Steve Litt <sl...@troubleshooters.com> writes:

> But then I view all filenames from that directory that have ever been
> in the project, as follows:
>
> git cat-file --buffer --batch-all-objects \
>  --batch-check='%(objecttype) %(objectname)' \
>  | grep ^c | cut -d " "  -f 2 \
>  | xargs -n 1 git ls-tree -r | sort | uniq \
>  | grep propdir
>
> The preceding command lists directory docs/propdir and all the files
> it's ever contained....

In which repository did you run this?  As cat-file's documentation
clearly states, --batch-all-objects does not *care* about the
reachability, so even after rewriting the history using
filter-branch, as long as you have the original objects before your
history rewrite in the repository, it _will_ see those trees with
propdir, even if they are now unreachable thanks to your
filter-branch.  If you are doing the above in the original (or in a
local clone), try running "git repack -a -d && git prune
--expire=now" after filter-branch.

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