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Home/ Questions/Q 6220053
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T07:53:28+00:00 2026-05-24T07:53:28+00:00

As we consider moving from SVN to git at work, a coworker has raised

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As we consider moving from SVN to git at work, a coworker has raised the concern that a malicious or accident-prone developer could use git rebase to delete remote history from our shared repo.

Edit: As pointed out in the answers, entire branches could also be deleted from the remote repo with git push origin :branch-name.

Is this a realistic problem? If so, what approach can we take to prevent it?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T07:53:28+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 7:53 am

    I tend to agree with your coworker that there is a problem here because:

    • no matter how well you trust your committers, there is always a possibility of human error
    • more onerous review processes (e.g. Gerrit) are not always appropriate
    • restoring from backups can be slow and a PITA

    Have you considered the receive.denyNonFastForwards and receive.denyDeletes config parameters? AFAICT these are available in Git 1.6 onwards.

    From Pro Git:

    If you rebase commits that you’ve already pushed and then try to push
    again, or otherwise try to push a commit to a remote branch that
    doesn’t contain the commit that the remote branch currently points to,
    you’ll be denied. This is generally good policy; but in the case of
    the rebase, you may determine that you know what you’re doing and can
    force-update the remote branch with a -f flag to your push command.

    To disable the ability to force-update remote branches to
    non-fast-forward references, set receive.denyNonFastForwards

    The other way you can do this is via server-side receive hooks, which I’ll cover in a bit. That approach lets you do more complex things like deny non-fast-forwards to a certain subset of users.

    As the author mentions, this rule can also be enforced via a receive hook (which is described later in Pro Git).

    These techniques should protect against accidental (or malicious) lost history in your shared repo.

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