I have an already initialized Git repository that I added a .gitignore
file to. How can I refresh the file index so the files I want ignored get ignored?
21 Answers
To untrack a single file that has already been added/initialized to your repository, i.e., stop tracking the file but not delete it from your system use: git rm --cached filename
To untrack every file that is now in your .gitignore
:
First commit any outstanding code changes, and then, run this command:
git rm -r --cached .
This removes any changed files from the index(staging area), then just run:
git add .
Commit it:
git commit -m ".gitignore is now working"
To undo git rm --cached filename
, use git add filename
.
Make sure to commit all your important changes before running
git add .
Otherwise, you will lose any changes to other files.
If you are trying to ignore changes to a file that's already tracked in the repository (e.g. a dev.properties file that you would need to change for your local environment but you would never want to check in these changes) than what you want to do is:
git update-index --assume-unchanged <file>
If you wanna start tracking changes again
git update-index --no-assume-unchanged <file>
See git-update-index(1) Manual Page.
Also have a look at the skip-worktree
and no-skip-worktree
options for update-index if you need this to persist past a git-reset (via)
Update: Since people have been asking, here's a convenient (and updated since commented on below) alias for seeing which files are currently "ignored" (--assume-unchanged) in your local workspace
$ git config --global alias.ignored = !git ls-files -v | grep "^[[:lower:]]"
Yes - .gitignore
system only ignores files not currently under version control from git.
I.e. if you've already added a file called test.txt
using git-add
, then adding test.txt
to .gitignore
will still cause changes to test.txt
to be tracked.
You would have to git rm test.txt
first and commit that change. Only then will changes to test.txt
be ignored.
Remove trailing whitespace in .gitignore
Also, make sure you have no trailing whitespace in your .gitignore. I got to this question because I was searching for an answer, then I had a funny feeling I should open the editor instead of just cat'ing .gitignore. Removed a single extra space from the end and poof it works now :)
If you want to stop tracking file without deleting the file from your local system, which I prefer for ignoring config/database.yml
file. Simply try:
git rm --cached config/database.yml
# this will delete your file from git history but not from your local system.
now, add this file to .gitignore
file and commit the changes. And from now on, any changes made to config/database.yml will not get tracked by git.
$ echo config/database.yml >> .gitignore
Thanks
Not knowing quite what the 'answer' command did, I ran it, much to my dismay. It recursively removes every file from your git repo.
Stackoverflow to the rescue... How to revert a "git rm -r ."?
git reset HEAD
Did the trick, since I had uncommitted local files that I didn't want to overwrite.
Thanks to your answer, I was able to write this little one-liner to improve it. I ran it on my .gitignore and repo, and had no issues, but if anybody sees any glaring problems, please comment. This should git rm -r --cached
from .gitignore
:
cat $(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/.gitIgnore | sed "s/\/$//" | grep -v "^#" | xargs -L 1 -I {} find $(git rev-parse --show-toplevel) -name "{}" | xargs -L 1 git rm -r --cached
Note that you'll get a lot of fatal: pathspec '<pathspec>' did not match any files
. That's just for the files which haven't been modified.
I have found a weird problem with .gitignore. Everything was in place and seemed correct. The only reason why my .gitignore was "ignored" was, that the line-ending was in Mac-Format (\r). So after saving the file with the correct line-ending (in vi using :set ff=unix) everything worked like a charm!
One other problem not mentioned here is if you've created your .gitignore in Windows notepad it can look like gibberish on other platforms as I found out. The key is to make sure you the encoding is set to ANSI in notepad, (or make the file on linux as I did).
From my answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/11451916/406592
If you need to stop tracking a lot of ignored files, you can combine some commands:
git ls-files -i --exclude-standard | xargs -L1 git rm --cached
This would stop tracking the ignored files. If you want to actually remove files from filesystem, do not use the --cached
option. You can also specify a folder to limit the search, such as:
git ls-files -i --exclude-standard -- ${FOLDER} | xargs -L1 git rm
One thing to also keep in mind if .gitignore
does not seem to be ignoring untracked files is that you should not have comments on the same line as the ignores. So this is okay
# ignore all foo.txt, foo.markdown, foo.dat, etc.
foo*
But this will not work:
foo* # ignore all foo.txt, foo.markdown, foo.dat, etc.
.gitignore
interprets the latter case as "ignore files named "foo* # ignore all foo.txt, foo.markdown, foo.dat, etc."
, which, of course, you don't have.