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Rename a Git repository in your project

TFS 2017 | TFS 2015

Visual Studio 2019 | Visual Studio 2017 | Visual Studio 2015

You can rename a Git repository in a project from your web browser. After you rename the repo, each member of your team should take a few steps to re-enable their dev machines to connect to the repo on the server.

Prerequisites

Rename the repository

  1. Open a project (on-premises http://{your_server}:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection/{your_project} or Azure DevOps Services https://dev.azure.com/{your_account}/{your_project}) in your web browser.

  2. Go to the control panel.

    Administer account

  3. Rename the repo from the Version Control tab.

    Rename a repository

Update the Git remotes on your dev machines

Git uses remote references to fetch and push changes between your local copy of a repository and the remote version that is stored on the server. After a Git repository or project has been renamed, you should update your remote references. Update your references to that the remote repository URL contains the project and the repository name.

Each member of your team must update their local Git repos to continue connecting from their dev machines to the repo in the project. The instructions below show how to update the remotes for the Fabrikam Mobile repo that was renamed to Fabrikam.

Get the new URL for the repo

  • Copy the repository URL to your clipboard.

    Remote URL for the repository

Update your remote in Visual Studio

  1. Connect to the repo.

    Connect to the repository

  2. Open the project settings.

    Project settings

  3. Open the repo settings.

    Repository settings

  4. Edit the fetch and push remote references and paste the URL that you copied from the remote repo.

    Edit remote

Update your remote in older versions of Visual Studio from the command prompt

If you use an older version of Visual Studio or work with Git from the command prompt:

  1. Open the Git command prompt.

  2. Go to the local repository and update the remote to the URL you copied from the remote repo.

    git remote set-url origin {URL_you_copied_from_the_remote_repo}

Refresh Team Explorer

  1. Refresh Team Explorer.

    Refresh Team Explorer

  2. Team Explorer now shows the updated repo name.

    Team Explorer Updated

Q&A

Q: Can I rename my repo again? Can I reuse an old repo name?

A: Yes

Q: What if I named my remote something other than the default origin?

A: If you're using:

  • Visual Studio 2015, then edit the remote with the name you used.

  • An older version of Visual Studio or the command prompt, then run this command: git remote set-url {remote_name} {URL_you_copied_from_the_remote_repo}