Hi all, I have git 2.17.1 running on Void Linux 64 bit running the Linux 4.16.9_1 kernel, not available to the public in any way (yet). I have a repository in my project's working directory, and push to a bare repository on the hard disk. My project (call it myproject) had a directory (call it docs/propdir) that was unnecessary for the project, and I've decided I don't want to offer the files in that directory as free software. So I need to delete docs/propdir from all commits in the repository. I did the following, while in my working repository's myproject directory: git filter-branch --tree-filter 'rm -rf docs/propdir' HEAD After that command, I could git clone the working repo and then git checkout to a commit stage that used to have the directory and files, and they're not there. So far, so good. But then I view all filenames from that directory that have ever been in the project, as follows: git cat-file --buffer --batch-all-objects \ --batch-check='%(objecttype) %(objectname)' \ | grep ^c | cut -d " " -f 2 \ | xargs -n 1 git ls-tree -r | sort | uniq \ | grep propdir The preceding command lists directory docs/propdir and all the files it's ever contained. This makes me uneasy because if the filenames are still there, I wonder if there's a route to get the files with a git command. Second, I'd prefer that when my repo is exposed to the public, people not know this directory and these files ever existed. What command do I do to remove all mention of doc/propdir and its files from my git history? Thanks, SteveT Steve Litt June 2018 featured book: Twenty Eight Tales of Troubleshooting http://www.troubleshooters.com/28