From: Johannes Sixt <j.sixt@viscovery.net>
To: Peter <vmail@mycircuit.org>
Cc: git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: gitignore: how to exclude a directory tree from being ignored
Date: Thu, 01 Oct 2009 17:25:15 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4AC4C9DB.2090907@viscovery.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4AC4C125.10609@mycircuit.org>
Peter schrieb:
>>> 1) I can't have just one .gitignore file in the root dir, if I want to
>>> _recursively_ inverse the exclude pattern for a sub dir tree.
>>>
>>
>> No, it's not the inversion of the pattern, but the slash (if it is not at
>> the end) that makes the pattern non-recursive.
>>
>>
> from the gitignore manpage:
>>> If the pattern ends with a slash, it is removed for the purpose of
> the following description, but it would only find a match with a
> directory. In other words, foo/ will match a directory foo and paths
> underneath it, but will not match a regular file or a symbolic link foo
> (this is consistent with the way how pathspec works in general in git). <<
>
> Doesn't this mean, that if I say:
> vendor/
> matches the directory and ( recursively ) the paths underneath it.?
The paragraph you are citing is talking about *what* the pattern matches,
but it says nothing about *where* the pattern matches.
When I was saying "recursively", then I was refering to the "where"
aspect, not the "what" aspect.
If you have directories
src/bar/vendor/
src/foo/bar/vendor/
src/vendor/
and you have the file src/.gitignore with the single pattern
vendor/
then it applies to recursively ("where") these directories:
src/bar/vendor/
src/foo/bar/vendor/
src/vendor/
and everything ("what") below them.
But if the same src/.gitignore has only this pattern:
bar/vendor/
then it will not match ("where") recursively and only apply to
src/bar/vendor/
and everything ("what") below it, but will not apply to
src/foo/bar/vendor/
> And, consequently:
> !vendor/
> inverse the exclusion for vendor ( that is: include ) and everything
> that is contained in it ? ( This is obviously not the case, but this is
> what I would expect )
You should update your expectations. ;-)
You think that git starts with the .gitignore files, and somehow applies
the rules that it finds to all files (perhaps recursively).
But it does not work like this; rather it is in the oppsite direction: git
starts with a file name, and then checks the rules in the .gitignore files
that it has available.
For example, take the path "src/vendor/foo.exe". git finds the file
src/.gitignore and there it sees the pattern "*.exe". The pattern matches,
and so git obeys the rule (ignores the file). But the pattern "!vendor/"
does not match (because the path ends with "foo.exe", not "vendor").
Before git had seen the path "src/vendor/foo.exe", it had already seen
"src/vendor". This time the pattern "!vendor/" did match (because the name
is identical *and* it is a directory, as per the cited paragraph) and git
obeyed the rule (which was not to ignore the directory).
-- Hannes
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-10-01 15:25 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-10-01 11:07 gitignore: how to exclude a directory tree from being ignored Peter
2009-10-01 12:39 ` Johannes Sixt
2009-10-01 13:00 ` Peter
2009-10-01 13:22 ` Johannes Sixt
2009-10-01 14:48 ` Peter
2009-10-01 15:25 ` Johannes Sixt [this message]
2009-10-01 16:26 ` Peter
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