2194

Is there a simple way to delete all tracking branches whose remote equivalent no longer exists?

Example:

Branches (local and remote)

  • master
  • origin/master
  • origin/bug-fix-a
  • origin/bug-fix-b
  • origin/bug-fix-c

Locally, I only have a master branch. Now I need to work on bug-fix-a, so I check it out, work on it, and push changes to the remote. Next I do the same with bug-fix-b.

Branches (local and remote)

  • master
  • bug-fix-a
  • bug-fix-b
  • origin/master
  • origin/bug-fix-a
  • origin/bug-fix-b
  • origin/bug-fix-c

Now I have local branches master, bug-fix-a, bug-fix-b. The Master branch maintainer will merge my changes into master and delete all branches he has already merged.

So the current state is now:

Branches (local and remote)

  • master
  • bug-fix-a
  • bug-fix-b
  • origin/master
  • origin/bug-fix-c

Now I would like to call some command to delete branches (in this case bug-fix-a, bug-fix-b), which are no longer represented in the remote repository.

It would be something like the existing command git remote prune origin, but more like git local prune origin.

2
  • 19
    Why do majority of answers answer: "Delete branches that have been merged", when the question is specifically for "branches no longer on remote". This is a pretty big difference.
    – pijemcolu
    Nov 29, 2021 at 11:42
  • @pijemcolu because the remote branch may be deleted, not only merged
    – VinhNT
    Sep 9, 2022 at 7:22

50 Answers 50

2142

git remote prune origin prunes tracking branches not on the remote.

git branch --merged lists branches that have been merged into the current branch.

xargs git branch -d deletes branches listed on standard input.

Be careful deleting branches listed by git branch --merged. The list could include master or other branches you'd prefer not to delete.

To give yourself the opportunity to edit the list before deleting branches, you could do the following in one line:

git branch --merged >/tmp/merged-branches && \
  vi /tmp/merged-branches && xargs git branch -d </tmp/merged-branches
24
  • 28
    The first line of the merged branches is * master on my system. The following command worked for me: git branch -d $(git branch --merged |tail -n +2) Jun 3, 2015 at 16:31
  • 130
    If I'm on develop then git branch --merged includes master! You probably (definitely!) don't want to delete that. Also I think it should be git branch -d where lowercase -d means "safe delete" e.g. only delete if merged.
    – thom_nic
    Jun 9, 2015 at 14:33
  • 17
    It seems an improved solution is provided there. Mar 24, 2016 at 9:58
  • 63
    Removed merged is useful, but not the same as "remove branches not on remote."
    – dlsso
    Jul 15, 2016 at 19:12
  • 28
    Just use grep to exclude master: git branch --merged | grep -v "master" >/tmp/merged-branches && vi /tmp/merged-branches && xargs git branch -d </tmp/merged-branches
    – geniass
    Feb 27, 2018 at 12:42
1283

The safest way to do this is to use the "plumbing" command git for-each-ref with the interpolation variable %(upstream:track), which will be [gone] when the branch is no longer on the remote:

git fetch -p && for branch in $(git for-each-ref --format '%(refname) %(upstream:track)' refs/heads | awk '$2 == "[gone]" {sub("refs/heads/", "", $1); print $1}'); do git branch -D $branch; done

This approach is somewhat safer than using the "porcelain" command, because there is no risk of accidentally matching on part of the commit message. Here is a version using the "porcelain" git commands:

git fetch -p && for branch in $(git branch -vv | grep ': gone]' | awk '{print $1}'); do git branch -D $branch; done

The way this works is that after the command

git fetch -p

removes the remote references, when you run

git branch -vv

it will show 'gone' as the remote status. For example,

$ git branch -vv
  master                 b900de9 [origin/master: behind 4] Fixed bug
  release/v3.8           fdd2f4e [origin/release/v3.8: behind 2] Fixed bug
  release/v3.9           0d680d0 [origin/release/v3.9: behind 2] Updated comments
  bug/1234               57379e4 [origin/bug/1234: gone] Fixed bug

This is what the scripts iterate over.

26
  • 9
    @KrzysztofWende - not on Solaris and some BSDs and some OS X :)
    – jww
    Jun 11, 2016 at 23:21
  • 9
    It looks like this will also remove any branch that has "gone" in the last commit message.
    – dlsso
    Jul 15, 2016 at 19:23
  • 19
    @dlsso If the last commit message contains the string ": gone]" then yes it will be removed as well. You can make it more robust at the expense of simplicity by having an additional awk/gawk to strip off the commit message. git branch -vv | gawk '{print $1,$4}' | grep 'gone]' | gawk '{print $1}' Jul 18, 2016 at 14:22
  • 4
    In reply to my previous comment (question), the current branch has * as the first field. If it happens to also be in the list of "gone" branches, $1 will be assigned * and will be interpreted as a filespec with awk spitting out file and folder names. I eliminated the grep expression and had awk do all of the filtering: awk '/: gone]/{if ($1!="*") print $1}'. This now works as expected.
    – rhaben
    Aug 23, 2016 at 17:29
  • 7
    @ahmedbhs since the command uses single quote ' you need to use double quote " to surround the entire command. Also, git aliases that are shell commands (like this one) require ! at the beginning. This works for me: test = "!git fetch -p && for branch in `git branch -vv | grep ': gone]' | awk '{print $1}'`; do git branch -D $branch; done" May 24, 2018 at 17:40
525

Most of these answers do not actually answer the original question. I did a bunch of digging and this was the cleanest solution I found. Here is a slightly more thorough version of that answer:

  1. Check out your default branch. Usually git checkout master
  2. Run git fetch -p && git branch -vv | awk '/: gone]/{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d

Explanation:

Works by pruning your tracking branches then deleting the local ones that show they are "gone" in git branch -vv.

Notes:

If your language is set to something other than English you will need to change gone to the appropriate word. Branches that are local only will not be touched. Branches that have been deleted on remote but were not merged will show a notification but not be deleted on local. If you want to delete those as well change -d to -D.

20
  • 8
    should add LANG=en_US before git branch to force english : git fetch --prune && LANG=en_US git branch -vv | awk '/: gone]/{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d Jul 12, 2017 at 4:55
  • 4
    I'd add git checkout master && ... at the beginning of the command.
    – iarroyo
    Nov 2, 2017 at 15:15
  • 9
    This is dangerous when you're on a branch that's supposed to be deleted - in that case the first column is '*', which is then passed to xargs. To improve this, add strip the '*' character before passing the output to awk: sed -e 's/^*//'
    – meeee
    Jan 19, 2018 at 9:15
  • 38
    Careful! There is an edge case that will result in deleting all your local branches: If you are currently on a branch that was deleted on remote the output of git branch -vv will start with an asterisk which will in the end result in executing git branch -d *. Here is a patched version which will ignore lines with asterisk: git branch -vv | grep ': gone]'| grep -v "\*" | awk '{ print $1; }' | xargs -r git branch -d
    – kcm
    Sep 25, 2018 at 8:45
  • 3
    @disso your default branch could be deleted on remote too. I wouldn't rely on that. As soon as an asterisk appears in the branch list, all your local branches will get deleted.
    – kcm
    Sep 25, 2018 at 16:02
471

I wouldn't normally answer a question that already has 16 answers, but all the other answers are wrong, and the right answer is so simple. The question says, "Is there a simple way to delete all tracking branches whose remote equivalent no longer exists?"

If "simple" means deleting them all in one go, not fragile, not dangerous, and without reliance on tools that not all readers will have, then the right answer is: no.

Some answers are simple, but they don't do what was asked. Others do what was asked, but are not simple: all rely on parsing Git output through text-manipulation commands or scripting languages, which may not be present on every system. On top of that, most of the suggestions use porcelain commands, whose output is not designed to be parsed by script ("porcelain" refers to the commands intended for human operation; scripts should use the lower-level "plumbing" commands).

Further reading:


If you want to do this safely, for the use case in the question (garbage-collect tracking branches which have been deleted on the server but still exist as local branches) and with high-level Git commands only, you have to

  1. git fetch --prune (or git fetch -p, which is an alias, or git remote prune origin which does the same thing without fetching, and is probably not what you want most of the time).
  2. Note any remote branches that are reported as deleted. Or, to find them later on, git branch -v (any orphaned tracking branch will be marked "[gone]").
  3. git branch -d [branch_name] on each orphaned tracking branch

(which is what some of the other answers propose).

If you want to script a solution, then for-each-ref is your starting point, as in Mark Longair's answer here and this answer to another question, but I can't see a way to exploit it without writing a shell script loop, or using xargs or something.


Background explanation

To understand what's happening, you need to appreciate that, in the situation of tracking branches, you have not one branch, but three. (And recall that "branch" means simply a pointer to a commit.)

Given a tracking branch feature/X, the remote repository (server) will have this branch and call it feature/X. Your local repository has a branch remotes/origin/feature/X which means, "This is what the remote told me its feature/X branch was, last time we talked," and finally, the local repository has a branch feature/X which points to your latest commit, and is configured to "track" remotes/origin/feature/X, meaning that you can pull and push to keep them aligned.

At some point, someone has deleted the feature/X on the remote. From that moment, you are left with your local feature/X (which you probably don't want any more, since work on feature X is presumably finished), and your remotes/origin/feature/X which is certainly useless because its only purpose was to remember the state of the server's branch.

And Git will let you automatically clean up the redundant remotes/origin/feature/X -- that's what git fetch --prune does -- but for some reason, it doesn't let you automatically delete your own feature/X... even though your feature/X still contains the orphaned tracking information, so it has the information to identify former tracking branches that have been fully merged. (After all, it can give you the information that lets you do the operation by hand yourself.)

15
  • 6
    This is a much safer answer. In addition, it will work if you use a "Squash and Merge" workflow, unlike the selected answer. May 22, 2018 at 13:33
  • 10
    This really only answers the easy part of the question "how to find gone branches" (and that with the same command as already posted by jason.rickman in 2015) but then tells you to delete all the branches manually which is exactly what the OP doesn't want to do.
    – Voo
    Nov 27, 2018 at 9:37
  • 16
    @Voo That's the point of the answer: not to tell you how to do it (that's just a bonus) but to tell you that the answer is that there is no easy, simple way to do it. Which is the correct answer to the question as it was formulated. Nov 27, 2018 at 13:12
  • 9
    @user2864740 Some readers may consider that writing a small bash script falls within their definition of "simple", and that's a perfectly defensible position, but I gave my own interpretation of "simple" in the 2nd paragraph and the rest of the answer is consistent with it. And in defense of my admittedly restrictive interpretation, not all Git users have xargs or bash, and they probably aren't here looking for a micro-coding challenge, so much as a quick answer they can apply safely without distracting themselves further from their real goal. Jun 14, 2019 at 9:51
  • 16
    I think using Git the answer to the question "is there a simple way to..." is pretty much always no.
    – Neutrino
    Oct 14, 2020 at 12:06
120

Windows Solution

For Microsoft Windows Powershell:

git checkout master; git remote update origin --prune; git branch -vv | Select-String -Pattern ": gone]" | % { $_.toString().Trim().Split(" ")[0]} | % {git branch -d $_}

Explaination

git checkout master switches to the master branch

git remote update origin --prune prunes remote branches

git branch -vv gets a verbose output of all branches (git reference)

Select-String -Pattern ": gone]" gets only the records where they have been removed from remote.

% { $_.toString().Trim().Split(" ")[0]} get the branch name

% {git branch -d $_} deletes the branch

4
  • 4
    Thanks for this, though I had to add a .Trim() after .toString() in order to remove two spaces before the branch name.
    – Matthew
    Apr 12, 2018 at 15:42
  • 6
    Thanks for this command. I had to change the git branch -d to git branch -D else I get the error the branch is not fully merged.
    – markieo
    May 23, 2019 at 7:51
  • 5
    @markieo You probably know this already, but for anyone else - git branch -D is destructive and will delete local work that you have not yet pushed. -d is always safe, just be careful with -D. Oct 24, 2019 at 22:20
  • In case anyone wants to create an alias for this I was able to get it working through powershell with the following: [alias] clean-local = "!powershell -Command 'git checkout master; git remote update origin --prune; git branch -vv | Select-String -Pattern \": gone]\" | % { $_.toString().Trim().Split(\" \")[0]} | % {git branch -d $_}'" Jan 31, 2023 at 16:56
72

I found the answer here: How can I delete all git branches which have been merged?

git branch --merged | grep -v "\*" | xargs -n 1 git branch -d

Make sure we keep master

You can ensure that master, or any other branch for that matter, doesn't get removed by adding another grep after the first one. In that case you would go:

git branch --merged | grep -v "\*" | grep -v "YOUR_BRANCH_TO_KEEP" | xargs -n 1 git branch -d

So if we wanted to keep master, develop and staging for instance, we would go:

git branch --merged | grep -v "\*" | grep -v "master" | grep -v "develop" | grep -v "staging" | xargs -n 1 git branch -d

Make this an alias

Since it's a bit long, you might want to add an alias to your .zshrc or .bashrc. Mine is called gbpurge (for git branches purge):

alias gbpurge='git branch --merged | grep -v "\*" | grep -v "master" | grep -v "develop" | grep -v "staging" | xargs -n 1 git branch -d'

Then reload your .bashrc or .zshrc:

. ~/.bashrc

or

. ~/.zshrc
4
  • 12
    Useful, but not the same as "remove branches not on remote"
    – dlsso
    Nov 7, 2016 at 21:18
  • Greate answer @karlingen, I have this permanently as gbpurge across all my dev environments Mar 30, 2018 at 18:51
  • How is this off-topic answer (a clunky one, at that) upvoted that much? Nov 9, 2023 at 8:43
  • @RomainValeri That's a good question. This was answered 8 years ago. Don't remember why I posted this answer, but I sure was thinking the same way that all the upvoters were thinking when they read the question :)
    – karlingen
    Dec 6, 2023 at 14:46
69

TL;DR:

Remove ALL local branches that are not on remote

git fetch -p && git branch -vv | grep ': gone]' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -D

Remove ALL local branches that are not on remote AND that are fully merged AND that are not used as said in many answers before.

git fetch -p && git branch --merged | grep -v '*' | grep -v 'master' | xargs git branch -d

Explanation

  • git fetch -p will prune all branches no longer existing on remote
  • git branch -vv will print local branches and pruned branch will be tagged with gone
  • grep ': gone]' selects only branch that are gone
  • awk '{print $1}' filter the output to display only the name of the branches
  • xargs git branch -D will loop over all lines (branches) and force remove this branch

Why git branch -D and not git branch -d else you will have for branches that are not fully merged.

error: The branch 'xxx' is not fully merged.
2
  • 1
    did you want to say remote instead of master?
    – tinos
    Feb 12, 2020 at 9:01
  • Use Git Bash on window for above commands to work!
    – Qamar
    Apr 7, 2023 at 6:39
57

You could do this:

git branch -vv | grep 'origin/.*: gone]' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d

P.S.: as pointed out by Sam H.

execute this first:

git remote prune origin
2
  • 4
    don't you have to run git remote prune origin first?
    – Sam H.
    Aug 20, 2020 at 19:24
  • 2
    Also pass xargs git branch -D (capital D) if you want to force a deletion
    – Jay Sidri
    Nov 30, 2021 at 23:41
48

The pattern matching for "gone" in most of the other solutions was a little scary for me. To be safer, this uses the --format flag to pull out each branch's upstream tracking status.

I needed a Windows-friendly version, so this deletes all branches that are listed as "gone" using Powershell:

git branch --list --format "%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)" | 
    ? { $_ -ne "" } | 
    % { git branch -D $_ }

The first line lists the name of local branches whose upstream branch is "gone". The next line removes blank lines (which are output for branches that aren't "gone"), then the branch name is passed to the command to delete the branch.

5
  • 8
    The --format option seems to be fairly new; I needed to upgrade git from 2.10.something to 2.16.3 to get it. This is my modification for Linux-ish systems: git branch --list --format "%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname)%(end)" | sed 's,^refs/heads/,,' | grep . | xargs git branch -D
    – bxm
    Mar 27, 2018 at 15:01
  • 3
    This is the best solution so far. One suggestion is to use refname:short. Then you can delete the line % { $_ -replace '^refs/heads/', '' }
    – ioudas
    Jul 18, 2018 at 5:06
  • 5
    This is a great solution for windows. I am using it like this cause it is more readable git branch --list --format "%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)" | where { $_ -ne "" } | foreach { git branch -d $_ } Also probably a good idea to use -d instead of -D. Force delete should not be necessary for branches that are no longer on remote. Sep 4, 2019 at 8:14
  • 1
    While obvious to some of us, probably worth mentioning that you should be running "git remote update origin --prune" first.
    – MattyMatt
    Sep 18, 2020 at 17:10
  • slight improvement to this answer is to remove the empty responses in the format you can use ` --omit-empty` Nov 5, 2023 at 14:57
47

Yet another answer, because none of the solutions suit my needs on elegance and cross-platformness:

Command to delete local branches not on remote:

for b in $(git for-each-ref --format='%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)' refs/heads); do git branch -d $b; done

To integrate it with gitconfig so it can be run with git branch-prune:

Bash

git config --global alias.branch-prune '!git fetch -p && for b in $(git for-each-ref --format='\''%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)'\'' refs/heads); do git branch -d $b; done'

PowerShell

git config --global alias.branch-prune '!git fetch -p && for b in $(git for-each-ref --format=''%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)'' refs/heads); do git branch -d $b; done'

(Need help in finding a universal command for PowerShell and bash)

Why this answer is the best?

  • Offers a complete solution: adds a git branch-prune command to your git
  • Works fine from Windows PowerShell
  • The core idea is @jason.rickman's bulletproof method using git for-each-ref
  • Parsing and filtering is done with --filter so no external dependencies needed

Explanation:

  • Adds a new alias to your ~\.gitconfig. After executing this you can simply do git branch-prune
  • Inside this alias:
    • Fetches branches with the --prune flag, which "prunes remote-tracking branches no longer on remote"
    • Uses git for-each-ref and --filter, to get a list of the branches are [gone] (no remote)
    • Loops through this list and deletes the branch safely
8
  • @jerry-wu and your last edit of git config command does not work in PowerShell ((
    – Himura
    Apr 21, 2020 at 11:00
  • Does this also remove local branches not yet pushed to remote? (a.k.a Work in Progress) Oct 7, 2020 at 16:08
  • 1
    The short answer is NO. If a branch is not merged, the git branch -d branch-name command used here will not remove it. It will send a notification that the branch is not merged, and show the command to delete it anyway (which is git branch -D branch-name)
    – Himura
    Oct 8, 2020 at 20:49
  • For me this does report errors that the branch is not merged, even if the branch indeed is fully merged and was deleted from remote after the merge. error: The branch 'feature/...' is not fully merged. - Any suggestions?
    – LukeSolar
    Nov 3, 2020 at 9:21
  • check git log --graph --all ? Try git branch -d feature/... manually?
    – Himura
    Nov 9, 2020 at 15:02
45
git fetch -p

This will prune any branches that no longer exist on the remote.

3
  • 113
    this removes remote references, but not the local branches themselves. While a useful command, I don't think this answers OP's question.
    – thataustin
    Nov 14, 2014 at 21:32
  • 3
    What? This deletes local branches for me.
    – Alex Hall
    Aug 5, 2018 at 13:33
  • 2
    @AlexHall The remote repository has a branch X; you git checkout X; now your repository has a (local) tracking branch X and a remote branch origin/X; the remote repository deletes X; you git fetch-p; in your local repository, not only origin/X but also X have been deleted. Is that what you're saying? Aug 17, 2018 at 8:49
41

Remove all branches that have been merged into master, but don't try to remove master itself:

git checkout master && git pull origin master && git fetch -p && git branch -d $(git branch --merged | grep master -v)

or add an alias:

alias gitcleanlocal="git checkout master && git pull origin master && git fetch -p && git branch -d $(git branch --merged | grep master -v)"

Explanation:

git checkout master checkout master branch

git pull origin master ensure local branch has all remote changes merged

git fetch -p remove references to remote branches that have been deleted

git branch -d $(git branch master --merged | grep master -v) delete all branches that have been merged into master, but don't try to remove master itself

3
  • 4
    One note, this is very helpful but it will also remove those branches that never have been pushed to the remote. It is safer to only list differences and then copy what you really want to delete into git branch -D command
    – Zefiryn
    Dec 12, 2014 at 7:41
  • Just to clarify, Zefiryn is referring to using the -D option which is not part of the one-liner.
    – cs01
    Dec 12, 2014 at 18:22
  • 2
    Or juse the lowercase git branch -d which should issue a warning about not pushed branches.
    – acme
    Apr 27, 2016 at 11:41
30

While the above answers cover how to prune branches manually, this answer adds automation to solve this. git now has a new setting to prune stale branches that are no longer on the remote for every fetch action. This is great because we no longer have to manually call remote prune every time we delete branches (git pull also calls git fetch).

Enable prune behaviour for every fetch

To enable this in the global config:

git config --global fetch.prune true

Making the thing happen automatically means you can forget to add this setting on new machines. It just works.

Enable prune behaviour for every fetch on specific remotes

git config --global remote.<name>.prune true

Local automated pruning

We can apply the same command for local pruning as well without the --global flag.

.gitconfig

The commands above apply to the global and local .gitconfig as follows:

...
[fetch]
    prune = true

I can recommend adding this to an ansible configuration or to your dotfiles repository (.gitconfig) to automate the setup for the future.

The configuration setting calls the below command on every fetch:

git remote prune <remote name>

Summary

To prune references as part of your normal workflow without needing to remember to run that, set fetch.prune globally or remote.<name>.prune per-remote in the config. See git-config.

1
  • 2
    Doesn't seem to work for me. Executed the global setting (it's also in my .gitconfig), merged branch on github followed by git fetch + git pull. The branch still exists on my local.
    – kev
    Feb 21, 2022 at 3:19
20

Yet-another-answer for the pile, drawing heavily from Patrick's answer (which I like because it seems to do away with any ambiguity about where gone] will match in the git branch output) but adding a *nix bent.

In its simplest form:

git branch --list --format \
  "%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)" \
  | xargs git branch -D

I have this wrapped up in a git-gone script on my path:

#!/usr/bin/env bash

action() {
  ${DELETE} && xargs git branch -D || cat
}

get_gone() {
  git branch --list --format \
    "%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname:short)%(end)"
}

main() {
  DELETE=false
  while [ $# -gt 0 ] ; do
    case "${1}" in
      (-[dD] | --delete) DELETE=true ;;
    esac
    shift
  done
  get_gone | action
}

main "${@}"

NB - The --format option seems to be fairly new; I needed to upgrade git from 2.10.something to 2.16.3 to get it.

EDIT: tweaked to include suggestion about refname:short from Benjamin W.

NB2 - I've only tested in bash, hence the hashbang, but probably portable to sh.

7
  • Can't you skip the sed part by using %(refname:short) in the first line? May 1, 2019 at 22:31
  • Seems to work for me, and I have it as a neat Git alias now – cleanest solution of all of them here! May 1, 2019 at 22:38
  • 2.13 introduced --format. Another way to skip the sed part is to use git update-ref -d. Note that this is probably somewhat unsafe, using git for-each-ref is safer here (given --shell).
    – gsnedders
    May 23, 2019 at 0:22
  • Great answer, and it's helped me answer my own questions when floundering with --format to do this myself. Just one question: why the #!bash? Everything here looks like portable sh to me. Mar 6, 2020 at 11:52
  • That's just my normal boilerplate, and hadn't tested elsewhere.
    – bxm
    Mar 6, 2020 at 12:25
18

You can use this:

git fetch --prune

then

git branch -vv | egrep -v "([origin/[a-zA-Z0-9/_-]+])" | awk "{print $1}" | xargs git branch -D

It removes all the local branches that are not linked to the remote

and I personally added an alias that does it for me 🙃

alias gbs='git fetch --prune; git branch -vv | egrep -v "(\[origin\/[a-zA-Z0-9/_-]+\])" | awk "{print \$1}" | xargs git branch -D'
1
  • 1
    As this is the top answer, I went for this method first. I found this to be somewhat fragile as it depends on how git decides to format the branches. I've had some strange behaviour occurring, probably because I was running an older version of git on Ubuntu 18.04 and it formatted the git branches in a different way than what egrep was expecting. I would suggest using git for-each-ref instead to make sure that the branch formatting is consistent across all git versions.
    – 9a3eedi
    Dec 21, 2022 at 4:02
16

This will delete all the merged local branched except local master reference and the one currently being used:

git branch --merged | grep -v "*" | grep -v "master" | xargs git branch -d

And this will delete all the branches having already been removed from the remote repository referenced by "origin", but are still locally available in "remotes/origin".

git remote prune origin
1
  • 1
    git branch -vv | grep 'gone]' | grep -v "\*" | awk '{print $1}' | xargs -r git branch -d Explanation: I prefer replacing the git branch --merged by git branch -vv to show the status (gone) because the previous git branch --merged can show also the master
    – jpmottin
    Jan 8, 2019 at 9:10
16

I don't think there is a built-in command to do this, but it is safe to do the following:

git checkout master
git branch -d bug-fix-a

When you use -d, git will refuse to delete the branch unless it is completely merged into HEAD or its upstream remote-tracking branch. So, you could always loop over the output of git for-each-ref and try to delete each branch. The problem with that approach is that I suspect that you probably don't want bug-fix-d to be deleted just because origin/bug-fix-d contains its history. Instead, you could create a script something like the following:

#!/bin/sh

git checkout master &&
for r in $(git for-each-ref refs/heads --format='%(refname:short)')
do
  if [ x$(git merge-base master "$r") = x$(git rev-parse --verify "$r") ]
  then
    if [ "$r" != "master" ]
    then
      git branch -d "$r"
    fi
  fi
done

Warning: I haven't tested this script - use only with care...

1
  • I took the liberty to edit the script. Still won't give any guarantees, but, it runs and seems to work now.
    – cthulhu
    Feb 7, 2014 at 13:45
15

Might be useful to some, simple one line to clear all local branches except master and develop

git branch | grep -v "master" | grep -v "develop" | xargs git branch -D
2
  • Awesome answer! I like how one can easily play with the 'git branch | grep -v "master" | grep -v "develop" kind of stuff before committing to adding on the deletion part of the command. 👏😊 Mar 8, 2019 at 19:49
  • 5
    But this does not answer the question above. This will delete branches even though remote is still there.
    – Jim.B
    Mar 18, 2020 at 10:26
14

Because some answers don’t prevent accidental deletion

git fetch -p && LANG=c git branch -vv | awk '/: gone]/&&!/^\*/{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d

filtering out the branch having * in the first column is important.

4
  • Best solution for me. I added LANG=c so that it also works on non-english environments. Mar 11, 2022 at 10:26
  • Why make it so complicated with the -vv and filter out the first column. Without the -vv you only get one column to start with.
    – Pelmered
    May 10, 2022 at 7:57
  • because I am looking for : gone] – but you are right: a single -v would suffice.
    – karlsebal
    May 11, 2022 at 12:12
  • /^*/ won't work. the * is meaningful and has to be escaped: /^\*/
    – ekkis
    Aug 25, 2022 at 20:27
13

None of this was really right for me. I wanted something that would purge all local branches that were tracking a remote branch, on origin, where the remote branch has been deleted (gone). I did not want to delete local branches that were never set up to track a remote branch (i.e.: my local dev branches). Also I wanted a simple one-liner that just uses git, or other simple CLI tools, rather than writing custom scripts. I ended up using a bit of grep and awk to make this simple command.

This is ultimately what ended up in my ~/.gitconfig:

[alias]
  prune-branches = !git remote prune origin && git branch -vv | grep ': gone]' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs -r git branch -D

Here is a git config --global ... command for easily adding this as git prune-branches:

git config --global alias.prune-branches '!git remote prune origin && git branch -vv | grep '"'"': gone]'"'"' | awk '"'"'{print $1}'"'"' | xargs -r git branch -d'

NOTE: In the config command, I use the -d option to git branch rather than -D, as I do in my actual config. I use -D because I don't want to hear Git complain about unmerged branches. You may want this functionality as well. If so, simply use -D instead of -d at the end of that config command.

2
  • I like the git alias approach. Quick question: Why doing git branch -vv and greping for : gone] and not do git branch -v and grep for [gone]?
    – lalibi
    Jan 14, 2019 at 9:23
  • @lalibi, good question. I don't remember. I suspect that something wasn't showing up with only one v. If git branch -v | grep '[gone]' works for you, go for it. It does seem a little cleaner. Apr 16, 2020 at 18:04
12

Powershell-based solution that I find more legible than many of the implementations here.

# prune deleted remoted branches
git fetch -p

# get all branches and their corresponding remote status
# deleted remotes will be marked [gone]
git branch -v |
  #find ones marked [gone], capture branchName
  select-string -Pattern '^  (?<branchName>\S+)\s+\w+ \[gone\]' | 
  foreach-object{ 
     #delete the captured branchname.
     git branch -D $_.Matches[0].Groups['branchName']
  }
1
  • this script has 1 error, you need to add .Value at the end of $_.Matches[0].Groups['branchName'], so line will be git branch -D $_.Matches[0].Groups['branchName'].Value
    – psulek
    Feb 19 at 8:50
11
grep gone <(git branch -v) | cut -d ' ' -f 3 | xargs git branch -d

The above command can be used to fetch branches which are merged and deleted in remote and it deletes the local branch which no longer available in remote

5
  • 1
    Best solution so far, though I changed it to grep gone <(git branch -v) | cut -d ' ' -f 3 | xargs git branch -D to force delete all
    – Battlefury
    Apr 29, 2019 at 14:53
  • 2
    Dangerous if any of your branch names happen to contain the substring gone anywhere in them (e.g. usingonefunction). Jul 24, 2019 at 10:35
  • What if we grep [gone] instead of gone? wouldn't that avoid probable collisions? @TobySpeight
    – dantebarba
    Nov 22, 2022 at 20:44
  • 1
    @dantebarba, I think so - as grep -F '[gone]' of course, to avoid the [ being expanded by shell or used as a character class by grep. Nov 23, 2022 at 7:13
  • dantebarba @TobySpeight agreed on the above points (y) Jan 20, 2023 at 16:30
7

Based on info above, this worked for me:

git br -d `git br -vv | grep ': gone] ' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs`

It removes all local branches with are ': gone] ' on remote.

3
  • 1
    It looks like this will also remove any branch that has "gone" in the last commit message.
    – dlsso
    Jul 15, 2016 at 19:23
  • It will also remove any branch that has gone anywhere in its name.
    – bfontaine
    Aug 22, 2016 at 21:24
  • 3
    "git branch -D git branch -vv | grep ': gone] ' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs`" This did the work for me. Dec 28, 2016 at 8:03
6

Drawing heavily from a number of other answers here, I've ended up with the following (git 2.13 and above only, I believe), which should work on any UNIX-like shell:

git for-each-ref --shell --format='ref=%(if:equals=[gone])%(upstream:track)%(then)%(refname)%(end)' refs/heads | while read entry; do eval "$entry"; [ ! -z "$ref" ] && git update-ref -d "$ref" && echo "deleted $ref"; done

This notably uses for-each-ref instead of branch (as branch is a "porcelain" command designed for human-readable output, not machine-processing) and uses its --shell argument to get properly escaped output (this allows us to not worry about any character in the ref name).

2
  • It works for me, but it would also be nice if you could explain what the other steps in the command are doing. For example I don't know what [ ! -z "$ref" ] means. I think a multi liner would have helped already. But still thanks for your input!
    – KevinH
    Aug 27, 2019 at 9:41
  • @KevinH I guess it means when $ref is not empty
    – dantebarba
    Nov 22, 2022 at 20:48
5

A simpler solution for Windows or others who don't want to/can't script the command line or who don't want to bother with PowerShell.

Dump the branch list into a file git branch > branches.txt
(or git branch --merged > branches.txt, if you're the belt and suspenders type; git branch -d will protect against deleting unmerged branches)

Open that file in your editor and combine all the lines (I used sublime text, so highlight all and press ctrl+j)

Add git branch -d ahead of your branch list.

Select all, copy, and paste (right click in windows cmd window) into the command line.

1
  • 1
    Easy, safe, cross OS, full management, understandable.
    – Jarvan
    Mar 8 at 6:42
4

Based on Git Tip: Deleting Old Local Branches, which looks similar to jason.rickman's solution I implemented a custom command for this purpose called git gone using Bash:

$ git gone
usage: git gone [-pndD] [<branch>=origin]
OPTIONS
  -p  prune remote branch
  -n  dry run: list the gone branches
  -d  delete the gone branches
  -D  delete the gone branches forcefully

EXAMPLES
git gone -pn    prune and dry run
git gone -d     delete the gone branches

git gone -pn combines the pruning and listing the "gone" branches:

$ git gone -pn
  bport/fix-server-broadcast         b472d5d2b [origin/bport/fix-server-broadcast: gone] Bump modules
  fport/rangepos                     45c857d15 [origin/fport/rangepos: gone] Bump modules

Then you can pull the trigger using git gone -d or git gone -D.

Notes

  • The regular expression I used is "$BRANCH/.*: gone]" where $BRANCH would normally be origin. This probably won't work if your Git output is localized to French etc.
  • Sebastian Wiesner also ported it to Rust for Windows users. That one is also called git gone.
2
  • This should probably be the accepted answer - git gone looks like an alias for git branch -vv | grep 'origin/.*: gone]' | awk '{print $1}' | xargs git branch -d, which solves the OP's issue.
    – alex
    Nov 18, 2019 at 16:08
  • imo would be better if it used for-each-ref
    – CervEd
    Oct 4, 2022 at 7:56
4

I like using pipes because it makes the command easier to read.

This is my solution if you would like to remove all branches except master.

git branch | grep -v master | xargs -n 1 git branch -D

To delete other branches that match your criteria, modify the first and second block.

git branch --merged | grep feature_name | xargs -n 1 git branch -D
1
  • Can be simplified a bit: git branch --merged | grep -vE 'main|master|\\*' | xargs -n 1 git branch -D"
    – slm
    Oct 7, 2021 at 1:08
4

May be this command is what you want.

After run:

git remote prune origin

then run:

diff <(git branch | sed -e 's/*/ /g') <(git branch -r | sed -e 's/origin\///g') | grep '^<'

this will show all branch which not in (git branch -r) but in (git branch)

This method have a problem, it will also show the branch in local which have not pushed before

1
  • It worked on terminal but how can I put it in git alias? I am using like show_deleted = "diff <(git branch | sed -e 's/*/ /g') <(git branch -r | sed -e 's/origin\///g') | grep '^<'" but it throwing error. Jul 22, 2022 at 14:44
3

List all local branches who's remote branch is now gone

#!/bin/sh
LC_ALL=C git for-each-ref --format='%(refname:short) %(upstream:track)' refs/heads/ |\
    sed -n '/ *\[gone\].*$/{s@@@;p}'

and then pipe that into xargs git branch -D or -d.

This solution should be POSIX compatible. No shell specific stuff and POSIX compliant sed/xargs only.

  • LC_ALL=C makes the script language neutral by forcing english
  • for-each-ref use plumbing command
  • --format='%(refname:short) %(upstream:track) output branch name tracking information
  • refs/heads only local branches
  • sed -n '/ *\[gone\].*$/ match the tracking information [gone] which is not part of a valid branch name so no need to worry about that
    • {s@@@;p} delete that tracking part and only print those lines

nb: branches cannot contain whitespace so we don't need to do any sanitation for xargs.

3

We need more answers on this one, so here's my variation:

What I was missing was a way to make this less magical and more day-to-day friendly, so I've combined some of the other answers and ended up creating 2 aliases:

  1. gonelist that lists all the branches that have a remote which is now gone
  2. gonedelete that deletes those same branches gonelist returns.

You can add them to your global git config like this:

git config --global alias.gonelist '!git for-each-ref --format "%(refname:short) %(upstream:track)" refs/heads | grep -F " [gone]" | cut -d" " -f1'
git config --global alias.gonedelete '!tmp="$(mktemp)" && git gonelist >$tmp && vi $tmp && < $tmp xargs git branch -d'

the workflow

  1. git fetch --prune Git tells you that some branches where deleted remotely.
  2. git gonelist List if your local branches to see if any have missing remotes.
  3. git gonedelete And editor opens and and you can remove all listed branches except for the ones you wish to delete. Then save and close the editor (:wq) and those branches will be deleted. (You might need to switch branches first if you wish to delete the current branch.)
Explanation gonelist
  • git for-each-ref --format "%(refname:short) %(upstream:track)" - Lists all branch heads with optional '[gone]' suffix.
  • grep -F " [gone]" | cut -d" " -f1 - Gets only the [gone] branches and then removes the [gone] part.
Explanation gonedelete
  • tmp="$(mktemp)" && git gonelist >$tmp - create a tmp file and write the output of gonelist to it.
  • vi $tmp - Edit the file with vi
  • < $tmp xargs git branch -d - feed the contents of the tmp file to git branch -d.

gonedelete gives you a prompt to edit the branches that should be deleted using vi (but you can replace that with any other editor if you like), and then deletes those branches. If you get an error: The branch '...' is not fully merged. message, you can just add -D to the command and it will force-delete the branches you picked.

0

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