Moving git commits between repos

Posted on July 15, 2017

Did you know it is possible to move commits between two unrelated git repositories?

Doing so relies on an interesting property of Git. It doesn’t have a concept of two repositories being the “same,” meaning it allows pushing and pulling between any two repositories, regardless of whether they hold the same project.

(To be fair, git will tell you when the two repositories have no commits in common, but that is a warning you can ignore here.)

Generally just moving the commits to another repo is not enough. It is often important to move the files to a different path inside that repo. Fortunately, git has a command for that. git filter-branch allows moving files around in git history (and rewriting history in a variety of other ways).

I’ll demonstrate two use cases you might have: extracting part of one repository out to its own repo, and the reverse, pulling commits in from another repo.

Extracting a subdirectory to its own repo

Let’s say you have some subdirectory of a large project that really should be a project on its own. Sure, you could create a new repository and copy over the files, but that doesn’t maintain their commit history. To keep the commit history, we need to do a little bit more work.

Start by creating another copy of your project to work in:

git clone existing_project/ new_project/ cd new_project/

This clones the existing project from the existing_project/ directory into the new_project/ directory. If you don’t have a local copy of existing_project , substitute the project’s clone URL.

For safety, we’ll remove the git remote that points to the original project. This will prevent accidentally pushing the modified version back to the original repo.

git remote rm origin

Now, it’s time to filter the repository to just the subdirectory you want.

git filter-branch --prune-empty --subdirectory-filter my_sub_directory/

And you are done! Check the results with a quick ls and git log .

Pulling commits in from another repo

Doing the reverse and combining two repos is a little more complicated. For this example, the commits will move from a project called source_repo and into one called dest_repo .

Start by adding a git remote to the destination repository that points to the source:

git remote add source ../source_repo git config remote.source.pushurl "don't push"

Setting remote.source.pushurl to some random value make pushing fail, effectively making the remote read-only. This prevents accidentally messing up the source repo.

Next, we’ll pull the commits from the source repo into a branch in the destination repo.

git fetch source git checkout source/master git checkout -b source_master

This creates a branch called source_master that contains an exact copy of the history of the master branch in the source repository.

Let’s say you want the files from the source repository in a directory called source_files/ . Like in the other example, git filter-branch allows moving the files to the new location.

git filter-branch --tree-filter "mkdir -p source_files; git ls-tree --name-only \$GIT_COMMIT | tr '

' '\0' | xargs -0 -I FILE mv FILE source_files"

At this point, I like to use git log --stat to sanity check the location of the files in the commits.

Finally, it’s time to combine this history with the original history of this project.

git checkout -b source-commits git rebase master

If you prefer, you could merge instead of rebasing.