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I have master and new-project branches. And now I'd like to create a brand new repo with its master based on the new-project branch.

Background: I have one repository which contains three independent applications. It didn't start out this way. There was originally just one app in the repo. Over time, however, business needs have changed. One app became two (a legacy version and a re-write.) A web service was added. Separate branches were used to contain the three projects. However, they don't share any code. And so it'd be simpler to have them split out into their own repos.

7 Answers 7

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I started with @user292677's idea, and refined it to solve my problem:

  1. Create the new-repo in github.
  2. cd to your local copy of the old repo you want to extract from, which is set up to track the new-project branch that will become the new-repo's master.
  3. $ git push https://github.com/accountname/new-repo.git +new-project:master

The new Github repo is finished. The result is;

  • a new Github repository named new-repo,
  • whose master corresponds to the old repo's new-project, with
  • all history preserved.

In fact, I found that by using this method, I could create the new repo with a hand-picked selection of branches, renamed as I wanted:

$ git push git@github.com:accountname/new_repo +new-project:master +site3a:rails3

The result is that the pre-existing site3a branch is now also moved to the new repo and will appear as rails3. This works really well: the network diagram shows the new master and rails3 with full history and in their correct relationship to each other.

Update 2013-12-07: Used this with another project, and verified that this recipe still works.

Update 2018-01-11: Updated step 3. to use GitHub recommendation for https protocol. Recipe still works.

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  • 1
    Hi @Dogweather, thanks for sharing this. can you explian what's the different between your method and change the origin remote url, push to new repo method?
    – Vincent
    May 1, 2013 at 14:16
  • 9
    Dogweather, I've used your solution more than I can remember. Thanks! I had to checkout old_branch first before this worked for me Jan 22, 2015 at 13:21
  • 5
    note that this won't copy tags. I believe you may need --follow-tags for that. Aug 31, 2015 at 22:28
  • 1
    Note that you don't need to create a repo on Github, you can just push to a local one (i.e. git init instead of Github > New > ...)
    – OJFord
    Apr 19, 2016 at 12:19
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    To be clear, use this on Git bash: git push [SSH address of repo for clone] +[old repo branch name]:[new repo branch name]. If you're copying the whole repo, old and new repo branch name will likely to be master.
    – tkpb
    Jun 4, 2020 at 16:28
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Update:

cd to local repo containing old_branch and:

$ git push https://github.com/accountname/new_repo.git +old_branch:master
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  1. Create the NEW_REPOSITORY in github.
  2. cd OLD_REPOSITORY
  3. git push https://github.com/accountname/NEW_REPO +master:master

And that is all. (Note: git history preserved)

I had tried the answer above and found it not specific enough as it didn't specify +master:master which is what I needed to make it work. It works great.

Source (with my modifications to avoid ssh issues with github): Mauricio Aiello, former Java Senior Developer, https://www.quora.com/How-do-I-create-a-new-GitHub-repository-from-a-branch-in-an-existing-repository

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  • 2
    That’s actually more usable than the accepted answer. It works even in situations where Git complains about src refspec errors when failing to push the old to the new repository.
    – Informagic
    Jun 14, 2019 at 16:02
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    worth noting that this is pushing master into master, if you want to push a specific branch do ...+{old_branch_name}:{new_branch_name}
    – Mojimi
    Apr 8, 2021 at 21:01
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git clone -b new-project /path/to/repo /new/repo/path

Edit: Within GitHub, you can “fork” the repo, then go to the Admin tab in your clone. Beneath “Repository name” and “Visibility” is “Default Branch” with a drop-down menu of branches. Choose new-project.

Re-edit: I just realized it’s the master branch you want set, not just the “default” branch. So…

  • On GitHub, clone them/repo to you/repo.
  • Run git clone git@github.com:you/repo.git
  • Start gitk.
  • [You might want to create an old-master branch so you don’t lose track of the old commits.]
  • Find most recent commit on the new-project branch, right-click on the commit message, and select “Reset master branch to here”. (You can also do this at the command line using git-reset, but I haven’t figured out the correct invocation.)

Your next push up to your GitHub repo will need to be done with the --force option, but otherwise you’re done.

If it’s one of your own repos you’re doing this to…

  • Run git clone git@github.com:you/orig.git
  • Run git clone orig copy
  • As I described above, but from within the local copy repo, reset the master branch to where you want it.
  • Create the empty GitHub project you/copy. Follow the directions on GitHub to set up that project as a remote for your local version of copy, push master, and you’re done!
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  • Hmm! I'm not sure how to do the first step: cloning a repo within github. I don't think it's possible.
    – Dogweather
    Mar 3, 2012 at 8:48
  • @Dogweather, it’s called “forking” on GitHub; I’ve edited my answer for clarity. Mar 4, 2012 at 0:30
  • I've been unable to fork a repo within one account. Have you tried this yourself?
    – Dogweather
    Mar 4, 2012 at 1:10
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Not sure whether this is a good way, but it's easy anyway:

git clone -b new-project git@github.com:User/YourProject.git newProjcet

Then create a new repo on github, and push it.

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Remembering that when you simply create a new repo, you lose reference to the old one, and make it harder to maintain any update to the original project synched to the new one. Perhaps isn't it better to fork the repo?

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If you are in love with SourceTree just do some simple step

  1. Check out the brand you want to clone as new repo

  2. Open terminal on this brand by click on the terminal button on toolbar in SourceTree

  3. Give the command to the terminal $ git push https://github.com/accountname/new_repo.git

The git command based on Alexey Kislitsin's answer. Thank Alexey Kislitsin

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