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What is the best (or as good as possible) general SVN ignore pattern to use?

There are a number of different IDE, editor, compiler, plug-in, platform, etc. specific files and some file types that "overlap" (i.e. desirable for some types projects and not for others).

There are however, a large number of file types that you just never want included in source control automatically regardless the specifics of your development environment.

The answer to this question would serve as a good starting point for any project - only requiring them to add the few environment specific items they need. It could be adapted for other Version Control Systems (VCS) as well.

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14 Answers

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I'll add my own two cents to this question:

I use the following SVN ignore pattern with TortoiseSVN and Subversion CLI for native C++, C#/VB.NET, and PERL projects on both Windows and Linux platforms. It works well for me!

Formatted for copy and paste:

*.o *.lo *.la #*# .*.rej *.rej .*~ *~ .#* .DS_Store thumbs.db Thumbs.db *.bak *.class *.exe *.dll *.mine *.obj *.ncb *.lib *.log *.idb *.pdb *.ilk *.msi* .res *.pch *.suo *.exp *.*~ *.~* ~*.* cvs CVS .CVS .cvs release Release debug Debug ignore Ignore bin Bin obj Obj *.csproj.user *.user

Formatted for readability:

*.o *.lo *.la #*# .*.rej *.rej
.*~ *~ .#* .DS_Store thumbs.db 
Thumbs.db *.bak *.class *.exe *.dll
*.mine *.obj *.ncb *.lib *.log 
*.idb *.pdb *.ilk *.msi* .res *.pch *.suo 
*.exp *.*~ *.~* ~*.* cvs  CVS .CVS .cvs  
release Release debug Debug
ignore Ignore bin Bin obj  Obj
*.csproj.user *.user
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What about *.tmp *.temp? – Bob King Jul 17 '09 at 17:15
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Also, if you do WPF *.g.vb *.g.cs *.baml *.GenerateResource.Cache *.cache – Bob King Jul 17 '09 at 17:15
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is *.dll required as it may be case when the reference assemblies needs to be commited also in repository? – Xabatcha Apr 8 '10 at 9:43
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@Xabatcha - You can always explicitly include a file of any extension (or folder) regardless of whether it is listed in the global ignore pattern or not. Generally you do not want *.dll being tracked by SVN however you can always explicitly add any necessary ones (which I often do in the case of third-party assemblies). – Zach Burlingame Apr 8 '10 at 20:03
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If you're using ReSharper the add that too – autonomatt May 11 '10 at 16:16
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Based on Burly's ignore pattern, I have added ReSharper to the ignore list

*.o *.lo .la ## .*.rej .rej .~ ~ .# .DS_Store thumbs.db Thumbs.db *.bak
*.class *.exe *.dll *.mine *.obj *.ncb *.lib *.log *.idb *.pdb *.ilk .msi .res *.pch *.suo *.exp .~ .~ ~. cvs
CVS .CVS .cvs release Release debug
Debug ignore Ignore bin Bin obj Obj
*.csproj.user *.user _ReSharper.* *.resharper.user

3/7

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i use this just also with: _ReSharper.* – Dve Jan 20 '11 at 3:30
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My ignore pattern for Visual Studio:

*/bin */obj */Release */Debug *.suo *.err *.log *.obj *.bin *.dll *.exe *.LOG *.user *.pdb [tT]emp [tT]empPE Ankh.Load thumbs.db *.resharper *.vspscc *.vsssccc *.scc */_ReSharper* */_ReSharper.* bin obj *.resharperoptions *.db *.bak *_ReSharper* *.snk logs output TestResults *.crunchsolution.* *.crunchproject.*

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Every time I come across a file I generally do not want in the repository, I update the pattern. I believe there is no "best" pattern - it always depends on the language and environment you develop in.

Moreover, you're not very likely to think of all the possible "ignorable" filetypes - you'll always encounter a filetype you simply forgot to include. Thats why updating the pattern as you go works the best.

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I agree there is no "best" pattern in the absolute sense, which i why I added the (or as good as possible). You are correct, you won't enumerate all of them and it does depend on the lang & env, which I also stated. However, there are a large number you can knock out right off the bat. – Zach Burlingame Sep 17 '08 at 17:10
Also while adding them as you go works alright for single developer environments, when you have multiple developers on a project, having a common project ignore pattern is desirable. You want to have to update it as infrequently as possible, so you want to knock out as many as possible up front – Zach Burlingame Sep 17 '08 at 17:10
Of course, the usual pattern of *.bin *.bak *.pdb *.suo etc etc must be set up front, I agree. But once you set the ignore properties on a repository folder, they do effectively become shared - although I am aware this is not exactly what you meant. – petr k. Sep 17 '08 at 17:21
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Windows users might want to throw in desktop.ini and thumbs.db.

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Visual Studio (VC++) users definitely need to exclude the .ncb files

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For Eclipse, I use:

bin
.*

.* gets all the project configuration. You almost never want to check in a 'hidden' directory or file, but if it comes up, you can still svn add it.

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Mac users probably want to throw in .DS_Store. In addition, if there are dev's using Emacs or Vim, you probably want to add ~~ and ##.

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Since you may be using third party libs and dll's as part of the project(s) then I don't see the wisdom in blocking *.lib and *.dll from the repository. These are the things that are meant to be stored in the repository.

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When using third party libs, dlls, exes, etc. just explicitly add them. If you want to a do an entire 3rd party tree, just temporarily disable the ignore pattern. You don't want these types being picked up implicitly during day-to-day development however, hence their inclusion in the pattern. – Zach Burlingame Oct 9 '08 at 15:18
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Used for my Visual Studio projects

*/bin */obj *.user *.suo

You can expand more file types from there.

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I saw a similar list earlier today -- what's the difference between */bin and just bin? Assuming you want to ignore the whole folder. – harpo Sep 17 '08 at 17:03
Read section 5.13. Ignoring Files And Directories of the TortoiseSVN help file. – icelava Sep 18 '08 at 14:31
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tortoisesvn.net/docs/release/TortoiseSVN_en/… There it says that you shouldn't include a / or \, and that including them is a legacy of earlier versions – Simon D Jul 9 '09 at 15:33
@Simon, isn't it saying (in the "No Paths in Global Ignore List" inset) that paths are okay in svn:ignore, but not in the global ignore list? – Matthew Flaschen Oct 12 '11 at 17:19
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The pattern depends on which operating system you're using.

On Linux, you'll want to block *.o, *.so, *.a, and *.la to begin with. You may also want to block *~ (backup file from editing) and #*# (emacs backup from a crash).

On Windows, you'll want *.obj, *.lib, and *.dll at the very least.

Any other files you need to block depend on your IDE, editor, and compiler.

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Gotta add Resharper to the mix if you use one.

another one to look out for is Ankh*.*

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Yeah, I left out most of the tool specific flags except for Visual Studio. Hopefully others continue to add answers with explicit file pattern lists for their various tools! – Zach Burlingame Jun 22 '10 at 12:36
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Visual Studio 2010 users should add ipch (a folder which contains C++ precompiled headers) and *.sdf (huge files used by intellisense for any kind of project).

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Don't forget NCrunch temporary files:

*.crunchsolution.* *.crunchproject.*
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