7
git config --global --add fetch.prune true
to prune automatically on fetch or pull.– T3rm1Commented Dec 18, 2015 at 14:51 -
5Mind you, prune is not the same as the remote clear. The remote clear actually deletes the remote branches that are fully merged with your current branch. Prune only cleans up your local registry of remote branches that are already deleted. Commented Jan 5, 2017 at 14:07
-
The word fully is a bit misleading, as a branch will be considered merged, when it was merged before, but has new commits after the merge, which were not merged.– sconesCommented Jul 20, 2017 at 9:15
-
1To delete all the origin remotes in one call, I used this:
git branch -r --merged | grep -v '\*\|master\|develop' | grep '^\s*origin/' | sed 's/origin\///' | tr "\n" " " | xargs git push --delete origin
Commented Oct 3, 2018 at 13:51
This also works to delete all merged branches except master.
git branch --merged | grep -v '^* master$' | grep -v '^ master$' | grep -v '^* main$' | grep -v '^ main$' | xargs git branch -d
Edit: Also ignoring main branch as it's being used these days
-
4Now it won't delete any branch with
master
in it. Trygrep -v ^master$
for the middle.– wcharginCommented Oct 12, 2013 at 2:26 -
1I'd also let
| grep -v '^\*'
to avoid deletting current branch if you are not on master– svassrCommented Sep 8, 2014 at 19:06 -
5This is great, thanks! One caveat for anyone using this: note that there are two spaces in
grep -v '^ master$'
. If you type it in yourself and miss one, you'll deletemaster
if you're not on it.– stygerCommented Oct 23, 2014 at 20:51 -
4@Mr.Polywhirl your edit breaks the command and you should revert it. The two spaces are necessary, since
git branch
will list each branch name on a new line with two spaces to the left if it is not the currently checked out branch. You have essentially guaranteed that anyone who runs this command will delete their master branch unless it is the currently checked out branch.– stygerCommented Dec 8, 2015 at 21:49 -
1this is 2023, we need to exclude main branch too. it's the default for too many repos :)– PedroCommented Feb 2 at 11:10
For those of you that are on Windows and prefer PowerShell scripts, here is one that deletes local merged branches:
function Remove-MergedBranches
{
git branch --merged |
ForEach-Object { $_.Trim() } |
Where-Object { $_ -NotMatch "^\*" } |
Where-Object { -not ( $_ -Like "*master" -or $_ -Like "*main" ) } |
ForEach-Object { git branch -d $_ }
}
Or the short version:
git branch --merged | %{$_.trim()} | ?{$_ -notmatch 'dev' -and $_ -notmatch 'master' -and $_ -notmatch 'main'} | %{git branch -d $_.trim()}
-
18For curiosity sake, this can be shortened to
git branch --merged | ?{-not ($_ -like "*master")} | %{git branch -d $_.trim()}
Commented Oct 8, 2014 at 8:27 -
5@IainBallard Sure, I could have used aliases. That is not recommended when you want to maximize readability. github.com/darkoperator/PSStyleGuide/blob/master/English.md Commented Oct 8, 2014 at 11:36
-
2sure. I found your answer very helpful :-) However sometimes the long-form powershell syntax gets in the way of what's going on in the blocks. But primarily, I was putting forward something you might copy/paste or type as a one-off. Thanks again. Commented Oct 8, 2014 at 11:56
-
7Here's a one-liner for Windows cmd shell that preserves master and your current branch:
for /f "usebackq" %B in (``git branch --merged^|findstr /v /c:"* " /c:"master"``) do @git branch -d %B
(sigh, replace double-backquotes with single, I'm not sure how to format a literal that contains backquotes)– yoyoCommented Jan 16, 2017 at 23:37
I've used Adam's answer for years now. That said, that there are some cases where it wasn't behaving as I expected:
- branches that contained the word "master" were ignored, e.g. "notmaster" or "masterful", rather than only the master branch
- branches that contained the word "dev" were ignored, e.g. "dev-test", rather than only the dev branch
- deleting branches that are reachable from the HEAD of the current branch (that is, not necessarily master)
- in detached HEAD state, deleting every branch reachable from the current commit
1 & 2 were straightforward to address, with just a change to the regex.
3 depends on the context of what you want (i.e. only delete branches that haven't been merged into master or against your current branch).
4 has the potential to be disastrous (although recoverable with git reflog
), if you unintentionally ran this in detached HEAD state.
Finally, I wanted this to all be in a one-liner that didn't require a separate (Bash|Ruby|Python) script.
TL;DR
Create a git alias "sweep" that accepts an optional -f
flag:
git config --global alias.sweep '!git branch --merged $([[ $1 != "-f" ]] \
&& git rev-parse master) | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)" \
| xargs git branch -d'
and invoke it with:
git sweep
or:
git sweep -f
The long, detailed answer
It was easiest for me to create an example git repo with some branches and commits to test the correct behavior:
Create a new git repo with a single commit
mkdir sweep-test && cd sweep-test && git init
echo "hello" > hello
git add . && git commit -am "initial commit"
Create some new branches
git branch foo && git branch bar && git branch develop && git branch notmaster && git branch masterful
git branch --list
bar develop foo * master masterful notmaster
Desired behavior: select all merged branches except: master, develop or current
The original regex misses the branches "masterful" and "notmaster" :
git checkout foo
git branch --merged | egrep -v "(^\*|master|dev)"
bar
With the updated regex (which now excludes "develop" rather than "dev"):
git branch --merged | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)"
bar masterful notmaster
Switch to branch foo, make a new commit, then checkout a new branch, foobar, based on foo:
echo "foo" > foo
git add . && git commit -am "foo"
git checkout -b foobar
echo "foobar" > foobar
git add . && git commit -am "foobar"
My current branch is foobar, and if I re-run the above command to list the branches I want to delete, the branch "foo" is included even though it hasn't been merged into master:
git branch --merged | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)"
bar foo masterful notmaster
However, if I run the same command on master, the branch "foo" is not included:
git checkout master && git branch --merged | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)"
bar masterful notmaster
And this is simply because git branch --merged
defaults to the HEAD of the current branch if not otherwise specified. At least for my workflow, I don't want to delete local branches unless they've been merged to master, so I prefer the following variant using git rev-parse:
git checkout foobar
git branch --merged $(git rev-parse master) | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)"
bar masterful notmaster
Detached HEAD state
Relying on the default behavior of git branch --merged
has even more significant consequences in detached HEAD state:
git checkout foobar
git checkout HEAD~0
git branch --merged | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)"
bar foo foobar masterful notmaster
This would have deleted the branch I was just on, "foobar" along with "foo", which is almost certainly not the desired outcome. With our revised command, however:
git branch --merged $(git rev-parse master) | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)"
bar masterful notmaster
One line, including the actual delete
git branch --merged $(git rev-parse master) | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)" | xargs git branch -d
All wrapped up into a git alias "sweep":
git config --global alias.sweep '!git branch --merged $([[ $1 != "-f" ]] \
&& git rev-parse master) | egrep -v "(^\*|^\s*(master|develop)$)" \
| xargs git branch -d'
The alias accepts an optional -f
flag. The default behavior is to only delete branches that have been merged into master, but the -f
flag will delete branches that have been merged into the current branch.
git sweep
Deleted branch bar (was 9a56952). Deleted branch masterful (was 9a56952). Deleted branch notmaster (was 9a56952).
git sweep -f
Deleted branch foo (was 2cea1ab).
-
Why do you need to create a function? Isn't
git config
atomic? Commented Jun 8, 2019 at 15:40 -
To deal with the optional '-f' argument (if I understand your question correctly)– eddiesCommented Jun 9, 2019 at 5:04
-
1but how does it help? I mean the start of the expression,
!f(){ git branch ...
. It's a function declaration, right? Why not start directly withgit branch ...
? Commented Jun 9, 2019 at 7:47 -
1You're absolutely right. Edited my answer accordingly. Thanks for the pointer!– eddiesCommented Jun 10, 2019 at 14:56
-
Would the following not do the same as the non-force-mode?
git checkout master && git branch -d `git branch --merged` && git checkout -
Except that it would deletedevelop
, but might be a simpler approach. Commented Dec 11, 2019 at 16:29
So many bad answers here. This is what you probably want:
git branch --delete $(git branch --merged master --no-contains master --format='%(refname:short)')
This selects all local branches that have been merged into master
(including master
), and that aren't descendent of master
(which excludes master
itself). The --format
is necessary because by default Git prints asterisks for the currently checked out branches. You might be able to do this with git for-each-ref
too but it seems more complicated (it lists remote branches too).
You don't want:
git branch --merged
(withoutmaster
): This will list branches that have been "merged" into your currently checked out commit (i.e.HEAD
), which is probably unexpected and not what you want.| grep -v master
: There's no need for this; you can just use--no-contains
.| xargs
: Again, no need.git branch --delete
can delete more than one branch.
Update: I've been using this for a while and it works pretty well. There are two minor flaws:
If there are no branches to delete it will give you an error. That's fine for interactive use IMO. You shouldn't be using this in a script anyway since it's Bash and Bash should not be used for scripting.
It won't delete branches that point to the same commit as
master
. I have a tool that automatically rebases all my branches, and for ones that have been merged it can leave them in this state. This may not matter to you.
-
1Not tested but this looks clean (no pipes with grep and misc.). Thanks. Commented Apr 20, 2023 at 21:29
-
-
Yeah it gives you an error, but it's fairly benign because there was nothing to do anyway.– TimmmmCommented Jul 11, 2023 at 21:03
-
Much cleaner of a solution, I just think it wasn't necessary to outright call the other solutions as "so many bad answers here". Commented Sep 6, 2023 at 0:49
-
113 years later and still useful. I've been looking for a solution that works everywhere for a long time. This is it! works on Windows where you don't have egrep or xargs. It can easily be put into .gitconfig Commented Nov 27, 2023 at 15:24
Using Git version 2.5.0:
git branch -d `git branch --merged`
If you're on Windows you can use Windows Powershell or Powershell 7 with Out-GridView to have a nice list of branches and select with mouse which one you want to delete:
git branch --format "%(refname:short)" --merged | Out-GridView -PassThru | % { git branch -d $_ }
after clicking OK Powershell will pass this branches names to git branch -d
command and delete them
You can add the commit to the --merged option. This way you can make sure only to remove branches which are merged into i.e. the origin/master
Following command will remove merged branches from your origin.
git branch -r --merged origin/master | grep -v "^.*master" | sed s:origin/:: |xargs -n 1 git push origin --delete
You can test which branches will be removed replacing the git push origin --delete with echo
git branch -r --merged origin/master | grep -v "^.*master" | sed s:origin/:: |xargs -n 1 echo
-
3
My favorite and simple script:
git branch --merged | grep -E -v "(master|main|develop|other)" | xargs git branch -d
-
delete all but the selected ones
git branch | grep -E -v "(master|develop|other)" | xargs git branch -D
Commented Dec 13, 2021 at 12:32 -
Update to support 'main' branch which is often the default branch now days:
git branch --merged | grep -E -v "(master|main|develop|other)" | xargs git branch -d
– spuderCommented Nov 13, 2022 at 17:02 -
1
How to delete merged branches in PowerShell console
git branch --merged | %{git branch -d $_.Trim()}
If you want to exclude master or any other branch names, you can pipe with PowerShell Select-String like this and pass the result to git branch -d
:
git branch -d $(git branch --merged | Select-String -NotMatch "master" | %{$_.ToString().Trim()})
-
1Higher answers are suggesting filtering master or other branches. For those looking to do that in powershell: git branch --merged | findstr /v "master" | %{git branch -d $_.trim()}– aredzkoCommented Jul 28, 2015 at 15:03
-
@tredzko Good point. FTR the higher answer is stackoverflow.com/questions/6127328/… - you could repost your comment with that linked and I'd then delete this Commented Feb 23, 2016 at 11:40
-
I use the following Ruby script to delete my already merged local and remote branches. If I'm doing it for a repository with multiple remotes and only want to delete from one, I just add a select statement to the remotes list to only get the remotes I want.
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
current_branch = `git symbolic-ref --short HEAD`.chomp
if current_branch != "master"
if $?.exitstatus == 0
puts "WARNING: You are on branch #{current_branch}, NOT master."
else
puts "WARNING: You are not on a branch"
end
puts
end
puts "Fetching merged branches..."
remote_branches= `git branch -r --merged`.
split("\n").
map(&:strip).
reject {|b| b =~ /\/(#{current_branch}|master)/}
local_branches= `git branch --merged`.
gsub(/^\* /, '').
split("\n").
map(&:strip).
reject {|b| b =~ /(#{current_branch}|master)/}
if remote_branches.empty? && local_branches.empty?
puts "No existing branches have been merged into #{current_branch}."
else
puts "This will remove the following branches:"
puts remote_branches.join("\n")
puts local_branches.join("\n")
puts "Proceed?"
if gets =~ /^y/i
remote_branches.each do |b|
remote, branch = b.split(/\//)
`git push #{remote} :#{branch}`
end
# Remove local branches
`git branch -d #{local_branches.join(' ')}`
else
puts "No branches removed."
end
end
-
@mmrobins You have an extra
\/
at the beginning of the reject statement for theremote_branches
line. Is that a typo or does it serve a purpose?– JawwadCommented Jan 27, 2016 at 17:46 -
-
If you want to do basically this but via vanilla bash rather than ruby: stackoverflow.com/a/37999948/430128– RamanCommented Jun 23, 2016 at 19:14
Note: I am not happy with previous answers, (not working on all systems, not working on remote, not specifying the --merged branch, not filtering exactly). So, I add my own answer.
There are two main cases:
Local
You want to delete local branches that are already merged to another local branch. During the deletion, you want to keep some important branches, like master, develop, etc.
git branch --format "%(refname:short)" --merged master | grep -E -v '^master$|^feature/develop$' | xargs -n 1 git branch -d
Notes:
git branch output --format
".." is to strip whitespaces and allow exact grep matchinggrep -E
is used instead ofegrep
, so it works also in systems without egrep (i.e.: git for windows).grep -E -v '^master$|^feature/develop$'
is to specify local branches that I don't want to deletexargs -n 1 git branch -d
: perform the deletion of local branches (it won't work for remote ones)- of course you get an error if you try deleting the branch currently checked-out. So, I suggest to switch to master beforehand.
Remote
You want to delete remote branches that are already merged to another remote branch. During the deletion, you want to keep some important branches, like HEAD, master, releases, etc.
git branch -r --format "%(refname:short)" --merged origin/master | grep -E -v '^*HEAD$|^*/master$|^*release' | cut -d/ -f2- | xargs -n 1 git push --delete origin
Notes:
- for remote, we use the
-r
option and provide the full branch name:origin/master
grep -E -v '^*HEAD$|^*/master$|^*release'
is to match the remote branches that we don't want to delete.cut -d/ -f2-
: remove the unneeded 'origin/' prefix that otherwise is printed out by thegit branch
command.xargs -n 1 git push --delete origin
: perform the deletion of remote branches.
I use this:
git branch --delete $(git branch --format '%(refname:short)' --merged | grep --invert-match 'main\|master\|branch-to-skip')
It lists all merged branched in the specified format, then it feeds that list to git branch --delete.
kuboon's answer missed deleting branches which have the word master in the branch name. The following improves on his answer:
git branch -r --merged | grep -v "origin/master$" | sed 's/\s*origin\///' | xargs -n 1 git push --delete origin
Of course, it does not delete the "master" branch itself :)
There is no command in Git that will do this for you automatically. But you can write a script that uses Git commands to give you what you need. This could be done in many ways depending on what branching model you are using.
If you need to know if a branch has been merged into master the following command will yield no output if myTopicBranch has been merged (i.e. you can delete it)
$ git rev-list master | grep $(git rev-parse myTopicBranch)
You could use the Git branch command and parse out all branches in Bash and do a for
loop over all branches. In this loop you check with above command if you can delete the branch or not.
git branch --merged | grep -Ev '^(. master|\*)' | xargs -n 1 git branch -d
will delete all local branches except the current checked out branch and/or master
.
Here's a helpful article for those looking to understand these commands: Git Clean: Delete Already Merged Branches, by Steven Harman.
You can use git-del-br
tool.
git-del-br -a
You can install it via pip
using
pip install git-del-br
P.S: I am the author of the tool. Any suggestions/feedback are welcome.
-
1Your answer and tool don't work. I spend a couple hours on it. Nothing. Commented Nov 15, 2017 at 18:55
-
@SpoiledTechie.com: Can you tell me what problem are you facing exactly? I am using it on a regular basis. Commented Nov 16, 2017 at 9:53
I use a git-flow esque naming scheme, so this works very safely for me:
git branch --merged | grep -e "^\s\+\(fix\|feature\)/" | xargs git branch -d
It basically looks for merged commits that start with either string fix/
or feature/
.
The accepted solution is pretty good, but has the one issue that it also deletes local branches that were not yet merged into a remote.
If you look at the output of you will see something like
$ git branch --merged master -v
api_doc 3a05427 [gone] Start of describing the Java API
bla 52e080a Update wording.
branch-1.0 32f1a72 [maven-release-plugin] prepare release 1.0.1
initial_proposal 6e59fb0 [gone] Original proposal, converted to AsciiDoc.
issue_248 be2ba3c Skip unit-for-type checking. This needs more work. (#254)
master be2ba3c Skip unit-for-type checking. This needs more work. (#254)
Branches bla
and issue_248
are local branches that would be deleted silently.
But you can also see the word [gone]
, which indicate branches that had been pushed to a remote (which is now gone) and thus denote branches can be deleted.
The original answer can thus be changed to (split into multiline for shorter line length)
git branch --merged master -v | \
grep "\\[gone\\]" | \
sed -e 's/^..//' -e 's/\S* .*//' | \
xargs git branch -d
to protect the not yet merged branches. Also the grepping for master to protect it, is not needed, as this has a remote at origin and does not show up as gone.
On Windows with git bash installed egrep -v
will not work
git branch --merged | grep -E -v "(master|test|dev)" | xargs git branch -d
where grep -E -v
is equivalent of egrep -v
Use -d
to remove already merged branches or
-D
to remove unmerged branches
-
egrep -v works for me. I'm using gitbash from the gitextensions installer though Commented Jul 10, 2018 at 16:47
If you'd like to delete all local branches that are already merged in to the branch that you are currently on, then I've come up with a safe command to do so, based on earlier answers:
git branch --merged | grep -v \* | grep -v '^\s*master$' | xargs -t -n 1 git branch -d
This command will not affect your current branch or your master branch. It will also tell you what it's doing before it does it, using the -t flag of xargs.
Alias version of Adam's updated answer:
[alias]
branch-cleanup = "!git branch --merged | egrep -v \"(^\\*|master|dev)\" | xargs git branch -d #"
Also, see this answer for handy tips on escaping complex aliases.
Below query works for me
for branch in `git branch -r --merged | grep -v '\*\|master\|develop'|awk 'NR > 0 {print$1}'|awk '{gsub(/origin\//, "")}1'`;do git push origin --delete $branch; done
and this will filter any given branch in the grep pipe.
Works well over http clone, but not so well for the ssh connection.
Based on some of these answers I made my own Bash script to do it too!
It uses git branch --merged
and git branch -d
to delete the branches that have been merged and prompts you for each of the branches before deleting.
merged_branches () {
local current_branch=$(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)
for branch in $(git branch --merged | cut -c3-)
do
echo "Branch $branch is already merged into $current_branch."
echo "Would you like to delete it? [Y]es/[N]o "
read REPLY
if [[ $REPLY =~ ^[Yy] ]]; then
git branch -d $branch
fi
done
}
Try the following command:
git branch -d $(git branch --merged | grep -vw $(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD))
By using git rev-parse
will get the current branch name in order to exclude it. If you got the error, that means there are no local branches to remove.
To do the same with remote branches (change origin
with your remote name), try:
git push origin -vd $(git branch -r --merged | grep -vw $(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD) | cut -d/ -f2)
In case you've multiple remotes, add grep origin |
before cut
to filter only the origin
.
If above command fails, try to delete the merged remote-tracking branches first:
git branch -rd $(git branch -r --merged | grep -vw $(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD))
Then git fetch
the remote again and use the previous git push -vd
command again.
If you're using it often, consider adding as aliases into your ~/.gitconfig
file.
In case you've removed some branches by mistake, use git reflog
to find the lost commits.
As of 2018.07
Add this to [alias]
section of your ~/.gitconfig
:
sweep = !"f() { git branch --merged | egrep -v \"(^\\*|master|dev)\" || true | xargs git branch -d; }; f"
Now you can just call git sweep
to perform that needed cleanup.
-
For me, calling git sweep only lists the branches that should be cleaned up, but it does not remove them Commented Jul 5, 2018 at 20:26
git branch -D
deletes any branch whether it as been merged or not.master
each branch is. However, your local client will still list the old branches if you rungit branch -a
; usegit fetch --prune
to remove them (as per this answer ).git delete-merged --doit origin
orgit delete-merged --doit --local
rm -fr work && git clone http://example.com/work.git
over the years has become the easiest way to get out of a pickle with git.