Package deletion and restoration support on GitHub
On GitHub if you have the required access, you can delete:
- an entire private package
- an entire public package, if there's not more than 25 downloads of any version of the package
- a specific version of a private package
- a specific version of a public package, if the package version doesn't have more than 25 downloads
Note:
- You cannot delete a public package if any version of the package has more than 25 downloads. In this scenario, contact GitHub support for further assistance.
- When deleting public packages, be aware that you may break projects that depend on your package.
On GitHub, you can also restore an entire package or package version, if:
- You restore the package within 30 days of its deletion.
- The same package namespace is still available and not used for a new package.
Packages API support
You can use the REST API to manage your packages. For more information, see the "GitHub Packages API."
For packages that inherit their permissions and access from repositories, you can use GraphQL to delete a specific package version. The GitHub Packages GraphQL API does not support containers or Docker images that use the package namespace https://ghcr.io/OWNER/PACKAGE-NAME
. For more information about GraphQL support, see "Deleting a version of a repository-scoped package with GraphQL."
Required permissions to delete or restore a package
For packages that inherit their access permissions from repositories, you can delete a package if you have admin permissions to the repository.
Repository-scoped packages on GitHub Packages include these packages:
- npm
- RubyGems
- maven
- Gradle
- NuGet
To delete a package that has granular permissions separate from a repository, such as container images stored at https://ghcr.io/OWNER/PACKAGE-NAME
, you must have admin access to the package.
Deleting a package version
Deleting a version of a repository-scoped package on GitHub
To delete a version of a repository-scoped package, you must have admin permissions to the repository that owns the package. For more information, see "Required permissions."
-
On GitHub, navigate to the main page of the repository.
-
To the right of the list of files, click Packages.
-
Search for and select your package.
-
In the top right of your package's landing page, click Package settings.
-
On the left, click Manage versions.
-
To the right of the version you want to delete, click and select Delete version.
-
To confirm deletion, type the package name and click I understand the consequences, delete this version.
Deleting a version of a repository-scoped package with GraphQL
For packages that inherit their permissions and access from repositories, you can use the GraphQL to delete a specific package version.
GraphQL is not supported for containers or Docker images at ghcr.io
.
Use the deletePackageVersion
mutation in the GraphQL API. You must use a token with the read:packages
, delete:packages
, and repo
scopes. For more information about tokens, see "About GitHub Packages."
The following example demonstrates how to delete a package version, using a packageVersionId
of MDIyOlJlZ2lzdHJ5UGFja2FnZVZlcnNpb243MTExNg
.
curl -X POST \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.package-deletes-preview+json" \
-H "Authorization: bearer TOKEN" \
-d '{"query":"mutation { deletePackageVersion(input:{packageVersionId:\"MDIyOlJlZ2lzdHJ5UGFja2FnZVZlcnNpb243MTExNg==\"}) { success }}"}' \
HOSTNAME/graphql
To find all of the private packages you have published to GitHub Packages, along with the version IDs for the packages, you can use the packages
connection through the repository
object. You will need a token with the read:packages
and repo
scopes. For more information, see the packages
connection or the PackageOwner
interface.
For more information about the deletePackageVersion
mutation, see "deletePackageVersion
."
You cannot directly delete an entire package using GraphQL, but if you delete every version of a package, the package will no longer show on GitHub.
Deleting a version of a user-scoped package on GitHub
To delete a specific version of a user-scoped package on GitHub, such as for a Docker image at ghcr.io
, use these steps. To delete an entire package, see "Deleting an entire user-scoped package on GitHub."
To review who can delete a package version, see "Required permissions."
- On GitHub, navigate to the main page of your user account.
- In the top right corner of GitHub, click your profile photo, then click Your profile.
- On your profile page, in the top right, click Packages.
- Search for and select your package.
- In the top right of your package's landing page, click Package settings.
- On the left, click Manage versions.
- To the right of the version you want to delete, click and select Delete version.
- To confirm deletion, type the package name and click I understand the consequences, delete this version.
Deleting a version of an organization-scoped package on GitHub
To delete a specific version of an organization-scoped package on GitHub, such as for a Docker image at ghcr.io
, use these steps.
To delete an entire package, see "Deleting an entire organization-scoped package on GitHub."
To review who can delete a package version, see "Required permissions."
-
On GitHub, navigate to the main page of your organization.
-
Under your organization name, click Packages.
-
Search for and select your package.
-
In the top right of your package's landing page, click Package settings.
-
On the left, click Manage versions.
-
To the right of the version you want to delete, click and select Delete version.
-
To confirm deletion, type the package name and click I understand the consequences, delete this version.
Deleting an entire package
Deleting an entire repository-scoped package on GitHub
To delete an entire repository-scoped package, you must have admin permissions to the repository that owns the package. For more information, see "Required permissions."
-
On GitHub, navigate to the main page of the repository.
-
To the right of the list of files, click Packages.
-
Search for and select your package.
-
In the top right of your package's landing page, click Package settings.
-
Under "Danger Zone", click Delete this package.
-
To confirm, review the confirmation message, enter your package name, and click I understand, delete this package.
Deleting an entire user-scoped package on GitHub
To review who can delete a package, see "Required permissions."
- On GitHub, navigate to the main page of your user account.
- In the top right corner of GitHub, click your profile photo, then click Your profile.
- On your profile page, in the top right, click Packages.
- Search for and select your package.
- In the top right of your package's landing page, click Package settings.
- On the left, click Options.
- Under "Danger zone", click Delete this package.
- To confirm deletion, type the package name and click I understand the consequences, delete this package.
Deleting an entire organization-scoped package on GitHub
To review who can delete a package, see "Required permissions."
-
On GitHub, navigate to the main page of your organization.
-
Under your organization name, click Packages.
-
Search for and select your package.
-
In the top right of your package's landing page, click Package settings.
-
On the left, click Options.
-
Under "Danger zone", click Delete this package.
-
To confirm deletion, type the package name and click I understand the consequences, delete this package.
Restoring packages
You can restore a deleted package or version if:
- You restore the package within 30 days of its deletion.
- The same package namespace and version is still available and not reused for a new package.
For example, if you have a deleted rubygem package named octo-package
that was scoped to the repo octo-repo-owner/octo-repo
, then you can only restore the package if the package namespace rubygem.pkg.github.com/octo-repo-owner/octo-repo/octo-package
is still available, and 30 days have not yet passed.
You must also meet one of these permission requirements:
- For repository-scoped packages: You have admin permissions to the repository that owns the deleted package.
- For user-account scoped packages: Your user account owns the deleted package.
- For organization-scoped packages: You have admin permissions to the deleted package in the organization that owns the package.
For more information, see "Required permissions."
Once the package is restored, the package will use the same namespace it did before. If the same package namespace is not available, you will not be able to restore your package. In this scenario, to restore the deleted package, you must delete the new package that uses the deleted package's namespace first.
Restoring a package in an organization
You can restore a deleted package through your organization account settings, as long as the package was in one of your repositories or had granular permissions and was scoped to your organization account.
To review who can restore a package in an organization, see "Required permissions."
-
On GitHub, navigate to the main page of the organization.
-
Under your organization name, click Settings.
-
On the left, click Packages.
-
Under "Deleted Packages", next to the package you want to restore, click Restore.
-
To confirm, type the name of the package and click I understand the consequences, restore this package.
Restoring a user-account scoped package
You can restore a deleted package through your user account settings, if the package was in one of your repositories or scoped to your user account. For more information, see "Required permissions."
- In the upper-right corner of any page, click your profile photo, then click Settings.
- On the left, click Packages.
- Under "Deleted Packages", next to the package you want to restore, click Restore.
- To confirm, type the name of the package and click I understand the consequences, restore this package.
Restoring a package version
You can restore a package version from your package's landing page. To review who can restore a package, see "Required permissions."
- Navigate to your package's landing page.
- On the right, click Package settings.
- On the left, click Manage versions.
- On the top right, use the "Versions" drop-down menu and select Deleted.
- Next to the deleted package version you want to restore, click Restore.
- To confirm, click I understand the consequences, restore this version.