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The purpose is to destroy a remote. Say you are moving remote. You add the second remote to your local. Then push all refs to your new remote. After that, how do I clean my first remote of everything? As I am paranoid, I don't trust deleting the project will clear my data.

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This is how I have done it.

First add your new remote

git remote add gitlab gl:user/prj

Then push all your refs

git push --all --tags gitlab

Then remove your new remote so you don't destroy that one.

git remote remove gitlab

Then clear all remote branches

git branch -a | grep -o remotes/.* | cut -c 9- | awk -F / '{st = index($0,"/");print "git push " $1 " :" substr($0,st+1) }' | bash

have fun

PS: don't do this before leaving your job.

Update: To answer @matt's comment

Commits data will get garbage collected in 30 days or depending on repo settings. While the commits are still present in the meantime and another develop can push all the branches references back. This effectively delete all branch references.

My mission is accomplished

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    The problem is that you didn’t actually destroy any information. You didn’t “clear your data” at all. It’s all still there. So what’s the point. Your mission was not accomplished.
    – matt
    Feb 19, 2021 at 6:06
  • I appreciate you took the time to read and reply to my Q&A, thank you, @matt. I have updated my answer. Hopefully this clarifies it.
    – Mathieu J.
    Feb 20, 2021 at 6:05

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