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I have a large Git repository that has many random files and directories in it that should be ignored. When I run git status, I get a lot of noise.

Those files and directories don't follow a specific pattern. I could manually add them one by one to .gitignore, but this is tedious.

Is there a rapid way to add many or all of the "untracked files" returned by git status to .gitignore? This seems like such an obvious task that I imagine a solution must exist.

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  • Yes, there is a way. In the .gitignore file, you can ignore a lot of things all in one go, only to "unignore" some of them further down the file; see this. For a more specific answer than this, though, you would need to tell us about the structure of your working tree.
    – jub0bs
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:08
  • Why not highlight and copy all the filepaths (at once) from git status's output and paste them into your .gitignore file?
    – ajp15243
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:17
  • It might help to organize your ignored files better, keeping them in a single ignored subfolder.
    – Bruce
    Jan 15, 2015 at 16:27
  • Someone edited the title of my question, but it now no longer really reflects my original intention. Perhaps a better title would be "How to include all untracked files in .gitignore?"
    – ddd kkk
    Jan 15, 2015 at 19:34

2 Answers 2

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You can create a simple Git alias, and then call it like this:

Edited: In reponse to ddd kkk's comment

git config alias.ignore-untracked "! git status -s | grep '??' | perl -pe 's/.{3}/\//' >>  .gitignore"
git ignore-untracked
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Based on Joseph Strauss's solution, the final alias definition I am using is:

git config alias.ignore-untracked "! git status -s | grep '??' | cut -d\  -f2- | awk '{print \"/\" \$0; }' | sed '1i # ignore-untracked: $(date)' >> .gitignore"

This prepends the additions to gitignore with a comment that indicates the date the files were added.

This code is executed as follows:

git ignore-untracked

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