On Sat, May 18 2019, Philip Oakley wrote: > Hi, > I'm unsure if there is a command for this. > > Currently I have 1600+ remote tracking branches (rtb) for my Git repo > as it covers both git.git and git-for-windows and some other > contributors. > > Finding a specific rtb for a particular remote looks like there ought > to be a simple command ready to do the job, but I haven't found > anything. > > Is there a command or simple simple invocation of branch, show-ref, > for-each-ref, etc that can be give a branch pattern and remote name to > quickly filter down the list of potential branches to just one or two > 24-line screens? That's: git for-each-ref 'refs/remotes/<remote>/<pattern>' git branch -a -l '<remote>/<pattern>' The latter will conflate <remote> with any local branches you happen to have prefixed with <remote>. The reason this isn't some easy mode in some command is because there's no hard notion that a given remote "owns" a given set of RTB's. It's just convention, but they can and do overlap sometimes. See the logic in 'git remote remove' that needs to decide if a deletion of a remote should delete its remote tracking refs: 7ad2458fad ("Make "git-remote rm" delete refs acccording to fetch specs", 2008-06-01)