I have a project with a submodule that is pointing to an invalid commit: the submodule commit remained local and when I try to fetch it from another repo I get:
$ git submodule update
fatal: reference is not a tree: 2d7cfbd09fc96c04c4c41148d44ed7778add6b43
Unable to checkout '2d7cfbd09fc96c04c4c41148d44ed7778add6b43' in submodule path 'mysubmodule'
I know what the submodule HEAD should be, is there any way I can change this locally, without pushing from the repo that does have commit 2d7cfbd09fc96c04c4c41148d4开发者_StackOverflow社区4ed7778add6b43
?
I'm not sure if I'm being clear... here's a similar situation I found.
Assuming the submodule's repository does contain a commit you want to use (unlike the commit that is referenced from the current state of the super-project), there are two ways to do it.
The first requires you to already know the commit from the submodule that you want to use. It works from the “inside, out” by directly adjusting the submodule then updating the super-project. The second works from the “outside, in” by finding the super-projects commit that modified the submodule and then resetting the super-project's index to refer to a different submodule commit.
Inside, Out
If you already know which commit you to want the submodule to use, cd
to the submodule, check out the commit you want, then git add
and git commit
it back in the super-project.
Example:
$ git submodule update
fatal: reference is not a tree: e47c0a16d5909d8cb3db47c81896b8b885ae1556
Unable to checkout 'e47c0a16d5909d8cb3db47c81896b8b885ae1556' in submodule path 'sub'
Oops, someone made a super-project commit that refers to an unpublished commit in the submodule sub
. Somehow, we already know that we want the submodule to be at commit 5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c
. Go there and check it out directly.
Checkout in the Submodule
$ cd sub
$ git checkout 5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c
Note: moving to '5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c' which isn't a local branch
If you want to create a new branch from this checkout, you may do so
(now or later) by using -b with the checkout command again. Example:
git checkout -b <new_branch_name>
HEAD is now at 5d5a3ee... quux
$ cd ..
Since we are checking out a commit, this produces a detached HEAD in the submodule. If you want to make sure that the submodule is using a branch, then use git checkout -b newbranch <commit>
to create and checkout a branch at the commit or checkout the branch that you want (e.g. one with the desired commit at the tip).
Update the Super-project
Checkout in the submodule is reflected in the super-project as a change to the working tree. So we need to stage the change in the super-project's index and verify the results.
$ git add sub
Check the Results
$ git submodule update
$ git diff
$ git diff --cached
diff --git c/sub i/sub
index e47c0a1..5d5a3ee 160000
--- c/sub
+++ i/sub
@@ -1 +1 @@
-Subproject commit e47c0a16d5909d8cb3db47c81896b8b885ae1556
+Subproject commit 5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c
The submodule update was silent because the submodule is already at the specified commit. The first diff shows that the index and work tree are the same. The third diff shows that the only staged change is moving the sub
submodule to a different commit.
Commit
git commit
This commits the fixed-up submodule entry.
Outside, In
If you are not sure which commit you should use from the submodule, you can look at the history in the superproject to guide you. You can also manage the reset directly from the super-project.
$ git submodule update
fatal: reference is not a tree: e47c0a16d5909d8cb3db47c81896b8b885ae1556
Unable to checkout 'e47c0a16d5909d8cb3db47c81896b8b885ae1556' in submodule path 'sub'
This is the same situation as above. But this time we will focus on fixing it from the super-project instead of dipping it into the submodule.
Find the Super-project's Errant Commit
$ git log --oneline -p -- sub
ce5d37c local change in sub
diff --git a/sub b/sub
index 5d5a3ee..e47c0a1 160000
--- a/sub
+++ b/sub
@@ -1 +1 @@
-Subproject commit 5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c
+Subproject commit e47c0a16d5909d8cb3db47c81896b8b885ae1556
bca4663 added sub
diff --git a/sub b/sub
new file mode 160000
index 0000000..5d5a3ee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/sub
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+Subproject commit 5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c
OK, it looks like it went bad in ce5d37c
, so we will restore the submodule from its parent (ce5d37c~
).
Alternatively, you can take the submodule's commit from the patch text (5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c
) and use the above “inside, out” process instead.
Checkout in the Super-project
$ git checkout ce5d37c~ -- sub
This resets the submodule entry for sub
to what it was at commit ce5d37c~
in the super-project.
Update the Submodule
$ git submodule update
Submodule path 'sub': checked out '5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c'
The submodule update went OK (it indicates a detached HEAD).
Check the Results
$ git diff ce5d37c~ -- sub
$ git diff
$ git diff --cached
diff --git c/sub i/sub
index e47c0a1..5d5a3ee 160000
--- c/sub
+++ i/sub
@@ -1 +1 @@
-Subproject commit e47c0a16d5909d8cb3db47c81896b8b885ae1556
+Subproject commit 5d5a3ee314476701a20f2c6ec4a53f88d651df6c
The first diff shows that sub
is now the same in ce5d37c~
. The second diff shows that the index and work tree are the same. The third diff shows the only staged change is moving the sub
submodule to a different commit.
Commit
git commit
This commits the fixed-up submodule entry.
try this:
git submodule sync
git submodule update
This error can mean that a commit is missing in the submodule. That is, the repository (A) has a submodule (B). A wants to load B so that it is pointing to a certain commit (in B). If that commit is somehow missing, you'll get that error. Once possible cause: the reference to the commit was pushed in A, but the actual commit was not pushed from B. So I'd start there.
Less likely, there's a permissions problem, and the commit cannot be pulled (possible if you're using git+ssh).
Make sure the submodule paths look ok in .git/config and .gitmodules.
One last thing to try - inside the submodule directory: git reset HEAD --hard
Possible cause
This can happens when:
- Submodule(s) have been edited in place
- Submodule(s) committed, which updates the hash of the submodule being pointed to
- Submodule(s) not pushed.
e.g. something like this happened:
$ cd submodule
$ emacs my_source_file # edit some file(s)
$ git commit -am "Making some changes but will forget to push!"
Should have submodule pushed at this point.
$ cd .. # back to parent repository
$ git commit -am "updates to parent repository"
$ git push origin master
As a result, the missing commits could not possibly be found by the remote user because they are still on the local disk.
Solution
Informa the person who modified the submodule to push, i.e.
$ cd submodule
$ git push
Your branch may not be up to date, a simple solution but try git fetch
I got this error when I did:
$ git submodule update --init --depth 1
but the commit in the parent project was pointing at an earlier commit.
Deleting the submodule folder and running:
$ git submodule update --init
did NOT solve the problem. I deleted the repo and tried again without the depth flag and it worked.
This error happens in Ubuntu 16.04 git 2.7.4, but not on Ubuntu 18.04 git 2.17.
@pavan kumar notes in comment:
I just increased the depth count to include the old commit and it worked.
This may also happen when you have a submodule pointing to a repository that was rebased and the given commit is "gone". While the commit may still be in the remote repository, it is not in a branch. If you can't create a new branch (e.g. not your repository), you're stuck with having to update the super project to point to a new commit. Alternatively you can push one of your copies of the submodules elsewhere and then update the super-project to point to that repository instead.
This answer is for users of SourceTree with limited terminal git experience.
Open the problematic submodule from within the Git project (super-project).
Fetch and ensure 'Fetch all tags' is checked.
Rebase pull your Git project.
This will solve the 'reference is not a tree' problem 9 out of ten times. That 1 time it won't, is a terminal fix as described by the top answer.
Your submodule history is safely preserved in the submodule git anyway.
So, why not just delete the submodule and add it again?
Otherwise, did you try manually editing the HEAD
or the refs/master/head
within the submodule .git
Just to be sure, try updating your git
binaries.
GitHub for Windows has the version git version 1.8.4.msysgit.0
which in my case was the problem. Updating solved it.
In my case, none of answer above solve the problem even thoungh they are good answers. So I post my solution (in my case there are two git clients, client A and B):
go to submodule's dir:
cd sub
checkout to master:
git checkout master
rebase to a commit code which both client can see
go back to the parent's dir:
commit to master
change to the other client, do
rebase
again.finally it works fine now! Maybe lose a couple of commits but it works.
FYI, don't try to remove your submodule, it will remain
.git/modules
there and cannot readd this submodule again, unless reactive local one.
To sync the git repo with the submodule's head, in case that is really what you want, I found that removing the submodule and then readding it avoids the tinkering with the history. Unfortunately removing a submodule requires hacking rather than being a single git command, but doable.
Steps I followed to remove the submodule, inspired by https://gist.github.com/kyleturner/1563153:
- Run git rm --cached
- Delete the relevant lines from the .gitmodules file.
- Delete the relevant section from .git/config.
- Delete the now untracked submodule files.
- Remove directory .git/modules/
Again, this can be useful if all you want is to point at the submodule's head again, and you haven't complicated things by needing to keep the local copy of the submodule intact. It assumes you have the submodule "right" as its own repo, wherever the origin of it is, and you just want to get back to properly including it as a submodule.
Note: always make a full copy of your project before engaging in these kinds of manipulation or any git command beyond simple commit or push. I'd advise that with all other answers as well, and as a general git guideline.
Just stumbled upon this problem, and none of these solutions worked for me. What turned out to be the solution for my issue is actually much simpler: upgrade Git. Mine was 1.7.1, and after I upgraded it to 2.16.1 (latest), the problem went away without a trace! Guess I'm leaving it here, hope it helps someone.
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