290
votes

I am trying to exclude a file (db/irrelevant.php) from a Git diff. I have tried putting a file in the db subdirectory called .gitattributes with the line irrelevant.php -diff and I have also tried creating a file called .git/info/attributes containing db/irrelevant.php.

In all cases, the db/irrelevant.php file is included in the diff as a Git binary patch. What I want is for the changes to that file to be ignore by the diff command. What am I doing wrong?

14

14 Answers

402
votes

Omg, drivers and awk to exclude a lousy file ? Since git 1.9 something you can:

git diff -- . ':(exclude)db/irrelevant.php' ':(exclude)db/irrelevant2.php'

Ah, elegance! See the quoted answer and for details this answer by @torek

68
votes

You could set up a custom diff driver with a no op command and assign it to those files that should be ignored.

Create a repository specific diff driver with this command

git config diff.nodiff.command /bin/true

or for all your repos with --global.

(If /bin/true doesn't exist in MacOS, alternatives would be using /usr/bin/true or echo).

Then, assign the new diff driver to those files you want ignored in your .git/info/attributes file.

irrelevant.php    diff=nodiff

If this state is supposed to be shared with other developers you could use .gitattributes instead of .git/info/attributes and share the git config command with your peers (through a documentation file or something).

55
votes

This method is shorter than the accepted answers.

git diff 987200fbfb 878cee40ba --stat -- ':!*.cs'

For more information about the different inclusion/exclusion possibilities read this other post

37
votes

You can also use filterdiff program of the patchutils program collection to exclude some parts of a diff. For example:

git diff | filterdiff -p 1 -x db/irrelevant.php
32
votes

Simplest answer

git diff ':!db/irrelevant.php'

It's just ':!<path to file>' after your diff command. The diff command can be as complicated as you like, and you can use wildcards like *.min.js or add multiple excludes (space separate the quoted blocks) if you want.

18
votes

Really good answer from KurzedMetal for what I needed to do, which was ability to see that the file has changed, but not to generate the diff, which could have been huge, in my case.

But a colleague of mine suggested approach that was even simpler and worked for me:

adding .gitattributes file in the directory where the file to be ignored by git diff resides with the following content:

file-not-to-diff.bin -diff

That still lets git status "see" if the file changed. git diff will also "see" that the file changed, but it will not generate the diff.

That .bin extension for the file in the example was deliberate. I do realize that this is the default behavior of git for binary files, and it does not require special handling with .gitattributes. But in my case, these files were recognized as text files by git and "file" utility and this did the trick.

16
votes

This one-line solution requires no other utils/downloads:

git diff `git status -s |grep -v ^\ D |grep -v file/to/exclude.txt |cut -b4-`

Where file/to/exclude.txt is the name of the file you would like to exclude, of course.

Edit: credit ksenzee for fixing deleted files breaking the diff.

11
votes

Relative to the git root directory

git diff accepts an optional exclude

git diff -- ":(exclude)thingToExclude"

You might want to add some wild cards

git diff -- ":(exclude)*/thingToExclude/*"

Target specific file types

git diff -- ":(exclude)*/$1/*.png"

Or drop a little script for your dotfiles

Such as .bash_profile or .zshrc

gde() {
    # git diff exclude files or folders 
    # usage: 
    # gde fileOrFolderNameToExclude
    git diff -- ":(exclude)*/$1/*"
}
5
votes

Building on existing answers, if you want to exclude a file pattern no matter where it is in the directory, use the corresponding git pathspec value of **:

git diff -- ':!**/yarn.lock'
2
votes

It's very simple, you can exclude what you want using standard unix commands, those commands are available under git bash even under windows environment. Below example shows how to exclude diff for pom.xml files, first check diff to master only for filenames, then using 'grep -v' exclude files which you don't want and then run again diff to master with prepapred list:

git diff master `git diff --name-only master | grep -v pom.xml`
2
votes

I do the following:

git add *pattern_to_exclude*
git diff
git reset HEAD .

I know it's not an elegant solution and it sometimes canot be used (eg. if you already have stuff staged) , but it does the trick without having to type a complicated command

1
votes

similar to Ben Roux's solution, but sharing anyway:

git status --porcelain | grep -v $PATTERN_TO_EXCLUDE | awk '{print $2}' | xargs git diff

or, if the changes have already be committed locally:

git diff --name-only origin/master | grep -v $PATTERN_TO_EXCLUDE | xargs git diff origin/master

Examples:

git status --porcelain | grep -v docs | awk '{print $2}' | xargs git diff origin/master

git diff --name-only origin/master | grep -v docs | xargs git diff origin/master
0
votes

If you want to do this only to visually inspect the diff, a visual diff tool (like Meld) will let you do it with a short command that's easy to remember.

First, set up a diff tool if you haven't already.

$ git config --global diff.tool = meld

Then, you can run a directory diff.

$ git difftool --dir-diff

You'll be able to browse diffs (by file) in Meld (or your tool of choice). Simply don't open the file you want to ignore.

0
votes
git diff remote/master..master --name-only -- ':!README.rst'

Gave me (git version 2.11.0)

fatal: There is nothing to exclude from by :(exclude) patterns.
Perhaps you forgot to add either ':/' or '.' ?
git diff remote/master..master --name-only -- './*' ':!README.rst'

Worked nicely, source: https://stackoverflow.com/a/30084612/5155484