Sometimes you want git to ignore certain files that appear on your machine. You can do this in 3 ways:
- Per project, in the project's
.gitignore
file - Per project, in a local exclude file
- Globally on your machine
Downsides of per-project .gitignore
entries
While it might be tempting to set it per project (other devs might benefit from it), you
- need to do it each time for every project
- "pollute" a project's
.gitignore
file with stuff that may be quite irrelevant for others
A global ignore file for the rescue
You can just put your patterns into another file, in your home directory on your machine (e.g. ~/.gitignore
).
Then, just feed it to git:
git config --global core.excludesfile ~/.gitignore
The file's effect will apply immediately if you do that from a repository. Neat.
Use cases for global ignores
- you're using a special editor that creates a hidden directory for config (e.g. VS Code)
- ignore a dir called
untracked
for your personal code snippets or project files like Excel sheets
Posted by Arne Hartherz to makandra dev (2013-05-06 16:08)