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I've tried including the .gitignore file in my directories of my project. In this file is the filename config.php. What I'm trying to do is get it so that each system (Development 1, Dev 2 and Test Server) all have their own config.php files.

But I've placed this file .gitignore in the directory where that file resides but that file is still synced when pushing and still merged. It also pulls it down to the test server when we sync that up. So each time we have to edit that file.

Why is this not working?

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  • Just now saw the dupe post. It's exactly what you need.
    – Andy
    Aug 27, 2014 at 18:33

1 Answer 1

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Two things can be happening here:

  1. I've only ever seen .gitignore files in the root of the repository. This might not be required, just the only way I've ever seen it.
  2. If the file in question is already under version control, you must delete it from version control, commit, push, and then put the file back. The .gitignore, if configured correctly, should prevent the file from being committed.
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    In my opinion both points are correct to have a proper configuration. First move the .gitignore in the root folder (best location in my opinion) and then remove the file from the index in order to have the desired behaviour. Aug 27, 2014 at 13:49
  • +1 for comment using the word "index." I couldn't remember how they termed it!
    – Andy
    Aug 27, 2014 at 13:51
  • So I log into bitbucket and delete the file from my master and all other branches to make this file work?
    – jfreak53
    Aug 27, 2014 at 13:59
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    I'm no Git expert, but I would think that your local repository is only tied to one branch. You should be able to remove the file from your local repository's index, commit, push, and it should be good. Related SO Post
    – Andy
    Aug 27, 2014 at 18:32

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