I got this error when starting up TortoiseGit:
Could not get all refs.
libgit2 returned: Refspec 'refs/heads/origin/HEAD' not found
While annoying, it does not prevent me from using TortoiseGit. However, I'd like to make it go away, because it is, well, annoying. How do I fix this?
Updated Answer
So it turns out that, for the purpose of updating a local repo's view of which branch <remote>/HEAD
points to, you can have git automatically fetch that information from the remote and set it locally for you, instead of having to manually set it with git symbolic-ref
like in my old solution above:
git remote set-head <remote> --auto
# Or shorter
git remote set-head <remote> -a
Note that this command doesn't actually change what the default branch is on the remote repo itself. For that, you'll probably need to use git symbolic-ref
directly on the remote repo, if you have access to it.
- Documentation for
git remote set-head
.
Old Answer
The problem that the error message refers to is that apparently libgit2 is trying to read the remote default branch pointed to by refs/remotes/origin/HEAD
, but the remote branch doesn't exist, thus the error.
Using git branch -a
, my local repo thinks that origin/develop
is the remote default branch:
remotes/origin/HEAD -> origin/develop
At one point origin/develop
was indeed the default branch in my origin
repo on GitHub, but it isn't any longer, the master
branch is. The develop
branch was deleted from origin
since it was no longer needed.
So I fixed this by manually updating the local reference origin/HEAD
to point to the new default branch on origin
:
git symbolic-ref refs/remotes/origin/HEAD refs/remotes/origin/master
Or if I wanted to also add a message to the reflog for refs/remotes/origin/HEAD
:
git symbolic-ref -m "Update to new remote default branch" \
refs/remotes/origin/HEAD refs/remotes/origin/master
This resolved the issue. See also:
- Documentation for
git symbolic-ref
.
- Git: Correct way to change Active Branch in a bare repository?.
- How do I change a Git remote HEAD to point to something besides “master”.