Delete unnecessary Iconr files from the Xcode commit - xcode

I need to remove these Iconr files from the project\commit but I cant find them in the project folder (even in the hidden files).
I can't perform any commit with these files, how can I remove them?

These files are created by some external apps such as Folderol which are used for highlighting/coloring your folders. Remove that app, or add these files into gitignore files, either to:
.gitignore inside your repository root,
global .gitignore, e.g.
git config --global core.excludesfile ~/.gitignore
into explicit repository exclude file (.git/info/exclude) inside your repository root.
See: Using Git / Ignoring files
To delete them, try:
find . -type f -name 'Icon??' -print -delete

Related

Git on Windows: How do I ignore a folder that has dots in its name

I have a directory like that :'dir1/dir2/blah.blah.blah.blah/'
'blah.blah.blah.blah' is folder how do I add it to .gitignore?
I tried:
dir1/dir2/blah.blah.blah.blah/*
You need to escape the . in your .gitignore file like this:
blah\.blah\.blah\.blah
If this does not work, you probably added the directory to git earlier. In this case, you need to remove it from git (git rm <directory> and then git commit) but this will also remove it from the working directory, so backup the files if you still need them!
Use git ls-files dir1/dir2/ as suggested by torek in the question's comments to check if the directory has been added to git.
To remove a file or directory from repository, you can use this:
git rm -r --cached <file/directory>
git commit -m "removes <file/directory>"
This will not remove anything from the history though. The files can still be accessed when checking out an older commit.
It will also not remove the actual files in the directory, it will just make git not longer track them.

Can't get Xcode / JUCE / .gitignore to work

I'm placing my .gitignore file in the same location as the *.jucer file and the .gitignore file contains:
./Builds/*
./JuceLibraryCode/*
As I only want to back up the source code folder only.
But whenever I go to commit, tons of of folders and items inside the Builds and JuceLibraryCode folder are pre checked. How Can I get Xcode to see this ignore file? Is it in the wrong location since the Projucer builds the folder hierarchy in a way that Xcode doesn't understand? I have it in the same location as my .git file.
Also, its worth noting that I recently allowed .git to back up everything, all of the files I'm currently trying to now ignore in those folders, but I did do a git rm --cached on all the files I'm trying to skip, as i read I needed to dump those before the .gitignore would be successful, but still, not luck. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Remove git cache again.
$ git rm --cached -r .
Add this in .gitignore
Builds/
JuceLibraryCode/
See if git ignore the changes
$ git status

Ignore desktop.ini files in all subdirectories [GitHub]

I have a folder that sync with google drive. So every folder and subfolder have a desktop.ini file.
I'm trying to make Git (GitHub) to ignore this desktop.ini files by adding this:
**/desktop.ini
desktop.ini
**/*/desktop.ini
To my .gitignore file. I added them one by one, combined, etc, and nothing. How I ignore dekstop.ini files in all subdirectories of my project?
Perhaps make use of the .git/info/exclude file to list all files that should be ignored.
It should work to exclude files such as desktop.ini However, it has the drawback that each member of the team will have to add the rule manually since it is not committed to the repo. Thus, other team members might eventually also commit the desktop.ini files if they are not careful
Try adding the below code to your ~/.gitconfig by running the following command:
vi ~/.gitconfig
[core]
excludesfile = /Users/<username>/Desktop/git_ignore_files.txt
And put the following types in the file that you mentioned in the [core] file like mentioned below
desktop.ini
*.swp
.DS_Store

XCode 4 - Snapshot Error - .gitignore ignores .DS_Store

**Unable to create snapshot**
The following paths are ignored by one of your .gitignore files:
/path/to/project/.DS_Store
Use -f if you really want to add them
fatal: no files added
thats the error i get any ideas?!? google a lot all the snapshot problems didn't seem to fit on my error message
Delete the .DS_STORE ( they are not really needed, they store Finder releated meta data).
Use some command like:
sudo find /path/to/project -name ".DS_Store" -depth -exec rm {} \;
You can also remove .DS_STORE from your gitignore config (although it really should be ignored because you dont want this useless file in your repo) by removing it from the file at ~/.gitignore or /Users/YOU/.gitignore.

Ignoring directories in Git repositories on Windows

How can I ignore directories or folders in Git using msysgit on Windows?
Create a file named .gitignore in your project's directory. Ignore directories by entering the directory name into the file (with a slash appended):
dir_to_ignore/
More information is here.
By default, Windows Explorer will display .gitignore when in fact the file name is .gitignore.txt.
Git will not use .gitignore.txt
And you can't rename the file to .gitignore, because Windows Explorer thinks it's a file of type gitignore without a name.
Non command line solution:
You can rename a file to ".gitignore.", and it will create ".gitignore"
It seems that for ignoring files and directories there are two main ways:
.gitignore
Placing .gitignore file into the root of your repository besides the .git folder (in Windows, make sure you see the true file extension and then make .gitignore. (with the point at the end to make an empty file extension))
Making the global configuration ~/.gitignore_global and running git config --global core.excludesfile ~/.gitignore_global to add this to your Git configuration
Note: files tracked before can be untracked by running git rm --cached filename
Repository exclude - For local files that do not need to be shared, you just add the file pattern or directory to the file .git/info/exclude. Theses rules are not committed, so they are not seen by other users. More information is here.
To make exceptions in the list of ignored files, see this question.
To ignore an entire directory place a .gitignore of “*” there.
For example,
Example System
/root/
.gitignore
/dirA/
someFile1.txt
someFile2.txt
/dirB/
.gitignore
someFile3.txt
someFile4.txt
Goal
ignore the contents of dirB/
Top Level (/root/.gitignore)
You could just “dirB/“ here
Ignored Directory (/root/dirB/.gitignore)
Or you could “*” here
Git watches for gitignore at every step of the file system. So here I choose dirB/.gitignore as “*” to ignore dirB/, including all files and subdirs within.
Done ☺️
To instruct Git to ignore certain files or folders, you have to create .gitignore file.
But in Windows Explorer you have to provide a name for the file. You just cannot create file with just an extension. The trick is that create a empty text file and go to command prompt and change the name of the file to .gitignore:
ren "New Text Document.txt" .gitignore
Now open the file with your favorite text editor and add the file/folder names you wish you ignore. You can also use wildcards like this: *.txt.
I had some issues creating a file in Windows Explorer with a . at the beginning.
A workaround was to go into the commandshell and create a new file using "edit".
If you want to maintain a folder and not the files inside it, just put a ".gitignore" file in the folder with "*" as the content. This file will make Git ignore all content from the repository. But .gitignore will be included in your repository.
$ git add path/to/folder/.gitignore
If you add an empty folder, you receive this message (.gitignore is a hidden file)
The following paths are ignored by one of your .gitignore files:
path/to/folder/.gitignore
Use -f if you really want to add them.
fatal: no files added
So, use "-f" to force add:
$ git add path/to/folder/.gitignore -f
You can create the ".gitignore" file with the contents:
*
!.gitignore
It works for me.
In Windows there's an extra catch with slashes. Excluding a single directory in .gitignore with
dir_to_exclude/
will possibly work, but excluding all directories with
/
causes problems when you have file names with spaces (like my file.txt) in your directory: Git Bash escapes these spaces with a backslash (like my\ file.txt) and Git for Windows doesn't distinguish between / and \.
To exclude all directories, better use:
**/
Two consecutive asterisks signify directory contents.
Just in case you need to exclude sub folders you can use the ** wildcard to exclude any level of sub directory.
**/build/output/Debug/
Also in your \.git\info projects directory there is an exclude file that is effectively the same thing as .gitignore (I think). You can add files and directories to ignore in that.
When everything else fails try editing the file
/.git/info/exclude
and adding the directories you want to the end of the file, like this:
# git ls-files --others --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
# Lines that start with '#' are comments.
# For a project mostly in C, the following would be a good set of
# exclude patterns (uncomment them if you want to use them):
# *.[oa]
# *~
assets/
compiled/
I added the folders "assets" and "compiled" to the list of files and directories to ignore.
I've had some problems getting Git to pick up the .gitignore file on Windows. The $GIT_DIR/info/exclude file always seems to work though.
The downside of this approach, however, is that the files in the $GIT_DIR directory are not included in the check-in, and therefore not shared.
p.s. $GIT_DIR is usually the hidden folder named .git
On Unix:
touch .gitignore
On Windows:
echo > .gitignore
These commands executed in a terminal will create a .gitignore file in the current location.
Then just add information to this .gitignore file (using Notepad++ for example) which files or folders should be ignored. Save your changes. That's it :)
More information: .gitignore
I assume the problem is that your working tree is like:
a-cache/foo
a-cache/index.html
b-cache/bar
b-cache/foo
b-cache/index.html
.gitignore
... with the .gitignore you describe. This will give you git status output like:
$ git status
# On branch master
# Untracked files:
# (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
#
# .gitignore
# a-cache/
# b-cache/
... if the index.html files have not yet been added to the repository. (Git sees that there are unignored files in the cache directories, but it only reports the directories.) To fix this, make sure that you have added and committed the index.html files:
git add *cache/index.html
git commit -m "Adding index.html files to the cache directories"
... and your git status will then look like:
$ git status
# On branch master
# Untracked files:
# (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
#
# .gitignore
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
(Obviously you do want to commit .gitignore as well. I was just being lazy with this test case.)
On Windows and Mac, if you want to ignore a folder named Flower_Data_Folder in the current directory, you can do:
echo Flower_Data_Folder >> .gitignore
If it's a file named data.txt:
echo data.txt >> .gitignore
If it's a path like "Data/passwords.txt"
echo "Data/passwords.txt" >> .gitignore.
I had similar issues. I work on a Windows tool chain with a shared repository with Linux guys, and they happily create files with the same (except for case) names in a given folder.
The effect is that I can clone the repository and immediately have dozens of 'modified' files that, if I checked in, would create havoc.
I have Windows set to case sensitive and Git to not ignore case, but it still fails (in the Win32 API calls apparently).
If I gitignore the files then I have to remember to not track the .gitignore file.
But I found a good answer here:
http://archive.robwilkerson.org/2010/03/02/git-tip-ignore-changes-to-tracked-files/index.html
Just create .gitignore file in your project folder Then add the name of the folder in it for ex:
frontend/node_modules
This might be extremely obvious for some, but I did understand this from the other answers.
Making a .gitignore file in a directory does nothing by itself. You have to open the .gitignore as a text file and write the files/directories you want it to ignore, each on its own line.
so cd to the Git repository directory
touch .gitignore
nano .gitignore
and then write the names of the files and or directories that you want to be ignored and their extensions if relevant.
Also, .gitignore is a hidden file on some OS (Macs for example) so you need ls -a to see it, not just ls.
Temporarily ignore a directory/file that was already in git:
I have a lot of projects in a multi-project gradle project and they can take a long time to delete them, and they're all pretty much the same but different. From time to time I want to remove those from the gradle build by deleting them altogether. git can get them back after all. However I don't want them showing up in git status either. So I use the following simple procedure;
delete files and folders I don't want.
verify build still works
tell git to ignore the deleted files for a bit (we can get them back)
git ls-files --deleted -z | git update-index --assume-unchanged -z
--stdin
go about life without the dirs until you want them back. Then run the same command as before but switch out assume-unchanged for no-assume-unchanged
git ls-files --deleted -z | git update-index --no-assume-unchanged -z
--stdin

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