How do I remove duplicate Git config values that contradict each other? - windows

I tried to remove the values (to reset them) but they won't go away. Plus they contradict each other.
C:\Users\Chloe\workspace\app>git config --unset-all core.autocrlf
C:\Users\Chloe\workspace\app>git config --unset-all core.editor
C:\Users\Chloe\workspace\app>git config --unset-all core.edit
C:\Users\Chloe\workspace\app>git config -l | grep autocrlf
core.autocrlf=true
core.autocrlf=false
C:\Users\Chloe\workspace\app>git config -l | grep notepad
core.editor=/C/Program Files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe
core.edit=C:\\Program Files\\Notepad++\\notepad++.exe
I tried to edit the values with git config -e (but first I had to figure out how to specify the path correctly), and it didn't list either of those config keys.
git version 2.16.3.windows.1

I found this answer http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2114111/ddg#2115116
And I used git config --list --show-origin then edited the files manually (from an elevated Notepad++). I had
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" core.autocrlf=true
file:C:/Users/Chloe/.gitconfig core.autocrlf=false
file:C:/Users/Chloe/.gitconfig core.editor=/C/Program Files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe
file:C:/Users/Chloe/.gitconfig core.edit=C:\\Program Files\\Notepad++\\notepad++.exe
Overall it was looking in 4 places: C:\ProgramData\Git\config, C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\etc\gitconfig, C:/Users/Chloe/.gitconfig, .git/config.

Run git config -l --show-origin to see where from the settings come. Most probably from the global ~/.gitconfig so remove them with
git config --global --unset-all core.autocrlf

Related

How can I create a new Git configuration file?

I want to configure Git, but I deleted my configuration file before (a big mistake). It shows me
No such file or directory
when I put in ~/.gitconfig:
$ git config global user.name "a"
error: key does not contain a section: global
$ ~/.gitconfig
-bash:/.gitconfig: No such file or directory
Add dashes to global:
git config --global user.name "a"
Without the dashes global is getting interpreted as a section, but that's not valid. You want the --global flag.
The file doesn't need to exist before you run this command. Git will create it if it's not there.

Git config files: Best practice

I managed somehow to make Git running with Github and now (a year later) I would like to teach the group how they can do the same. I learned quite a lot from here, but even with the answer, some things remain unclear. Please apologize, if I didn't got it from the git reference
Questions:
Is there a best practice, which parameters should show up in which config file?
... Continued from my example below:
I marked the parts which I can access via --system, --global and --local. Does anybody know where the first part belongs to?
Green is everything, where I think, it is ok (with my very limited knowledge).
Red is strange as it exists twice
When I run git config --list --show-origin I get the following result:
Edit #Code-Apprentice:
From git-bash
$ git config --list --show-origin --system
file:"C:\\Git\\mingw64/etc/gitconfig" credential.helper=manager
and cmd
>git config --list --show-origin --system
file:"C:\\Git\\mingw64/etc/gitconfig" credential.helper=manager
Git output as code:
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" core.symlinks=false # ... see .git/config
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" core.autocrlf=true
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" core.fscache=true
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" color.diff=auto
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" color.status=auto
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" color.branch=auto
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" color.interactive=true
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" help.format=html
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" http.sslcainfo=C:/Git/mingw64/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" diff.astextplain.textconv=astextplain
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" rebase.autosquash=true
file:"C:\\Git\\mingw64/etc/gitconfig" credential.helper=manager # ... see file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig filter.lfs.clean=git-lfs clean %f
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig filter.lfs.smudge=git-lfs smudge %f
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig filter.lfs.required=true
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig user.name=My name
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig user.email=my.name#domain.com
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig credential.helper=wincred
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig alias.hist=log --pretty=format:'%h - %an, %ad: %s' --graph --date=short
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig difftool.kdiff3.cmd='C:/Program Files/KDiff3/kdiff3' $LOCAL $REMOTE
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig difftool.kdiff3.keepbackup=false
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig difftool.kdiff3.trustexitcode=false
file:C:/Users/myname/.gitconfig merge.conflictstyle=diff3
file:.git/config core.repositoryformatversion=0
file:.git/config core.filemode=false
file:.git/config core.bare=false
file:.git/config core.logallrefupdates=true
file:.git/config core.symlinks=false
file:.git/config core.ignorecase=true
file:.git/config core.hidedotfiles=dotGitOnly
file:.git/config remote.origin.url=https://github.com/repo/Rettung-ZCH
file:.git/config remote.origin.fetch=+refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
file:.git/config branch.master.remote=origin
file:.git/config branch.master.merge=refs/heads/master
file:.git/config branch.dev1.remote=origin
file:.git/config branch.dev1.merge=refs/heads/dev1
file:.git/config branch.dev2.remote=origin
file:.git/config branch.dev2.merge=refs/heads/dev2
Is there a best practice, which parameters should show up in which config file?
This is totally up to you, whether you want a setting only on one repository, on all repositories you access with your user account or on all repositories on this machine (each time of course only if not overwritten from a lower config level).
I marked the parts which I can access via --system, --global and --local. Does anybody know where the first part belongs to?
As far as I remember these are the default values of the Git for Windows client and are on (or rather above) the system settings level. You can list and change them with git config --file c:\ProgramData\Git\config --list and so on.
Green is everything, where I think, it is ok (with my very limited knowledge).
As I said, totally up to you. The local green settings are most probably only useful on the local level, yes. For me user.email for example is not set on global level on my work box, as I work on private and corporate repos and use different addresses there. By not configuring either on the global level I am reminded on local level to set it when doing the first commit.
Red is strange as it exists twice
You can have each setting on each level, lower level overwriting value of upper levels, this is perfectly legal. You can e. g. set for all users on the system to use credential.helper=manager but for your user to use credential.helper=wincred like you have it in your example.
For Windows there should be following global settings:
rem always have Linux line endings in text files
git config --global core.autocrlf input
rem support more than 260 characters on Windows
rem See https://stackoverflow.com/a/22575737/873282 for details
git config --global core.longpaths true
rem some color and diff tweaks
rem Use SVN's ||| also in git
rem See https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config#Documentation/git-config.txt-mergeconflictStyle for details
git config --global merge.configStyle "diff3"
git config --global color.diff.new "green bold"
git config --global color.status.updated "green bold"
git config --global color.branch.current "green bold"
rem Sort branches at "git branch -v" by committer date
git config --global branch.sort -committerdate
(The hints at https://stackoverflow.com/a/24045966/873282 are obsolete)
Git will override more global settings with more local ones. The duplicated (red) ones in your output guarantee consistency at a more local level if the more global value is ever changed.

Where is core.autocrlf set in windows?

I have git 2.6.2 installed in Windows 7.
I have core.autocrlf set to False. I'd like to know where that setting comes from. I have the following weird behavior:
> cd c:\
> git config --global --list | select-string autocrlf
> git config --system --list | select-string autocrlf
fatal: unable to read config file 'C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64/etc/gitconfig': No such file or directory
> git config --list | select-string autocrlf
core.autocrlf=false
core.autocrlf=False
> git config core.autocrlf
False
So I have not set core.autocrlf in the global config. I have no system config. I am currently not in a git directory. Still, I get no less than two core.autocrlf settings.
Are they generated by the Git binary? (if so, why two settings?)
Look in C:\ProgramData\Git\config.
And see this question for more details (it's not just core.autocrlf that has a "phantom" value, there's more :) )

Windows-specific Git configuration settings; where are they set?

I've read the Git documentation and Where do the settings in my Git configuration come from? and yet I still can't make sense of some of my settings.
I'm on Git 2.5.3 on Windows 10. Here's the output of git config -l:
λ git config -l
core.symlinks=false
core.autocrlf=true
color.diff=auto
color.status=auto
color.branch=auto
color.interactive=true
pack.packsizelimit=2g
help.format=html
http.sslcainfo=C:/Program Files/Git/mingw64/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt
sendemail.smtpserver=/bin/msmtp.exe
diff.astextplain.textconv=astextplain
rebase.autosquash=true
user.name=Ben Collins
user.email=#redacted#
alias.sm=submodule
alias.br=branch
alias.co=checkout
alias.st=status
alias.rebuild=!git rm --cached -r . && git reset --hard
core.excludesfile=C:\Users\Benjamin\Documents\gitignore_global.txt
core.editor=c:/Users/Benjamin/AppData/Local/atom/bin/atom.cmd
core.attributesfile=C:\Users\Benjamin\.gitattributes
push.default=simple
merge.tool=p4merge
mergetool.p4merge.cmd=p4merge.exe "$BASE" "$LOCAL" "$REMOTE" "$MERGED"
mergetool.p4merge.path=C:/Program Files/Perforce/p4merge.exe
gui.encoding=utf-8
diff.guitool=p4merge
difftool.p4merge.path=C:/Program Files/Perforce/p4merge.exe
difftool.p4merge.cmd=p4merge.exe "$LOCAL" "$REMOTE"
mergetool.keepbackup=false
rerere.enabled=true
credential.helper=!'C:\Users\Benjamin\AppData\Roaming\GitCredStore\git-credential-winstore.exe'
filter.lfs.clean=git lfs clean %f
filter.lfs.smudge=git lfs smudge %f
filter.lfs.required=true
color.diff.whitespace=red reverse
What's bothersome is that the first twelve settings I cannot find anywhere.
C:\Program Files\Git
λ git config --system --list
fatal: unable to read config file 'C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64/etc/gitconfig': No such file or directory
C:\Program Files\Git
λ git config --global --list
user.name=Ben Collins
user.email=#redacted#
alias.sm=submodule
alias.br=branch
alias.co=checkout
alias.st=status
alias.rebuild=!git rm --cached -r . && git reset --hard
core.excludesfile=C:\Users\Benjamin\Documents\gitignore_global.txt
core.editor=c:/Users/Benjamin/AppData/Local/atom/bin/atom.cmd
core.attributesfile=C:\Users\Benjamin\.gitattributes
push.default=simple
merge.tool=p4merge
mergetool.p4merge.cmd=p4merge.exe "$BASE" "$LOCAL" "$REMOTE" "$MERGED"
mergetool.p4merge.path=C:/Program Files/Perforce/p4merge.exe
gui.encoding=utf-8
diff.guitool=p4merge
difftool.p4merge.path=C:/Program Files/Perforce/p4merge.exe
difftool.p4merge.cmd=p4merge.exe "$LOCAL" "$REMOTE"
mergetool.keepbackup=false
rerere.enabled=true
credential.helper=!'C:\Users\Benjamin\AppData\Roaming\GitCredStore\git-credential-winstore.exe'
filter.lfs.clean=git lfs clean %f
filter.lfs.smudge=git lfs smudge %f
filter.lfs.required=true
color.diff.whitespace=red reverse
Also, when I try to unset one of the first twelve settings, it has no effect:
C:\Users\Benjamin\Projects\blah [master +0 ~1 -0]
λ git config --unset core.autocrlf
C:\Users\Benjamin\Projects\blah [master +0 ~1 -0]
λ git config core.autocrlf
true
C:\Users\Benjamin\Projects\Saddleback\cm-core [master +0 ~1 -0]
λ git config --unset-all core.autocrlf
C:\Users\Benjamin\Projects\Saddleback\cm-core [master +0 ~1 -0]
λ git config core.autocrlf
true
Are these first twelve settings hardcoded or platform-specific somehow? How do I get control of them?
As this commit explains, they've added another config location only for Windows, which is applied even before the --system:
The file /etc/gitconfig can be used to store a system-wide default
configuration. On Windows, configuration can also be stored in
C:\ProgramData\Git\config; This file will be used also by
libgit2-based software.
...
On Windows, as there is no central /etc/ directory, there is yet
another config file, intended to contain settings for all
Git-related software running on the machine. Consequently, this config
file takes an even lower precedence than the $(prefix)/etc/gitconfig
file.
So I believe you can find those mystery settings in C:\ProgramData\Git\config.
From that commit I can see that git config --system --list should've shown you those settings, but it seems that the absence of C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64/etc/gitconfig file aborted the operation, which is probably a bug.
In my version of git there is a --show-origin switch on the list command which gives away where the setting was applied from. I agree that it's confusing that there is no provided switch to access the windows configuration location inside ProgramData.
C:\Users\karlb>git --version
git version 2.11.0.windows.3
C:\Users\karlb>git config --list --show-origin
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" core.symlinks=false
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" core.autocrlf=true
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" core.fscache=true
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" color.diff=auto
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" color.status=auto
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" color.branch=auto
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" color.interactive=true
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" help.format=html
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" http.sslcainfo=C:/Program Files/Git/mingw64/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" diff.astextplain.textconv=astextplain
file:"C:\\ProgramData/Git/config" rebase.autosquash=true
file:"C:\\Program Files\\Git\\mingw64/etc/gitconfig" credential.helper=manager
file:"C:\\Program Files\\Git\\mingw64/etc/gitconfig" difftool.usebuiltin=true
file:"C:\\Program Files\\Git\\mingw64/etc/gitconfig" alias.lol=log --oneline --graph
file:"C:\\Program Files\\Git\\mingw64/etc/gitconfig" alias.last=log -1 HEAD
file:C:/Users/karlb/.gitconfig user.email=karl.horton#yahoo.com
file:C:/Users/karlb/.gitconfig user.name=Karl Horton
TIL a caveat concerning Git for Widows. I have git version 2.17.1.windows.2.
I tried to set a global core.attributesfile to override the line-ending attributes for *.sh files (I use WSL, and the present version becomes very unhappy when it tries to run shell scripts with DOS (CRLF) line endings. For Git on the Linux side, the following lines in ~\.gitattributes solve the problem:
*.sln text eol=crlf
*.bat text eol=crlf
*.sh text eol=cr
But using Git from Windows side (e.g. via Sourcetree GUI), for some repositories, I was still getting CRLF in *.sh files.
I found that in these repositories, core.autocrlf=true. Setting it to input solves the problem, and Git respects the global gitattributes now.

Why any quotes are ignored in the Git config?

git, windows 7. I try set a text editor via different ways:
$ git config --global core.editor "C:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe"
$ git config --global core.editor \"C:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe\"
$ git config --global core.editor 'C:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe'
But when I look the config file (via the git config --list command), I get the same result:
core.editor=C:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe
So, I can't do a commit, I get an error:
$ git commit C:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe: C:Program:
command not found error: There was a problem with the editor
'C:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++ .exe'. Please supply the message
using either -m or -F option.
I tried edit the .gitconfig file manually (I added the quotes) but it is not help me.
Why quotes are ignored and how can I solve it?
Try that
git config --global core.editor "'C:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe'"
You should use forward slashes (/) rather than backslashes (\) in your pathname.
Source: [here] under "Configuring git and the helpers"

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