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I would like to change the directory name of a git submodule in my git superproject.

Lets suppose I have the following entry in my .gitmodules file:

[submodule ".emacs.d/vimpulse"]  
path = .emacs.d/vimpulse  
url = git://gitorious.org/vimpulse/vimpulse.git

What do I have to type to move the .emacs.d/vimpulse directory to .emacs.d/vendor/vimpulse without deleting it first (explained here and here) and then readding it.

Does git really need the whole path in the submodule tag

[submodule ".emacs.d/vimpulse"]

or is it also possible to store just the name of the subproject ?

[submodule "vimpulse"]

edit:

There exists a GSoC11 idea which tries to address the "move submodule"-problem: see wiki and repo

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6 Answers

up vote 50 down vote accepted

It’s similar to how you remove a submodule (see How do I remove a git submodule?):

  1. Edit .gitmodules and change the path of the submodule appropriately, and put it in the index with git add .gitmodules.
  2. If needed, create the parent directory of the new location of the submodule (mkdir -p new/parent) and make sure Git tracks this directory (git add new/parent).
  3. Move all content from the old to the new directory (mv -vi old/parent/submodule new/parent/submodule).
  4. Remove the old directory with git rm --cached old/parent/submodule.

    git status output looks like this for me afterwards:

    # On branch master
    # Changes to be committed:
    #   (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
    #
    #       modified:   .gitmodules
    #       renamed:    old/parent/submodule -> new/parent/submodule
    #
    
  5. Finally, commit the changes.

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9  
When you update .gitmodules make sure you update both that path configuration and the submodule's name. For example, in moving foo/module to bar/module you must change in .gitmodules the section [submodule "foo/module"] to [submodule "bar/module"], and under that same section path = foo/module to path = bar/module. Also, you must change in .git/config the section [submodule "foo/module"] to [submodule "bar/module"]. – wilhelmtell Nov 12 '11 at 14:11
1  
It didn't work for me either... the closest solution I've found is deleting a submodule (a pain) and then re-add it in the different location. – PaBLoX Dec 6 '11 at 1:29
9  
A very-very important note: If you get fatal: 'git status --porcelain' failed in... just delete any .git files or directories in the submodule. – antitoxic Mar 11 '12 at 9:14
1  
The order of steps was wrong for me. git add new/parent didn’t do anything after mkdir, which makes sense, because Git can’t track empty directories. I had to git add new/parent after moving the submodule directory with mv. – Rory O'Kane Aug 27 '12 at 19:46
2  
It looks like this post misses a few steps, such as editing .git/modules/old/parent/submodule, moving it to the new location, updating gitdir in old/parent/submodule/.git... – szx Mar 28 at 13:48
show 6 more comments

In my case, I wanted to move a submodule from one directory into a subdirectory, e.g. "AFNetworking" -> "ext/AFNetworking". These are the steps I followed:

  1. Edit .gitmodules changing submodule name and path to be "ext/AFNetworking"
  2. Move submodule's git directory from ".git/modules/AFNetworking" to ".git/modules/ext/AFNetworking"
  3. Move library from "AFNetworking" to "ext/AFNetworking"
  4. Edit ".git/modules/ext/AFNetworking/config" and fix the [core] worktree line. Mine changed from ../../../AFNetworking to ../../../../ext/AFNetworking
  5. Edit "ext/AFNetworking/.git" and fix gitdir. Mine changed from ../.git/modules/AFNetworking to ../../git/modules/ext/AFNetworking
  6. git add .gitmodules
  7. git rm --cached AFNetworking
  8. git submodule add -f <url> ext/AFNetworking

Finally, I saw in the git status:

matt$ git status
# On branch ios-master
# Changes to be committed:
#   (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
#
#   modified:   .gitmodules
#   renamed:    AFNetworking -> ext/AFNetworking

Et voila. The above example doesn't change the directory depth, which makes a big difference to the complexity of the task, and doesn't change the name of the submodule (which may not really be necessary, but I did it to be consistent with what would happen if I added a new module at that path.)

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Thanks Matt. I was lost on the accepted answer. Thank you for covering more than the base case. This worked like a charm. – Andrew Hubbs Jan 22 at 0:19
You don't need to shuffle around .git/modules paths, or change the name of the submodule (as arand and Bob Bell mention). Though, doing so may keep things cleaner. – gatoatigrado Mar 25 at 21:51

The string in quotes after "[submodule" doesn't matter. You can change it to "foobar" if you want. It's used to find the matching entry in ".git/config".

Therefore, if you make the change before you run "git submodule init", it'll work fine. If you make the change (or pick up the change through a merge), you'll need to either manually edit .git/config or run "git submodule init" again. If you do the latter, you'll be left with a harmless "stranded" entry with the old name in .git/config.

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This is really annoying, but you're right. The worst part is, if you just change the URL, running git init doesn't seem to update it, you do have to edit .git/config manually. – crimson_penguin Jan 6 '12 at 20:09
1  
in this case git submodule sync propagates the change to .git/config automatically – CharlesB Apr 25 '12 at 20:12

The trick seems to be understanding that the .git directory for submodules are now kept in the master repository, under .git/modules, and each submodule has a .git file that points to it. This is the procedure you need now:

  • Move the submodule to its new home.
  • Edit the .git file in the submodule's working directory, and modify the path it contains so that it points to the right directory in the master repository's .git/modules directory.
  • Enter the master repository's .git/modules directory, and find the directory corresponding to your submodule.
  • Edit the config file, updating the worktree path so that it points to the new location of the submodule's working directory.
  • Edit the .gitmodules file in the root of the master repository, updating the path to the working directory of the submodule.
  • git add -u
  • git add <parent-of-new-submodule-directory> (It's important that you add the parent, and not the submodule directory itself.)

A few notes:

  • The [submodule "submodule-name"] lines in .gitmodules and .git/config must match each other, but don't correspond to anything else.
  • The submodule working directory and .git directory must correctly point to each other.
  • The .gitmodules and .git/config files should be synchronised.
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You can just add a new submodule and remove the old submodule using standard commands. (should prevent any accidental errors inside of .git)

Example setup:

mkdir foo; cd foo; git init; 
echo "readme" > README.md; git add README.md; git commit -m "First"
## add submodule
git submodule add git://github.com/jquery/jquery.git
git commit -m "Added jquery"
## </setup example>

Examle move 'jquery' to 'vendor/jquery/jquery' :

oldPath="jquery"
newPath="vendor/jquery/jquery"
orginUrl=`git config --local --get submodule.${oldPath}.url`

## add new submodule
mkdir -p `dirname "${newPath}"`
git submodule add -- "${orginUrl}" "${newPath}"

## remove old submodule
git config -f .git/config --remove-section "submodule.${oldPath}"
git config -f .gitmodules --remove-section "submodule.${oldPath}"
git rm --cached "${oldPath}"
rm -rf "${oldPath}"              ## remove old src
rm -rf ".git/modules/${oldPath}" ## cleanup gitdir (housekeeping)

## commit
git add .gitmodules
git commit -m "Renamed ${oldPath} to ${newPath}"

Bonus method for large submodules:

If the submodule is large and you prefer not to wait for the clone, you can create the new submodule using the old as origin, and then switch the origin.

Example (use same example setup)

oldPath="jquery"
newPath="vendor/jquery/jquery"
baseDir=`pwd`
orginUrl=`git config --local --get submodule.${oldPath}.url`

# add new submodule using old submodule as origin
mkdir -p `dirname "${newPath}"`
git submodule add -- "file://${baseDir}/${oldPath}" "${newPath}"

## change origin back to original
git config -f .gitmodules submodule."${newPath}".url "${orginUrl}"
git submodule sync -- "${newPath}"

## remove old submodule
...
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The given solution did not work for me, however a similar version did...

This is with a cloned repository, hence the submodule git repos are contained in the top repositories .git dir. All cations are from the top repository:

  1. Edit .gitmodules and change the "path =" setting for the submodule in question. (No need to change the label, nor to add this file to index.)

  2. Edit .git/modules/name/config and change the "worktree =" setting for the submodule in question

  3. run:

    mv submodule newpath/submodule
    git add -u
    git add newpath/submodule
    

I wonder if it makes a difference if the repositories are atomic, or relative submodules, in my case it was relative (submodule/.git is a ref back to topproject/.git/modules/submodule)

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