Installation is as easy as
$ PACKAGE_TOOL install git-filter-repo
for those using a package manager to install software on their system from one of the following package repositories:
This list covers at least Windows (Scoop), Mac OS X (Homebrew), and Linux (most the rest). Note that I do not curate this list (and have no interest in doing so); https://repology.org tracks who packages these versions.
The first hurdle for Windows users is installing a functional version of Python (it has been reported that Windows ships with a stripped down python-like program that just doesn't work). python.org probably has good instructions here, though many users report a preference getting it from the Microsoft Store and seem to be successful with that (particularly since msys2 issue #27 was fixed by the Git for Windows maintainer).
Several users also needed to modify the first line of the git-filter-repo script to change paths, especially if installing git-filter-repo using the pip method instead of Scoop, and particularly with older versions of Git for Windows (anything less than 2.32.0.windows.1) as GitBash had an unfortunate shebang length limitation (see git-for-windows issue #3165).
For additional details (if needed, though be aware these might not be accurate anymore given both git-for-windows and git-filter-repo fixes), see #225, #231, #124, #36, and this git mailing list thread.
filter-repo only consists of a few files that need to be installed:
-
git-filter-repo
This is the only thing needed for basic use.
This can be installed in the directory pointed to by
git --exec-path
, or placed anywhere in $PATH.If your python3 executable is named "python" instead of "python3" (this particularly appears to affect a number of Windows users), then you'll also need to modify the first line of git-filter-repo to replace "python3" with "python".
-
git_filter_repo.py
This is needed if you want to make use of one of the scripts in contrib/filter-repo-demos/, or want to write your own script making use of filter-repo as a python library.
You can create this symlink to (or copy of) git-filter-repo named git_filter-repo.py and place it in your python site packages;
python -c "import site; print(site.getsitepackages())"
may help you find the appropriate location for your system. Alternatively, you can place this file anywhere within $PYTHONPATH. -
git-filter-repo.1
This is needed if you want
git filter-repo --help
to succeed in displaying the manpage, when help.format is "man" (the default on Linux and Mac).This can be installed in the directory pointed to by
$(git --man-path)/man1/
, or placed anywhere in $MANDIR/man1/ where $MANDIR is some entry from $MANPATH.Note that
git filter-repo -h
will show a more limited built-in set of instructions regardless of whether the manpage is installed. -
git-filter-repo.html
This is needed if you want
git filter-repo --help
to succeed in displaying the html version of the help, when help.format is set to "html" (the default on Windows).This can be installed in the directory pointed to by
git --html-path
.Note that
git filter-repo -h
will show a more limited built-in set of instructions regardless of whether the html version of help is installed.
So, installation might look something like the following:
-
If you don't have the necessary documentation files (because you are installing from a clone of filter-repo instead of from a tarball) then you can first run:
make snag_docs
(which just copies the generated documentation files from the
docs
branch) -
Run the following
cp -a git-filter-repo $(git --exec-path) cp -a git-filter-repo.1 $(git --man-path)/man1 cp -a git-filter-repo.html $(git --html-path) ln -s $(git --exec-path)/git-filter-repo \ $(python -c "import site; print(site.getsitepackages()[-1])")/git_filter_repo.py
Installation via pip
For those who prefer to install python packages via pip, you merely need to run:
$ pip3 install git-filter-repo
However, the place where pip places that package might not be in your $PATH (thus requiring you to manually update your $PATH afterwards), and on windows the pip install might not take care of python-specific issues for you (see "Notes for Windows Users", above). As such, installation via package managers is recommended instead.
Installing should be doable by hand, but a Makefile is provided for those that prefer it. However, usage of the Makefile really requires overridding at least a couple of the directories with sane values, e.g.
$ make prefix=/usr pythondir=/usr/lib64/python3.8/site-packages install
Also, the Makefile will not edit the shebang line (the first line) of git-filter-repo if your python executable is not named "python3"; you'll still need to do that yourself.