Documentation / git-filter-branch.txton commit general improvements (43abf13)
   1git-filter-branch(1)
   2====================
   3
   4NAME
   5----
   6git-filter-branch - Rewrite branches
   7
   8SYNOPSIS
   9--------
  10[verse]
  11'git filter-branch' [--setup <command>] [--subdirectory-filter <directory>]
  12        [--env-filter <command>] [--tree-filter <command>]
  13        [--index-filter <command>] [--parent-filter <command>]
  14        [--msg-filter <command>] [--commit-filter <command>]
  15        [--tag-name-filter <command>] [--prune-empty]
  16        [--original <namespace>] [-d <directory>] [-f | --force]
  17        [--state-branch <branch>] [--] [<rev-list options>...]
  18
  19WARNING
  20-------
  21'git filter-branch' has a plethora of pitfalls that can produce non-obvious
  22manglings of the intended history rewrite (and can leave you with little
  23time to investigate such problems since it has such abysmal performance).
  24These safety and performance issues cannot be backward compatibly fixed and
  25as such, its use is not recommended.  Please use an alternative history
  26filtering tool such as https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/[git
  27filter-repo].  If you still need to use 'git filter-branch', please
  28carefully read <<SAFETY>> (and <<PERFORMANCE>>) to learn about the land
  29mines of filter-branch, and then vigilantly avoid as many of the hazards
  30listed there as reasonably possible.
  31
  32DESCRIPTION
  33-----------
  34Lets you rewrite Git revision history by rewriting the branches mentioned
  35in the <rev-list options>, applying custom filters on each revision.
  36Those filters can modify each tree (e.g. removing a file or running
  37a perl rewrite on all files) or information about each commit.
  38Otherwise, all information (including original commit times or merge
  39information) will be preserved.
  40
  41The command will only rewrite the _positive_ refs mentioned in the
  42command line (e.g. if you pass 'a..b', only 'b' will be rewritten).
  43If you specify no filters, the commits will be recommitted without any
  44changes, which would normally have no effect.  Nevertheless, this may be
  45useful in the future for compensating for some Git bugs or such,
  46therefore such a usage is permitted.
  47
  48*NOTE*: This command honors `.git/info/grafts` file and refs in
  49the `refs/replace/` namespace.
  50If you have any grafts or replacement refs defined, running this command
  51will make them permanent.
  52
  53*WARNING*! The rewritten history will have different object names for all
  54the objects and will not converge with the original branch.  You will not
  55be able to easily push and distribute the rewritten branch on top of the
  56original branch.  Please do not use this command if you do not know the
  57full implications, and avoid using it anyway, if a simple single commit
  58would suffice to fix your problem.  (See the "RECOVERING FROM UPSTREAM
  59REBASE" section in linkgit:git-rebase[1] for further information about
  60rewriting published history.)
  61
  62Always verify that the rewritten version is correct: The original refs,
  63if different from the rewritten ones, will be stored in the namespace
  64'refs/original/'.
  65
  66Note that since this operation is very I/O expensive, it might
  67be a good idea to redirect the temporary directory off-disk with the
  68`-d` option, e.g. on tmpfs.  Reportedly the speedup is very noticeable.
  69
  70
  71Filters
  72~~~~~~~
  73
  74The filters are applied in the order as listed below.  The <command>
  75argument is always evaluated in the shell context using the 'eval' command
  76(with the notable exception of the commit filter, for technical reasons).
  77Prior to that, the `$GIT_COMMIT` environment variable will be set to contain
  78the id of the commit being rewritten.  Also, GIT_AUTHOR_NAME,
  79GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL, GIT_AUTHOR_DATE, GIT_COMMITTER_NAME, GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL,
  80and GIT_COMMITTER_DATE are taken from the current commit and exported to
  81the environment, in order to affect the author and committer identities of
  82the replacement commit created by linkgit:git-commit-tree[1] after the
  83filters have run.
  84
  85If any evaluation of <command> returns a non-zero exit status, the whole
  86operation will be aborted.
  87
  88A 'map' function is available that takes an "original sha1 id" argument
  89and outputs a "rewritten sha1 id" if the commit has been already
  90rewritten, and "original sha1 id" otherwise; the 'map' function can
  91return several ids on separate lines if your commit filter emitted
  92multiple commits.
  93
  94
  95OPTIONS
  96-------
  97
  98--setup <command>::
  99        This is not a real filter executed for each commit but a one
 100        time setup just before the loop. Therefore no commit-specific
 101        variables are defined yet.  Functions or variables defined here
 102        can be used or modified in the following filter steps except
 103        the commit filter, for technical reasons.
 104
 105--subdirectory-filter <directory>::
 106        Only look at the history which touches the given subdirectory.
 107        The result will contain that directory (and only that) as its
 108        project root. Implies <<Remap_to_ancestor>>.
 109
 110--env-filter <command>::
 111        This filter may be used if you only need to modify the environment
 112        in which the commit will be performed.  Specifically, you might
 113        want to rewrite the author/committer name/email/time environment
 114        variables (see linkgit:git-commit-tree[1] for details).
 115
 116--tree-filter <command>::
 117        This is the filter for rewriting the tree and its contents.
 118        The argument is evaluated in shell with the working
 119        directory set to the root of the checked out tree.  The new tree
 120        is then used as-is (new files are auto-added, disappeared files
 121        are auto-removed - neither .gitignore files nor any other ignore
 122        rules *HAVE ANY EFFECT*!).
 123
 124--index-filter <command>::
 125        This is the filter for rewriting the index.  It is similar to the
 126        tree filter but does not check out the tree, which makes it much
 127        faster.  Frequently used with `git rm --cached
 128        --ignore-unmatch ...`, see EXAMPLES below.  For hairy
 129        cases, see linkgit:git-update-index[1].
 130
 131--parent-filter <command>::
 132        This is the filter for rewriting the commit's parent list.
 133        It will receive the parent string on stdin and shall output
 134        the new parent string on stdout.  The parent string is in
 135        the format described in linkgit:git-commit-tree[1]: empty for
 136        the initial commit, "-p parent" for a normal commit and
 137        "-p parent1 -p parent2 -p parent3 ..." for a merge commit.
 138
 139--msg-filter <command>::
 140        This is the filter for rewriting the commit messages.
 141        The argument is evaluated in the shell with the original
 142        commit message on standard input; its standard output is
 143        used as the new commit message.
 144
 145--commit-filter <command>::
 146        This is the filter for performing the commit.
 147        If this filter is specified, it will be called instead of the
 148        'git commit-tree' command, with arguments of the form
 149        "<TREE_ID> [(-p <PARENT_COMMIT_ID>)...]" and the log message on
 150        stdin.  The commit id is expected on stdout.
 151+
 152As a special extension, the commit filter may emit multiple
 153commit ids; in that case, the rewritten children of the original commit will
 154have all of them as parents.
 155+
 156You can use the 'map' convenience function in this filter, and other
 157convenience functions, too.  For example, calling 'skip_commit "$@"'
 158will leave out the current commit (but not its changes! If you want
 159that, use 'git rebase' instead).
 160+
 161You can also use the `git_commit_non_empty_tree "$@"` instead of
 162`git commit-tree "$@"` if you don't wish to keep commits with a single parent
 163and that makes no change to the tree.
 164
 165--tag-name-filter <command>::
 166        This is the filter for rewriting tag names. When passed,
 167        it will be called for every tag ref that points to a rewritten
 168        object (or to a tag object which points to a rewritten object).
 169        The original tag name is passed via standard input, and the new
 170        tag name is expected on standard output.
 171+
 172The original tags are not deleted, but can be overwritten;
 173use "--tag-name-filter cat" to simply update the tags.  In this
 174case, be very careful and make sure you have the old tags
 175backed up in case the conversion has run afoul.
 176+
 177Nearly proper rewriting of tag objects is supported. If the tag has
 178a message attached, a new tag object will be created with the same message,
 179author, and timestamp. If the tag has a signature attached, the
 180signature will be stripped. It is by definition impossible to preserve
 181signatures. The reason this is "nearly" proper, is because ideally if
 182the tag did not change (points to the same object, has the same name, etc.)
 183it should retain any signature. That is not the case, signatures will always
 184be removed, buyer beware. There is also no support for changing the
 185author or timestamp (or the tag message for that matter). Tags which point
 186to other tags will be rewritten to point to the underlying commit.
 187
 188--prune-empty::
 189        Some filters will generate empty commits that leave the tree untouched.
 190        This option instructs git-filter-branch to remove such commits if they
 191        have exactly one or zero non-pruned parents; merge commits will
 192        therefore remain intact.  This option cannot be used together with
 193        `--commit-filter`, though the same effect can be achieved by using the
 194        provided `git_commit_non_empty_tree` function in a commit filter.
 195
 196--original <namespace>::
 197        Use this option to set the namespace where the original commits
 198        will be stored. The default value is 'refs/original'.
 199
 200-d <directory>::
 201        Use this option to set the path to the temporary directory used for
 202        rewriting.  When applying a tree filter, the command needs to
 203        temporarily check out the tree to some directory, which may consume
 204        considerable space in case of large projects.  By default it
 205        does this in the `.git-rewrite/` directory but you can override
 206        that choice by this parameter.
 207
 208-f::
 209--force::
 210        'git filter-branch' refuses to start with an existing temporary
 211        directory or when there are already refs starting with
 212        'refs/original/', unless forced.
 213
 214--state-branch <branch>::
 215        This option will cause the mapping from old to new objects to
 216        be loaded from named branch upon startup and saved as a new
 217        commit to that branch upon exit, enabling incremental of large
 218        trees. If '<branch>' does not exist it will be created.
 219
 220<rev-list options>...::
 221        Arguments for 'git rev-list'.  All positive refs included by
 222        these options are rewritten.  You may also specify options
 223        such as `--all`, but you must use `--` to separate them from
 224        the 'git filter-branch' options. Implies <<Remap_to_ancestor>>.
 225
 226
 227[[Remap_to_ancestor]]
 228Remap to ancestor
 229~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 230
 231By using linkgit:git-rev-list[1] arguments, e.g., path limiters, you can limit the
 232set of revisions which get rewritten. However, positive refs on the command
 233line are distinguished: we don't let them be excluded by such limiters. For
 234this purpose, they are instead rewritten to point at the nearest ancestor that
 235was not excluded.
 236
 237
 238EXIT STATUS
 239-----------
 240
 241On success, the exit status is `0`.  If the filter can't find any commits to
 242rewrite, the exit status is `2`.  On any other error, the exit status may be
 243any other non-zero value.
 244
 245
 246EXAMPLES
 247--------
 248
 249Suppose you want to remove a file (containing confidential information
 250or copyright violation) from all commits:
 251
 252-------------------------------------------------------
 253git filter-branch --tree-filter 'rm filename' HEAD
 254-------------------------------------------------------
 255
 256However, if the file is absent from the tree of some commit,
 257a simple `rm filename` will fail for that tree and commit.
 258Thus you may instead want to use `rm -f filename` as the script.
 259
 260Using `--index-filter` with 'git rm' yields a significantly faster
 261version.  Like with using `rm filename`, `git rm --cached filename`
 262will fail if the file is absent from the tree of a commit.  If you
 263want to "completely forget" a file, it does not matter when it entered
 264history, so we also add `--ignore-unmatch`:
 265
 266--------------------------------------------------------------------------
 267git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm --cached --ignore-unmatch filename' HEAD
 268--------------------------------------------------------------------------
 269
 270Now, you will get the rewritten history saved in HEAD.
 271
 272To rewrite the repository to look as if `foodir/` had been its project
 273root, and discard all other history:
 274
 275-------------------------------------------------------
 276git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter foodir -- --all
 277-------------------------------------------------------
 278
 279Thus you can, e.g., turn a library subdirectory into a repository of
 280its own.  Note the `--` that separates 'filter-branch' options from
 281revision options, and the `--all` to rewrite all branches and tags.
 282
 283To set a commit (which typically is at the tip of another
 284history) to be the parent of the current initial commit, in
 285order to paste the other history behind the current history:
 286
 287-------------------------------------------------------------------
 288git filter-branch --parent-filter 'sed "s/^\$/-p <graft-id>/"' HEAD
 289-------------------------------------------------------------------
 290
 291(if the parent string is empty - which happens when we are dealing with
 292the initial commit - add graftcommit as a parent).  Note that this assumes
 293history with a single root (that is, no merge without common ancestors
 294happened).  If this is not the case, use:
 295
 296--------------------------------------------------------------------------
 297git filter-branch --parent-filter \
 298        'test $GIT_COMMIT = <commit-id> && echo "-p <graft-id>" || cat' HEAD
 299--------------------------------------------------------------------------
 300
 301or even simpler:
 302
 303-----------------------------------------------
 304git replace --graft $commit-id $graft-id
 305git filter-branch $graft-id..HEAD
 306-----------------------------------------------
 307
 308To remove commits authored by "Darl McBribe" from the history:
 309
 310------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 311git filter-branch --commit-filter '
 312        if [ "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME" = "Darl McBribe" ];
 313        then
 314                skip_commit "$@";
 315        else
 316                git commit-tree "$@";
 317        fi' HEAD
 318------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 319
 320The function 'skip_commit' is defined as follows:
 321
 322--------------------------
 323skip_commit()
 324{
 325        shift;
 326        while [ -n "$1" ];
 327        do
 328                shift;
 329                map "$1";
 330                shift;
 331        done;
 332}
 333--------------------------
 334
 335The shift magic first throws away the tree id and then the -p
 336parameters.  Note that this handles merges properly! In case Darl
 337committed a merge between P1 and P2, it will be propagated properly
 338and all children of the merge will become merge commits with P1,P2
 339as their parents instead of the merge commit.
 340
 341*NOTE* the changes introduced by the commits, and which are not reverted
 342by subsequent commits, will still be in the rewritten branch. If you want
 343to throw out _changes_ together with the commits, you should use the
 344interactive mode of 'git rebase'.
 345
 346You can rewrite the commit log messages using `--msg-filter`.  For
 347example, 'git svn-id' strings in a repository created by 'git svn' can
 348be removed this way:
 349
 350-------------------------------------------------------
 351git filter-branch --msg-filter '
 352        sed -e "/^git-svn-id:/d"
 353'
 354-------------------------------------------------------
 355
 356If you need to add 'Acked-by' lines to, say, the last 10 commits (none
 357of which is a merge), use this command:
 358
 359--------------------------------------------------------
 360git filter-branch --msg-filter '
 361        cat &&
 362        echo "Acked-by: Bugs Bunny <bunny@bugzilla.org>"
 363' HEAD~10..HEAD
 364--------------------------------------------------------
 365
 366The `--env-filter` option can be used to modify committer and/or author
 367identity.  For example, if you found out that your commits have the wrong
 368identity due to a misconfigured user.email, you can make a correction,
 369before publishing the project, like this:
 370
 371--------------------------------------------------------
 372git filter-branch --env-filter '
 373        if test "$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL" = "root@localhost"
 374        then
 375                GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL=john@example.com
 376        fi
 377        if test "$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL" = "root@localhost"
 378        then
 379                GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL=john@example.com
 380        fi
 381' -- --all
 382--------------------------------------------------------
 383
 384To restrict rewriting to only part of the history, specify a revision
 385range in addition to the new branch name.  The new branch name will
 386point to the top-most revision that a 'git rev-list' of this range
 387will print.
 388
 389Consider this history:
 390
 391------------------
 392     D--E--F--G--H
 393    /     /
 394A--B-----C
 395------------------
 396
 397To rewrite only commits D,E,F,G,H, but leave A, B and C alone, use:
 398
 399--------------------------------
 400git filter-branch ... C..H
 401--------------------------------
 402
 403To rewrite commits E,F,G,H, use one of these:
 404
 405----------------------------------------
 406git filter-branch ... C..H --not D
 407git filter-branch ... D..H --not C
 408----------------------------------------
 409
 410To move the whole tree into a subdirectory, or remove it from there:
 411
 412---------------------------------------------------------------
 413git filter-branch --index-filter \
 414        'git ls-files -s | sed "s-\t\"*-&newsubdir/-" |
 415                GIT_INDEX_FILE=$GIT_INDEX_FILE.new \
 416                        git update-index --index-info &&
 417         mv "$GIT_INDEX_FILE.new" "$GIT_INDEX_FILE"' HEAD
 418---------------------------------------------------------------
 419
 420
 421
 422CHECKLIST FOR SHRINKING A REPOSITORY
 423------------------------------------
 424
 425git-filter-branch can be used to get rid of a subset of files,
 426usually with some combination of `--index-filter` and
 427`--subdirectory-filter`.  People expect the resulting repository to
 428be smaller than the original, but you need a few more steps to
 429actually make it smaller, because Git tries hard not to lose your
 430objects until you tell it to.  First make sure that:
 431
 432* You really removed all variants of a filename, if a blob was moved
 433  over its lifetime.  `git log --name-only --follow --all -- filename`
 434  can help you find renames.
 435
 436* You really filtered all refs: use `--tag-name-filter cat -- --all`
 437  when calling git-filter-branch.
 438
 439Then there are two ways to get a smaller repository.  A safer way is
 440to clone, that keeps your original intact.
 441
 442* Clone it with `git clone file:///path/to/repo`.  The clone
 443  will not have the removed objects.  See linkgit:git-clone[1].  (Note
 444  that cloning with a plain path just hardlinks everything!)
 445
 446If you really don't want to clone it, for whatever reasons, check the
 447following points instead (in this order).  This is a very destructive
 448approach, so *make a backup* or go back to cloning it.  You have been
 449warned.
 450
 451* Remove the original refs backed up by git-filter-branch: say `git
 452  for-each-ref --format="%(refname)" refs/original/ | xargs -n 1 git
 453  update-ref -d`.
 454
 455* Expire all reflogs with `git reflog expire --expire=now --all`.
 456
 457* Garbage collect all unreferenced objects with `git gc --prune=now`
 458  (or if your git-gc is not new enough to support arguments to
 459  `--prune`, use `git repack -ad; git prune` instead).
 460
 461[[PERFORMANCE]]
 462PERFORMANCE
 463-----------
 464
 465The performance of git-filter-branch is glacially slow; its design makes it
 466impossible for a backward-compatible implementation to ever be fast:
 467
 468* In editing files, git-filter-branch by design checks out each and
 469every commit as it existed in the original repo.  If your repo has 10\^5
 470files and 10\^5 commits, but each commit only modifies 5 files, then
 471git-filter-branch will make you do 10\^10 modifications, despite only
 472having (at most) 5*10^5 unique blobs.
 473
 474* If you try and cheat and try to make git-filter-branch only work on
 475files modified in a commit, then two things happen
 476
 477  ** you run into problems with deletions whenever the user is simply
 478     trying to rename files (because attempting to delete files that
 479     don't exist looks like a no-op; it takes some chicanery to remap
 480     deletes across file renames when the renames happen via arbitrary
 481     user-provided shell)
 482
 483  ** even if you succeed at the map-deletes-for-renames chicanery, you
 484     still technically violate backward compatibility because users are
 485     allowed to filter files in ways that depend upon topology of
 486     commits instead of filtering solely based on file contents or names
 487     (though this has not been observed in the wild).
 488
 489* Even if you don't need to edit files but only want to e.g. rename or
 490remove some and thus can avoid checking out each file (i.e. you can use
 491--index-filter), you still are passing shell snippets for your filters.
 492This means that for every commit, you have to have a prepared git repo
 493where those filters can be run.  That's a significant setup.
 494
 495* Further, several additional files are created or updated per commit by
 496git-filter-branch.  Some of these are for supporting the convenience
 497functions provided by git-filter-branch (such as map()), while others
 498are for keeping track of internal state (but could have also been
 499accessed by user filters; one of git-filter-branch's regression tests
 500does so).  This essentially amounts to using the filesystem as an IPC
 501mechanism between git-filter-branch and the user-provided filters.
 502Disks tend to be a slow IPC mechanism, and writing these files also
 503effectively represents a forced synchronization point between separate
 504processes that we hit with every commit.
 505
 506* The user-provided shell commands will likely involve a pipeline of
 507commands, resulting in the creation of many processes per commit.
 508Creating and running another process takes a widely varying amount of
 509time between operating systems, but on any platform it is very slow
 510relative to invoking a function.
 511
 512* git-filter-branch itself is written in shell, which is kind of slow.
 513This is the one performance issue that could be backward-compatibly
 514fixed, but compared to the above problems that are intrinsic to the
 515design of git-filter-branch, the language of the tool itself is a
 516relatively minor issue.
 517
 518  ** Side note: Unfortunately, people tend to fixate on the
 519     written-in-shell aspect and periodically ask if git-filter-branch
 520     could be rewritten in another language to fix the performance
 521     issues.  Not only does that ignore the bigger intrinsic problems
 522     with the design, it'd help less than you'd expect: if
 523     git-filter-branch itself were not shell, then the convenience
 524     functions (map(), skip_commit(), etc) and the `--setup` argument
 525     could no longer be executed once at the beginning of the program
 526     but would instead need to be prepended to every user filter (and
 527     thus re-executed with every commit).
 528
 529The https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/[git filter-repo] tool is
 530an alternative to git-filter-branch which does not suffer from these
 531performance problems or the safety problems (mentioned below). For those
 532with existing tooling which relies upon git-filter-branch, 'git
 533repo-filter' also provides
 534https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo/blob/master/contrib/filter-repo-demos/filter-lamely[filter-lamely],
 535a drop-in git-filter-branch replacement (with a few caveats).  While
 536filter-lamely suffers from all the same safety issues as
 537git-filter-branch, it at least ameloriates the performance issues a
 538little.
 539
 540[[SAFETY]]
 541SAFETY
 542------
 543
 544git-filter-branch is riddled with gotchas resulting in various ways to
 545easily corrupt repos or end up with a mess worse than what you started
 546with:
 547
 548* Someone can have a set of "working and tested filters" which they
 549document or provide to a coworker, who then runs them on a different OS
 550where the same commands are not working/tested (some examples in the
 551git-filter-branch manpage are also affected by this).  BSD vs. GNU
 552userland differences can really bite.  If lucky, error messages are
 553spewed.  But just as likely, the commands either don't do the filtering
 554requested, or silently corrupt by making some unwanted change.  The
 555unwanted change may only affect a few commits, so it's not necessarily
 556obvious either.  (The fact that problems won't necessarily be obvious
 557means they are likely to go unnoticed until the rewritten history is in
 558use for quite a while, at which point it's really hard to justify
 559another flag-day for another rewrite.)
 560
 561* Filenames with spaces are often mishandled by shell snippets since
 562they cause problems for shell pipelines.  Not everyone is familiar with
 563find -print0, xargs -0, git-ls-files -z, etc.  Even people who are
 564familiar with these may assume such flags are not relevant because
 565someone else renamed any such files in their repo back before the person
 566doing the filtering joined the project.  And often, even those familiar
 567with handling arguments with spaces may not do so just because they
 568aren't in the mindset of thinking about everything that could possibly
 569go wrong.
 570
 571* Non-ascii filenames can be silently removed despite being in a desired
 572directory.  Keeping only wanted paths is often done using pipelines like
 573`git ls-files | grep -v ^WANTED_DIR/ | xargs git rm`.  ls-files will
 574only quote filenames if needed, so folks may not notice that one of the
 575files didn't match the regex (at least not until it's much too late).
 576Yes, someone who knows about core.quotePath can avoid this (unless they
 577have other special characters like \t, \n, or "), and people who use
 578ls-files -z with something other than grep can avoid this, but that
 579doesn't mean they will.
 580
 581* Similarly, when moving files around, one can find that filenames with
 582non-ascii or special characters end up in a different directory, one
 583that includes a double quote character.  (This is technically the same
 584issue as above with quoting, but perhaps an interesting different way
 585that it can and has manifested as a problem.)
 586
 587* It's far too easy to accidentally mix up old and new history.  It's
 588still possible with any tool, but git-filter-branch almost invites it.
 589If lucky, the only downside is users getting frustrated that they don't
 590know how to shrink their repo and remove the old stuff.  If unlucky,
 591they merge old and new history and end up with multiple "copies" of each
 592commit, some of which have unwanted or sensitive files and others which
 593don't.  This comes about in multiple different ways:
 594
 595  ** the default to only doing a partial history rewrite ('--all' is not
 596     the default and few examples show it)
 597
 598  ** the fact that there's no automatic post-run cleanup
 599
 600  ** the fact that --tag-name-filter (when used to rename tags) doesn't
 601     remove the old tags but just adds new ones with the new name
 602
 603  ** the fact that little educational information is provided to inform
 604     users of the ramifications of a rewrite and how to avoid mixing old
 605     and new history.  For example, this man page discusses how users
 606     need to understand that they need to rebase their changes for all
 607     their branches on top of new history (or delete and reclone), but
 608     that's only one of multiple concerns to consider.  See the
 609     "DISCUSSION" section of the git filter-repo manual page for more
 610     details.
 611
 612* Annotated tags can be accidentally converted to lightweight tags, due
 613to either of two issues:
 614
 615  ** Someone can do a history rewrite, realize they messed up, restore
 616     from the backups in refs/original/, and then redo their
 617     git-filter-branch command.  (The backup in refs/original/ is not a
 618     real backup; it dereferences tags first.)
 619
 620  ** Running git-filter-branch with either --tags or --all in your
 621     <rev-list options>.  In order to retain annotated tags as
 622     annotated, you must use --tag-name-filter (and must not have
 623     restored from refs/original/ in a previously botched rewrite).
 624
 625* Any commit messages that specify an encoding will become corrupted
 626by the rewrite; git-filter-branch ignores the encoding, takes the original
 627bytes, and feeds it to commit-tree without telling it the proper
 628encoding.  (This happens whether or not --msg-filter is used.)
 629
 630* Commit messages (even if they are all UTF-8) by default become
 631corrupted due to not being updated -- any references to other commit
 632hashes in commit messages will now refer to no-longer-extant commits.
 633
 634* There are no facilities for helping users find what unwanted crud they
 635should delete, which means they are much more likely to have incomplete
 636or partial cleanups that sometimes result in confusion and people
 637wasting time trying to understand.  (For example, folks tend to just
 638look for big files to delete instead of big directories or extensions,
 639and once they do so, then sometime later folks using the new repository
 640who are going through history will notice a build artifact directory
 641that has some files but not others, or a cache of dependencies
 642(node_modules or similar) which couldn't have ever been functional since
 643it's missing some files.)
 644
 645* If --prune-empty isn't specified, then the filtering process can
 646create hoards of confusing empty commits
 647
 648* If --prune-empty is specified, then intentionally placed empty
 649commits from before the filtering operation are also pruned instead of
 650just pruning commits that became empty due to filtering rules.
 651
 652* If --prune empty is specified, sometimes empty commits are missed
 653and left around anyway (a somewhat rare bug, but it happens...)
 654
 655* A minor issue, but users who have a goal to update all names and
 656emails in a repository may be led to --env-filter which will only update
 657authors and committers, missing taggers.
 658
 659* If the user provides a --tag-name-filter that maps multiple tags to
 660the same name, no warning or error is provided; git-filter-branch simply
 661overwrites each tag in some undocumented pre-defined order resulting in
 662only one tag at the end.  (A git-filter-branch regression test requires
 663this surprising behavior.)
 664
 665Also, the poor performance of git-filter-branch often leads to safety
 666issues:
 667
 668* Coming up with the correct shell snippet to do the filtering you want
 669is sometimes difficult unless you're just doing a trivial modification
 670such as deleting a couple files.  Unfortunately, people often learn if
 671the snippet is right or wrong by trying it out, but the rightness or
 672wrongness can vary depending on special circumstances (spaces in
 673filenames, non-ascii filenames, funny author names or emails, invalid
 674timezones, presence of grafts or replace objects, etc.), meaning they
 675may have to wait a long time, hit an error, then restart.  The
 676performance of git-filter-branch is so bad that this cycle is painful,
 677reducing the time available to carefully re-check (to say nothing about
 678what it does to the patience of the person doing the rewrite even if
 679they do technically have more time available).  This problem is extra
 680compounded because errors from broken filters may not be shown for a
 681long time and/or get lost in a sea of output.  Even worse, broken
 682filters often just result in silent incorrect rewrites.
 683
 684* To top it all off, even when users finally find working commands, they
 685naturally want to share them.  But they may be unaware that their repo
 686didn't have some special cases that someone else's does.  So, when
 687someone else with a different repository runs the same commands, they
 688get hit by the problems above.  Or, the user just runs commands that
 689really were vetted for special cases, but they run it on a different OS
 690where it doesn't work, as noted above.
 691
 692GIT
 693---
 694Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite