The solution is in the definition of pathspec
(see man pathspec
). It allows non-recursing glob patters and even exclusion patterns and attribute filtering.
In essence: Special paths can be given, that start with a :
, and some ”magic signature” before the actual path. There are long and a short form signatures.
For your case, the following works nicely:
git status ':(glob)mypath/*'
This is the long form, :(*)…
, where *
is a keyword. (glob
in this case.) There is no short one for glob
.
Note the single quotes, to make git itself glob, and not your shell. (Which may otherwise lead to passing a huge number of arguments to git, if your directory of choice has lot of entries.)
You can also specifically exclude subdirectory contents, by writing:
git status ':^mypath/*/*'
Here we can use the short form :?…
, where ?
is a key character. (^
in this case.) The long form of :^
is :(exclude)
.
This variant may have a slightly different meaning. (I have not verified this, but it probably includes changes to the actual subdirectories themselves but not changes to the files inside them.)