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| $ git branch -r --merged | | |
| grep origin | | |
| grep -v '>' | | |
| grep -v master | | |
| xargs -L1 | | |
| awk '{split($0,a,"/"); print a[2]}' | | |
| xargs git push origin --delete |
If you run this while on a branch that tracks a remote branch and is not master, this script will delete the remote branch!
Change git branch -r --merged to git branch -r --merged origin/master to eliminate this.
I regularly create branches named mp/some-branch or review/some-branch. As a result, I vote for the change @ctshryock suggests. :D
One last change - I added a line at the top of the file, git remote prune origin, which cleans up local records of any remote branches that no longer exist.
git branch -r --merged |
grep origin |
grep -v '>' |
grep -v master |
xargs -L1 |
cut -d"/" -f2- |
xargs git push origin --delete
greate
I am using git-fiow and I dont wanna delete the origin/develop?
@guneysus : replace grep -v master with grep -v develop
If you get a error: unable to delete 'origin/myBranch-1234': remote ref does not exist, run git fetch -p origin before.
I actually added that command to my version of the script (note that it's for branches from develop):
git fetch -p origin && git branch -r --merged | grep origin |grep -v '>' | grep -v develop | xargs -L1 | cut -d"/" -f2- | xargs git push origin --delete
I tried this,
https://gist.github.com/Emuentes/80c96c3927911dae6e19
Works for me, I also use git-flow @guneysus
@arielelkin I had the same issue. My solution was to run it in a for loop.
for branch in $(git branch -r --merged master | grep origin | grep -v develop | grep -v master | sed -E "s|^ *origin/||g")
do
git push origin $branch --delete
done
https://gist.github.com/zsoobhan/53b598da50a5496f655a07bb9fb39151
For clean projects using /feature or /fix.
$ git fetch --prune;
$ git branch --remote --merged |
grep origin |
grep -v '>' |
grep -v master |
grep -v develop |
xargs -L1 |
cut -d"/" -f2- |
xargs git push origin --delete;git fetch --prune; git branch -r --merged | grep origin | grep -v '>' | grep -v master | xargs -L1 | awk '{sub(/origin//,"");print}' | xargs git push origin --delete
In my case this would also delete the branches {development, release}, which is probably not what you want.
awk is cool but a bit overkill. sed is cooler.
git branch -r --merged | grep origin | grep -v '>' | grep -v master | sed 's/origin\///' | xargs git push origin --delete
sed is fine, but cut is more appropriate here. Also when using egrep it get shorter:
git branch -r --merged | grep origin | egrep -v '>|master' | cut -d/ -f2- | xargs git push origin --delete
I use sed so I am not limited to origin.
git fetch --all --prune && git branch --remote --merged | grep -v -P 'master|develop$' | sed -e 's/\// /g' | xargs -L1 -r git push -d; echo Done cleaning remote branches.
For the speedy users, do not forget the common develop branch
Hi, thanks all for the tip to drop a huge list of merged branches but I believe that we can save time pushing all branches together to have one unique transaction:
git push origin --delete $(git branch -r --merged origin/master | grep origin | egrep -v '>|master|develop' | cut -d/ -f2-)
I like your solution @voiski. Can this somehow also be improved to avoid this message when no refs exist:
fatal: --delete doesn't make sense without any refs
Best answer in my opinion @voiski π π π
I created a script named git-merged on my PATH. Git recognizes this syntax and allows you to execute these scripts as if they are aliases. In this case, this script allows you to run git merged. The contents of the script are as follows:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
remote="${1:-origin}"
branch="$2"
git branch -r --list "$remote/*" --merged $branch \
| sed "s/\s*$remote\///" \
| egrep -v "^(HEAD|release|hotfix|master|develop)"
With this script, you can list merged branches on the remote (default behavior is to check remote origin for branches merged to HEAD):
$ git merged
You can fully specify the remote and target branch to check for merges:
$ git merged origin my-topic
Example above checks all remote tracking branches on remote origin that are merged to local branch my-topic. Using xargs, you can use this to effectively delete all merged branches on the remote:
$ git merged | xargs git push origin --delete
You can add the -n option to do a dry push to verify what will happen before you actually delete anything:
$ git merged | xargs git push origin --delete -n
The following branch patterns are ignored (supports git-flow branch naming):
release/1.2.3hotfix/1.2.3developmasterorigin/HEAD
The intention is to explicitly clean up stale, merged branches for feature development such as:
feature/my-thingbugfix/crash-issuemy-topic-branch
Could you replace the current awk statement that resides in the gist file with the suggestion by @catsby, i.e. awk '{sub(/origin\//,"");print}'?
Here's a bash version, that doesn't rely on awk or sed or xargs.
for branch in $(git branch -r --merged master | grep origin | grep -v develop | grep -v master);
do
git push origin --delete "${branch##*/}";
doneHere's a bash version, that doesn't rely on
awkorsedorxargs.for branch in $(git branch -r --merged master | grep origin | grep -v develop | grep -v master); do git push origin --delete "${branch##*/}"; done
Clearest solution I've seen, it makes the intent much more explicit than a long chain of awk/sed/xarg calls.
Only thing I'd add is that it doesn't quite work for branches that have a '/' in the name - if branch="origin/foo/bar" then ${branch##*/} will be "bar" and not "foo/bar"! You can fix by using the non-greedy single # to match the substring:
for branch in $(git branch -r --merged master | grep origin | grep -v develop | grep -v master)
do
git push origin --delete "${branch#*/}"
doneMy solution to prune merged branches from local + multiple remotes, based on snippets above:
https://gist.github.com/ryanc414/f7686d2c97808b41ed8518a5840e2d78
@jbbarth @malclocke those solutions do not work for a project using git-flow, who's branch names are like @feature/name@