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Ignore file changes with Git

Azure DevOps Services | Azure DevOps Server 2022 - Azure DevOps Server 2019

Visual Studio 2019 | Visual Studio 2022

Git shouldn't track every file in your project. Temporary files from your development environment, test outputs, and logs are all examples of files that probably don't need to be tracked.

You can use various mechanisms to let Git know which files in your project not to track, and to ensure that Git won't report changes to those files. For files that Git doesn't track, you can use a .gitignore or exclude file. For files that Git does track, you can tell Git to stop tracking them and to ignore changes.

In this article, you learn how to:

  • Ignore changes to untracked files by using a .gitignore file.
  • Ignore changes to untracked files by using an exclude file.
  • Stop tracking a file and ignore changes by using the git update-index command.
  • Stop tracking a file and ignore changes by using the git rm command.

Use a .gitignore file

You can tell Git not to track certain files in your project by adding and configuring a .gitignore file. Entries in a .gitignore file apply only to untracked files. They don't prevent Git from reporting changes to tracked files. Tracked files are files that were committed and exist in the last Git snapshot.

Each line in a .gitignore file specifies a file search pattern relative to the .gitignore file path. The .gitignore syntax is flexible and supports the use of wildcards to specify individual or multiple files by name, extension, and path. Git matches .gitignore search patterns to the files in your project to determine which files to ignore.

Typically, you add a .gitignore file to the root folder of your project. However, you can add a .gitignore file to any project folder to let Git know which files to ignore within that folder and its subfolders at any nested depth. For multiple .gitignore files, the file search patterns that a .gitignore file specifies within a folder take precedence over the patterns that a .gitignore file specifies within a parent folder.

You can manually create a .gitignore file and add file pattern entries to it. Or you can save time by downloading a .gitignore template for your development environment from the GitHub gitignore repo. One of the benefits of using a .gitignore file is that you can commit changes and share it with others.

Note

Visual Studio automatically creates a .gitignore file for the Visual Studio development environment when you create a Git repo.

Visual Studio 2022 provides a Git version control experience through the Git menu, Git Changes, and shortcut menus in Solution Explorer. Visual Studio 2019 version 16.8 also offers the Team Explorer Git user interface. For more information, see the Visual Studio 2019 - Team Explorer tab.

In the Git Changes window, right-click any changed file that you want Git to ignore, and then select Ignore this local item or Ignore this extension. Those menu options don't exist for tracked files.

Screenshot of the context menu options for changed files in the Git Changes window in Visual Studio.

The Ignore this local item option adds a new entry to the .gitignore file, and it removes the selected file from the list of changed files.

The Ignore this extension option adds a new entry to the .gitignore file, and it removes all files with the same extension as the selected file from the list of changed files.

Either option creates a .gitignore file if it doesn't already exist in the root folder of your repo, and adds an entry to it.

Edit a gitignore file

Each entry in the .gitignore file is either: a file search pattern that specifies which files to ignore, a comment that begins with a number sign (#), or a blank line (for readability). The .gitignore syntax is flexible and supports the use of wildcards to specify individual or multiple files by name, extension, and path. All paths for file search patterns are relative to the .gitignore file.

Here are some examples of common file search patterns:

# Ignore all files with the specified name.
# Scope is all repo folders.
config.json

# Ignore all files with the specified extension.
# Scope is all repo folders.
*.json

# Add an exception to prevent ignoring a file with the specified name.
# Scope is all repo folders.
!package.json

# Ignore a file with the specified name.
# Scoped to the 'logs' subfolder.
/logs/test.logfile

# Ignore all files with the specified name.
# Scoped to the 'logs' subfolder and all folders beneath it.
/logs/**/test.logfile

# Ignore all files in the 'logs' subfolder.
/logs/

As soon as you modify a .gitignore file, Git updates the list of files that it ignores.

Note

Windows users must use a slash (/) as a path separator in a .gitignore file, instead of using a backslash (\). All users must add a trailing slash when specifying a folder.

Use a global .gitignore file

You can designate a .gitignore file as a global ignore file that applies to all local Git repos. To do so, use the git config command as follows:

git config core.excludesfile <gitignore file path>

A global .gitignore file helps ensure that Git doesn't commit certain file types, such as compiled binaries, in any local repo. File search patterns in a repo-specific .gitignore file have precedence over patterns in a global .gitignore file.

Use an exclude file

You can also add entries for file search patterns to the exclude file in the .git/info/ folder of your local repo. The exclude file lets Git know which untracked files to ignore. It uses the same syntax for file search patterns as a .gitignore file.

Entries in an exclude file apply only to untracked files. They don't prevent Git from reporting changes to committed files that it already tracks. Only one exclude file exists per repo.

Because Git doesn't commit or push the exclude file, you can safely use it to ignore files on your local system without affecting anyone else.

Use git update-index to ignore changes

Sometimes it's convenient to temporarily stop tracking a local repo file and have Git ignore changes to the file. For example, you might want to customize a settings file for your development environment without the risk of committing your changes. To do so, you can run the git update-index command with the skip-worktree flag:

git update-index --skip-worktree <file path>

To resume tracking, run the git update-index command with the --no-skip-worktree flag.

Or, you can temporarily stop tracking a file and have Git ignore changes to the file by using the git update-index command with the assume-unchanged flag. This option is less effective than the skip-worktree flag, because a Git pull operation that changes file content can revert the assume-unchanged flag.

git update-index --assume-unchanged <file path>

To resume tracking, run the git update-index command with the --no-assume-unchanged flag.

Use git rm to ignore changes

Entries in a .gitignore or exclude file have no effect on files that Git already tracks. Git tracks files that you previously committed. To permanently remove a file from the Git snapshot so that Git no longer tracks it, but without deleting it from the file system, run the following commands:

git rm --cached <file path>
git commit <some message>

Then, use a .gitignore or exclude file entry to prevent Git from reporting changes to the file.

Next steps