171

Is there a handy way to ignore all untracked files and folders in a git repository?
(I know about the .gitignore.)

So git status would provide a clean result again.

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12 Answers 12

299

As already been said, to exclude from status just use:

git status -uno  # must be "-uno" , not "-u no"

If you instead want to permanently ignore currently untracked files you can, from the root of your project, launch:

git status --porcelain | grep '^??' | cut -c4- >> .gitignore

Every subsequent call to git status will explicitly ignore those files.

UPDATE: the above command has a minor drawback: if you don't have a .gitignore file yet your gitignore will ignore itself! This happens because the file .gitignore gets created before the git status --porcelain is executed. So if you don't have a .gitignore file yet I recommend using:

echo "$(git status --porcelain | grep '^??' | cut -c4-)" > .gitignore

This creates a subshell which completes before the .gitignore file is created.

COMMAND EXPLANATION I'll explain the command:

  • git status --porcelain is used instead of git status --short because manual states "Give the output in an easy-to-parse format for scripts. This is similar to the short output, but will remain stable across git versions and regardless of user configuration." So we have both the parseability and stability;
  • grep '^??' filters only the lines starting with ??, which, according to the git status manual, correspond to the untracked files;
  • cut -c4- removes the first 3 characters of every line, which gives us just the relative path to the untracked file;
  • the | symbols are pipes, which pass the output of the previous command to the input of the following command;
  • the >> and > symbols are redirect operators, which append the output of the previous command to a file or overwrites/creates a new file, respectively.

ANOTHER VARIANT for those who prefer using sed instead of grep and cut, here's another way:

git status --porcelain | sed -n -e 's/^?? //p' >> .gitignore
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  • 3
    cut -c4- removes the first 4 characters of every line, which gives us just the relative path to the untracked file; No. -c marks the beginning of a list of column numbers to cut. And 4- selects the line from column 4 to the end, which cuts columns 1-3. So your cut command actually removes the first 3 characters of each line. If you removed 4 characters from a git status line such as the one for this file here: ?? app/views/static_pages/contact.html.erb, you would remove the first letter of app. So the command is correct, but the explanation is faulty.
    – 7stud
    Sep 10, 2014 at 21:03
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    I really appreciate the command explanation. Its nice to know what the random commands I copied from the internet are doing, and helps us all learn how to use the command line and git better. Mar 19, 2015 at 13:36
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    -u no doesn't work for me. But -uno does. I've updated the answer accordingly. This is strange design for git. I'm on git 1.7.1 Mar 1, 2016 at 10:48
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    @AaronMcDaid: thanks. The change is documented here, and discussed here
    – Diego
    Mar 2, 2016 at 10:45
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    @AndreasAbel this should work: git status --porcelain | sed -n -e 's,^?? ,/,p' >> .gitignore
    – Diego
    Jan 27, 2023 at 13:50
65

If you want to permanently ignore these files, a simple way to add them to .gitignore is:

  1. Change to the root of the git tree.
  2. git ls-files --others --exclude-standard >> .gitignore

This will enumerate all files inside untracked directories, which may or may not be what you want.

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  • 4
    Why doesn't this get as many votes? No need to pipe through 2 other programs!
    – JoelFan
    Jan 4, 2017 at 21:56
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    @JoelFan: two reasons: 1) this one works only from the root of the git, while the accepted one works from every subdirectory, you just need to tweak the destination .gitignore path 2) if you have an untracked directory, this one list each and every single file in it, but not the untracked directory itself (so you won't ignore the directory, and thus still get reported future files in the directory as untracked, while the accepted one lists only the directory, and not the untracked files inside. This is a matter of what you want to do, but often you just want to ignore the whole dir
    – Diego
    Jun 30, 2017 at 13:50
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    Thank you Poolie I appreciate the difference of your suggestion because of the points mentioned by @Diego I started working with a library of files & folders and I don't want to track/push the original files. I only want to track files I add or rebuild in the library. Adding the parent folders would ignore everything. This/your solution added all 1696 files in a snap. xD
    – Chaos7703
    Jul 30, 2017 at 2:58
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    @Diego, it's inaccurate that it only works in the root git directory. It works in any subdirectory but it adds to that subdirectories .gitignore, which is valid in many use-cases
    – CervEd
    Mar 30, 2021 at 8:01
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    This is the more elegant solution, which works for many common cases. Minor flaw in the ointment: The files listed miss a leading /, so there should be a step inserted that prepends / to every file. Jan 26, 2023 at 7:31
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Found it in the manual

The mode parameter is used to specify the handling of untracked files. It is optional: it defaults to all, and if specified, it must be stuck to the option (e.g. -uno, but not -u no).

git status -uno

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    Well if everyone would RTFM before posting, none of us would ever get any rep :-)
    – Jenny D
    Jul 18, 2012 at 13:43
13

IMHO better than the accepted answer is to use the following:

git config --local status.showUntrackedFiles no

The accepted answer does not work for when new files are added that are not in .gitignore

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  • 2
    The question title mentions "present untracked files", so there's no mention of ignoring future files. Also ignoring all future untracked files is quite a rare use case, I would say.
    – Diego
    Jul 21, 2021 at 7:32
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    Thanks! Exactly what I was looking for! (Even though it doesn't seem to be what the OP here was looking for...) @Diego, anyone searching StackOverflow for things like this already likely has a rare usecase lol.
    – Matt
    Sep 10, 2021 at 17:13
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None of the above answers worked for me.

In my case, I want a personal config file to be ignored permanently (git status -uno only works for one use).

I'm part of a team so can't add it to .gitignore as that's checked in.

Mu solution was to add it to:

.git/info/exclude

which is like your own personal .gitignore file.

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  • exactly what I needed! thanks. Sep 22, 2023 at 4:50
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Two ways:

  • use the argument -uno to git-status. Here's an example:

    [jenny@jenny_vmware:ft]$ git status
    # On branch ft
    # Untracked files:
    #   (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
    #
    #       foo
    nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
    [jenny@jenny_vmware:ft]$ git status -uno
    # On branch ft
    nothing to commit (working directory clean)
    
  • Or you can add the files and directories to .gitignore, in which case they will never show up.

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    A handy way of editing the .gitignore being git status | cat >> temp && vim temp. Then editing the file so the first few lines and last line is deleted, as well as trailing # and the whitespace after it. Then cat temp >> .gitignore && rm temp. In case no .gitignore was present before, mv temp .gitignore will do. Ugly stuff but better than updating the .gitignore manually.
    – sjas
    Jul 18, 2012 at 13:53
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    This answer is incorrect. The correct answer is -uno. If you use -u no, it is equivalent to no -u - it will do a status on a file called no (which probably doesn't exist) and use the default -u mode. i.e. it is equivalent to git status no Mar 1, 2016 at 10:50
5

-u no doesn't show unstaged files either. -uno works as desired and shows unstaged, but hides untracked.

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    Even this isn't quite correct. git status -u X is equivalent to git status X -u (X is not an argument to -u). This, in turn, is equivalent to git status X (because -u without an argument is the default -u). Therefore, it is simply a git-status on file X. So, if X is no it simply tries to do a git status on a file called no, which you probably don't have Mar 1, 2016 at 10:53
2

In case you are not on Unix like OS, this would work on Windows using PowerShell

git status --porcelain | ?{ $_ -match "^\?\? " }| %{$_ -replace "^\?\? ",""} | Add-Content .\.gitignore

However, .gitignore file has to have a new empty line, otherwise it will append text to the last line no matter if it has content.

This might be a better alternative:

$gi=gc .\.gitignore;$res=git status --porcelain|?{ $_ -match "^\?\? " }|%{ $_ -replace "^\?\? ", "" }; $res=$gi+$res; $res | Out-File .\.gitignore

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  • What does this do?
    – Unknow0059
    Jan 9, 2021 at 21:27
2
git reset --hard HEAD
git clean -fxd

will remove any untracked files, and make your local branch up to date with the remote branch. this is good option if you don't want to preserve any local changes you already made.

1

If you have a lot of untracked files, and don't want to "gitignore" all of them, note that, since git 1.8.3 (April, 22d 2013), git status will mention the --untracked-files=no even if you didn't add that option in the first place!

"git status" suggests users to look into using --untracked=no option when it takes too long.

0

I came here trying to solve a slightly different problem. Maybe this will be useful to someone else:

I create a new branch feature-a. as part of this branch I create new directories and need to modify .gitignore to suppress some of them. This happens a lot when adding new tools to a project that create various cache folders. .serverless, .terraform, etc.

Before I'm ready to merge that back to master I have something else come up, so I checkout master again, but now git status picks up those suppressed folders again, since the .gitignore hasn't been merged yet.

The answer here is actually simple, though I had to find this blog to figure it out:

Just checkout the .gitignore file from feature-a branch

git checkout feature-a -- feature-a/.gitignore
git add .
git commit -m "update .gitignore from feature-a branch"
0

To add to @Diego's answer above, I think the mentioned solutions will fail for files with spaces (and possibly other special characters, like " itself, although I haven't checked) in their names. This line:

echo "$(git status --porcelain | grep '^??' | cut -c4- | sed 's/^\"//;s/\"$//')" >> .gitignore

removes starting and trailing double quotes where present which fixes it.

I'm not very good with sed though, there may be a better way to do this, or edge cases.

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