Make the current commit the only (initial) commit in a Git repository?
This is my favoured approach:
git branch new_branch_name $(echo "commit message" | git commit-tree HEAD^{tree})
This will create a new branch with one commit that adds everything in HEAD. It doesn't alter anything else, so it's completely safe.
Here's the brute-force approach. It also removes the configuration of the repository.
Note: This does NOT work if the repository has submodules! If you are using submodules, you should use e.g. interactive rebase
Step 1: remove all history (Make sure you have a backup, this cannot be reverted)
cat .git/config # note <github-uri>
rm -rf .git
Step 2: reconstruct the Git repo with only the current content
Before step 2 if you have not set up init.defaultBranch
configuration then, please do it via git config --global init.defaultBranch <branch-name>
you may choose main
as <branch-name>
in the current example
git init
git add .
git commit -m "Initial commit"
Step 3: push to GitHub.
git remote add origin <github-uri>
git push -u --force origin main
The other option, which could turn out to be a lot of work if you have a lot of commits, is an interactive rebase (assuming your git version is >=1.7.12):git rebase --root -i
When presented with a list of commits in your editor:
- Change "pick" to "reword" for the first commit
- Change "pick" to "fixup" every other commit
Save and close. Git will start rebasing.
At the end you would have a new root commit that is a combination of all the ones that came after it.
The advantage is that you don't have to delete your repository and if you have second thoughts you always have a fallback.
If you really do want to nuke your history, reset master to this commit and delete all other branches.
The only solution that works for me (and keeps submodules working) is
git checkout --orphan newBranch
git add -A # Add all files and commit them
git commit
git branch -D master # Deletes the master branch
git branch -m master # Rename the current branch to master
git push -f origin master # Force push master branch to github
git gc --aggressive --prune=all # remove the old files
Deleting .git/
always causes huge issues when I have submodules.
Using git rebase --root
would somehow cause conflicts for me (and take long since I had a lot of history).