Resync git repo with new .gitignore file
Solution 1:
The solution mentioned in ".gitignore file not ignoring" is a bit extreme, but should work:
# rm all files
git rm -r --cached .
# add all files as per new .gitignore
git add .
# now, commit for new .gitignore to apply
git commit -m ".gitignore is now working"
(make sure to commit first your changes you want to keep, to avoid any incident as jball037 comments below.
The --cached
option will keep your files untouched on your disk though.)
You also have other more fine-grained solution in the blog post "Making Git ignore already-tracked files":
git rm --cached `git ls-files -i --exclude-standard`
Bassim suggests in his edit:
Files with space in their paths
In case you get an error message like
fatal: path spec '...' did not match any files
, there might be files with spaces in their path.You can remove all other files with option
--ignore-unmatch
:
git rm --cached --ignore-unmatch `git ls-files -i --exclude-standard`
but unmatched files will remain in your repository and will have to be removed explicitly by enclosing their path with double quotes:
git rm --cached "<path.to.remaining.file>"
Solution 2:
I might misunderstand, but are you trying to delete files newly ignored or do you want to ignore new modifications to these files ? In this case, the thing is working.
If you want to delete ignored files previously commited, then use
git rm –cached `git ls-files -i –exclude-standard`
git commit -m 'clean up'
Solution 3:
I know this is an old question, but gracchus's solution doesn't work if file names contain spaces. VonC's solution to file names with spaces is to not remove them utilizing --ignore-unmatch
, then remove them manually, but this will not work well if there are a lot.
Here is a solution that utilizes bash arrays to capture all files.
# Build bash array of the file names
while read -r file; do
rmlist+=( "$file" )
done < <(git ls-files -i --exclude-standard)
git rm –-cached "${rmlist[@]}"
git commit -m 'ignore update'