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I've issued the following command

git rm --cached .idea

on my develop branch, 'cause i don't want to track ide config files. Files have been removed from index but they're still on filesystem, which is exactly my original goal.

Now when i try to checkout another branch, git fails because they're still in the index of the other branch - this is expected.

However, i need to remove these files from the index of any branch, so how can i issue the same git rm --cached command on a branch i can't checkout to?

2 Answers 2

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If the file on the other branch is the same as the untracked file on the disk, you can git checkout -f, and then git rm --cached. If not, and you want to save the untracked file without git's knowledge, you must do exactly that: put it away in ~/tmp or something, clean up git's view, and mv it back to the repository directory. Also, put it in .gitignore immediately to avoid tracking it by mistake.

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Faced with the same situation, I tend do this until all BRANCH_WHERE_FILE_REMAINS are gone.

git rebase BRANCH_WHERE_FILE_IS_REMOVED BRANCH_WHERE_FILE_REMAINS

Note: This doesn't cause checking out of commits where .idea remains, because rebase's cherry-picking is based after the commit where the file is already removed.

However, note that if at any point you do git rebase --abort, rebase will try going back to a commit where .idea was still in the index, and you'll probably face trouble there. (Backing up of .idea is recommended before attempting.)

BRANCH_WHERE_FILE_IS_REMOVED can just be the commit-id if there's no such branch.

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  • Not working. I'm on develop ( the branch with the .idea files) and issued git rebase master (master is the branch without the files), but i get "error: The following untracked working tree files would be overwritten by checkout:"
    – brazorf
    Dec 3, 2015 at 11:39
  • Are you sure that's not "I'm on develop (the branch without the .idea files) and issued git rebase master (master is the branch with the files) ..."? Because this is more in line with your original question, as well as the error message you're getting.
    – antak
    Dec 5, 2015 at 5:55
  • Anyhow, the command you need to issue is backwards. It's git rebase develop master. But this rebases master on develop, and I'm pretty sure you don't want this. The above answer actually assumed that by "Now when i try to checkout another branch", you meant other feature branches, not your mainline. Indeed, I see how you'd run into your initial problem if you wanted to checkout your mainline in order to issue git merge develop.
    – antak
    Dec 5, 2015 at 5:56
  • Yep that's the problem - my bad i didn't mention that the involved branch was my master. I'll try your solution if i run into this again
    – brazorf
    Dec 5, 2015 at 11:40

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