How can I move a single directory from a git repository to a new repository whilst maintaining the history?
You can use git filter-branch
to rewrite the history of a project. From the documentation:
To rewrite the repository to look as if foodir/ had been its project root, and discard all other history:
git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter foodir -- --all
Make several copies of your repo, do that for each subdirectory you want to split out, and you should wind up with what you're looking for.
To export a folder as a new repository you need:
- To clone the repository where the folder you want to export is.
- To create a empty repository on your hosting provider as GitHub, to store the exported folder.
-
Open the cloned repository folder and run this command:
git subtree push --prefix=YourFolderNameToExport https://github.com/YourUserName/YourNewCleanRepoName master
The point of git is that the history is embodied in each commit by hashing the parent commit. You could "replay" the commits (this is essentially how the svn-importer works) into a new repository and only keeping each sub-project. This, however, would destroy the meaning of the commit hashes. If you have no problem with that then so be it.
In the past I've just cloned it and moved on. This makes things larger but disk space is cheap; my time is expensive.
I also don't know of any tools to splice out a directory. I suppose you could git-log on the directory to find all commits on it then replay the commits with something like git-fast-export?