How do I convert a bare git repository into a normal one (in-place)?

I had a slightly different scenario:

  • a non-repo (get through a tarball from github)
  • the need to restore a full repo from that content.

Solution:

  • clone a bare repo in that content, in a .git dir:
    git clone --bare https://github.com/user/project .git
  • Mark it as a non-bare repo:
    git config --local --bool core.bare false
  • reset the index (otherwise, it believes everything has been deleted, since a .git bare repo doesn't include a file 'index'.)
    git reset HEAD -- .
    That restores the .git/index.

I have effectively transformed a bare repo into a non-bare one, while preserving the content I had previously got.
The full script I have been using for years involves the steps:

cd /path/to/current/worktree

# That creates a .git directly at the right place
git clone --bare /url/of/repo .git

# restore the link between the local repo and its upstream remote repo
git config --local --bool core.bare false
git config --local remote.origin.fetch +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
git fetch origin
git branch -u origin/master master

# reset the index (not the working tree)
git reset HEAD -- .

But I do recon the accepted solution (with the helpful git reset step added by ADTC) is simpler.


Note: I tested this on a very simple 1-commit repository. Double-check this, read the man pages, and always be happy you've backed up before following advice you found on StackOverflow. (You do back up, right?)

To convert a --bare repository to a non-bare:

  1. Make a .git folder in the top-level of your repository.
  2. Move the repository management things (HEAD branches config description hooks info objects refs etc.) into the .git you just created.
  3. Run git config --local --bool core.bare false to convert the local git-repository to non-bare.
  4. (via comment by Tamás Pap) After step #3 you will see that you are on branch master (or whichever your main branch is) and all your files are deleted and the deletion is staged. That's normal. Just manually checkout master, or do a git reset --hard, and you are done.
  5. (to resolve issue reported by Royi) Edit .git/config file adding line fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* after url = <...> in [remote "origin"] section. Otherwise git fetch will not see origin/master and other origin's branches.

These steps are in the opposite direction of this question, "git-convert normal to bare repository" - in particular note this answer, which states that the above steps (in, I presume, either direction) is different from doing a git-clone. Not sure if that's relevant to you, though, but you mentioned git clone in the question.

Tags:

Git

Git Bare