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I have 6,000 untracked files in one subdirectory and I'm constructing .gitignore files to filter out the unwanted ones. I'm testing my gitignore filters as I go by running 'git status'.

However, I have a larger number of untracked other files in a different subdirectory, so 'git status' shows all of those too, which makes it very hard to see what the .gitignore rules are doing.

If the files were tracked, then I could just do 'git status .' and it would restrict the git-status output to only those files in the current directory, but because the current directory and all its contents are untracked, 'git status .' returns "error: pathspec . did not match any file(s) known to git."

I'm using git-1.6.6.1 for this, although interestingly my testing shows that git-1.7.1 (on a different system) does actually let you do git-status on an untracked directory. Unfortunately I can't upgrade git on this system. Is there a known workaround for -1.6.6.1?

2 Answers 2

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You can try:

git add --dry-run -A
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  • I think with a . on the end of that, it might do what I need - thanks.
    – davidA
    Jun 9, 2010 at 4:32
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I would temporarily add the unwanted (different) sub-directory to the .gitignore file, so that all its contents are ignored. Then, when you're ready, remove the entry for the previously unwanted sub-directory from .gitignore so that its files become tracked by git status once more.

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