Obliterating history from Git
To obliterate history from the Git repo means removing it from three different sources: Gerrit, Forgejo, and GitHub.
A tool has been written, called gerrit-rewrite-branch, to rewrite Gerrit history completely, including the meta on past CLs.
To use it, build it as --release
(it will stack overflow on debug mode), and find the following repos, and make backups of them:
-
/var/lib/gerrit/git/lix.git
-
/var/lib/forgejo/repositories/*/lix.git
To start off, stop Gerrit and find the Git repo for it.
The tool requires four things: The email address to obliterate, and a replacement name + email address. It also needs a cutoff date for where to remove commits before. To find this, run git cat-file -p {commit}
for a commit earlier than the oldest you want to remove, and note down the timestamp on the committer
line.
Call the tool. It will churn for a while, and rewrite all previous Git commits, plus the Gerrit metadata of affected commits. As a bonus, run a git gc --prune=now
.
Before turning on Gerrit, run systemd-run -p DynamicUser=yes -p StateDirectory=gerrit -t gerrit reindex -d /var/lib/gerrit
. This ensures Gerrit is aware of the changes made outside of its existence.
For forgejo, no special steps are needed; just run the same tool over these repos plus all their forks, and run git gc --prune=now
as well.
Once Gerrit and Forgejo are back up, run ssh gerrit.lix.systems replication start --now --url github
to propagate the changes to GitHub.
Don't forget to ban the commits as well, using ssh gerrit.lix.systems gerrit ban-commit lix {commits}
.