Delete all files and history from remote Git repo without deleting repo itself

As I explain in this answer to Delete or remove all history, commits, and branches from a remote Git repo?, you can also achieve the same thing as Ceilingfish's answer (i.e. delete all references/branches/tags in the remote repo) by doing the following:

  1. Create new empty repo with initial commit:

    mkdir new
    cd new
    echo "This is the README" > README.md
    git init
    git add .
    git commit -m "Add README.md (initial commit)"
    
  2. Add remote repo as origin:

    git remote add origin <url-to-remote>
    
  3. Mirror push to remote:

    git push origin --mirror
    

That will delete all references/branches/tags in your remote repo, and any dangling commits will probably be garbage collected eventually. From the official Linux Kernel Git documentation for git push (emphasis mine):

--mirror

Instead of naming each ref to push, specifies that all refs under refs/ (which includes but is not limited to refs/heads/, refs/remotes/, and refs/tags/) be mirrored to the remote repository. Newly created local refs will be pushed to the remote end, locally updated refs will be force updated on the remote end, and deleted refs will be removed from the remote end.


You can delete a branch from a repository remote like this

git push origin :branchname

if you've got any tags you can delete them like this:

git push origin :refs/tags/tagname

This is assuming you have a remote set up to github called origin

This will leave the local tags / branches on your computer, though.


This is what I have done

git rm -r -f -q

git commit

git push

Then you have to manually delete the files, git rm remove the files from the repo but not from the file system