Ignoring Things
Last updated on 2024-12-19 | Edit this page
Estimated time: 5 minutes
Overview
Questions
- How can I tell Git to ignore files I don’t want to track?
Objectives
- Configure Git to ignore specific files.
- Explain why ignoring files can be useful.
What if we have files that we do not want Git to track for us, like backup files created by our editor or intermediate files created during data analysis? Let’s create a few dummy files:
and see what Git says:
OUTPUT
On branch forecast
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
a.png
b.png
c.png
data/
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
Putting these files under version control would be a waste of disk space. What’s worse, having them all listed could distract us from changes that actually matter, so let’s tell Git to ignore them.
We do this by creating a file in the root directory of our project
called .gitignore:
OUTPUT
*.png
data/
These patterns tell Git to ignore any file whose name ends in
.png and everything in the data directory. (If
any of these files were already being tracked, Git would continue to
track them.)
Once we have created this file, the output of git status
is much cleaner:
OUTPUT
On branch forecast
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
.gitignore
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
The only thing Git notices now is the newly-created
.gitignore file. You might think we wouldn’t want to track
it, but everyone we’re sharing our repository with will probably want to
ignore the same things that we’re ignoring. Let’s add and commit
.gitignore:
OUTPUT
On branch forecast
nothing to commit, working tree clean
As a bonus, using .gitignore helps us avoid accidentally
adding files to the repository that we don’t want to track:
OUTPUT
The following paths are ignored by one of your .gitignore files:
a.png
Use -f if you really want to add them.
If we really want to override our ignore settings, we can use
git add -f to force Git to add something. For example,
git add -f a.csv. We can also always see the status of
ignored files if we want:
OUTPUT
On branch forecast
Ignored files:
(use "git add -f <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
a.png
b.png
c.png
data/
nothing to commit, working tree clean
If you only want to ignore the contents of data/plots,
you can change your .gitignore to ignore only the
/plots/ subfolder by adding the following line to your
.gitignore:
OUTPUT
data/plots/
This line will ensure only the contents of data/plots is
ignored, and not the contents of data/csv.
As with most programming issues, there are a few alternative ways that one may ensure this ignore rule is followed. The “Ignoring Nested Files: Variation” exercise has a slightly different directory structure that presents an alternative solution. Further, the discussion page has more detail on ignore rules.
Including Specific Files
How would you ignore all .png files in your root
directory except for final.png? Hint: Find out what
! (the exclamation point operator) does
You would add the following two lines to your .gitignore:
OUTPUT
*.png # ignore all png files
!final.png # except final.png
The exclamation point operator will include a previously excluded entry.
Note if you’ve previously committed .png files they will
not be ignored with this new rule. Only future additions of
.png files added to the root directory will be ignored.
Ignoring Nested Files: Variation
Given a directory structure that looks similar to the earlier Nested Files exercise, but with a slightly different directory structure:
How would you ignore all of the contents in the data folder, but not
data/csv?
Hint: think a bit about how you created an exception with the
! operator before.
If you want to ignore the contents of data/ but not
those of data/csv/, you can change your
.gitignore to ignore the contents of data folder, but
create an exception for the contents of the data/csv
subfolder. Your .gitignore would look like this:
OUTPUT
data/* # ignore everything in data folder
!data/csv/ # do not ignore data/csv/ contents
Ignoring all data Files in a Directory
Assuming you have an empty .gitignore file, and given a directory structure that looks like:
BASH
data/csv/global/temperature/a.dat
data/csv/global/temperature/b.dat
data/csv/global/temperature/c.dat
data/csv/global/temperature/info.txt
data/plots
What’s the shortest .gitignore rule you could write to
ignore all .dat files in
data/csv/global/temperature? Do not ignore the
info.txt.
Appending data/csv/global/temperature/*.dat will match
every file in data/csv/global/temperature that ends with
.dat. The file
data/csv/global/temperature/info.txt will not be
ignored.
Ignoring all data Files in the repository
Let us assume you have many .csv files in different
subdirectories of your repository. For example, you might have:
BASH
results/a.csv
data/experiment_1/b.csv
data/experiment_2/c.csv
data/experiment_2/variation_1/d.csv
How do you ignore all the .csv files, without explicitly
listing the names of the corresponding folders?
In the .gitignore file, write:
OUTPUT
**/*.csv
This will ignore all the .csv files, regardless of their
position in the directory tree. You can still include some specific
exception with the exclamation point operator.
The ! modifier will negate an entry from a previously
defined ignore pattern. Because the !*.csv entry negates
all of the previous .csv files in the
.gitignore, none of them will be ignored, and all
.csv files will be tracked.
Log Files
You wrote a script that creates many intermediate log-files of the
form log_01, log_02, log_03, etc.
You want to keep them but you do not want to track them through Git.
Write one
.gitignoreentry that excludes files of the formlog_01,log_02, etc.Test your “ignore pattern” by creating some dummy files of the form
log_01, etc.You find that the file
log_01is very important after all, add it to the tracked files without changing the.gitignoreagain.Discuss with your neighbor what other types of files could reside in your directory that you do not want to track and thus would exclude via
.gitignore.
- append either
log_*orlog*as a new entry in your .gitignore - track
log_01usinggit add -f log_01
Key Points
- The
.gitignorefile tells Git what files to ignore.