960

Which files should I include in .gitignore when using Git in conjunction with Xcode?

2

21 Answers 21

735

I was previously using the top-voted answer, but it needs a bit of cleanup, so here it is redone for Xcode 4, with some improvements.

I've researched every file in this list, but several of them do not exist in Apple's official Xcode documentation, so I had to go on Apple mailing lists.

Apple continues to add undocumented files, potentially corrupting our live projects. This IMHO is unacceptable, and I've now started logging bugs against it each time they do so. I know they don't care, but maybe it'll shame one of them into treating developers more fairly.


If you need to customize, here's a gist you can fork: https://gist.github.com/3786883


#########################
# .gitignore file for Xcode4 and Xcode5 Source projects
#
# Apple bugs, waiting for Apple to fix/respond:
#
#    15564624 - what does the xccheckout file in Xcode5 do? Where's the documentation?
#
# Version 2.6
# For latest version, see: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/49478/git-ignore-file-for-xcode-projects
#
# 2015 updates:
# - Fixed typo in "xccheckout" line - thanks to @lyck for pointing it out!
# - Fixed the .idea optional ignore. Thanks to @hashier for pointing this out
# - Finally added "xccheckout" to the ignore. Apple still refuses to answer support requests about this, but in practice it seems you should ignore it.
# - minor tweaks from Jona and Coeur (slightly more precise xc* filtering/names)
# 2014 updates:
# - appended non-standard items DISABLED by default (uncomment if you use those tools)
# - removed the edit that an SO.com moderator made without bothering to ask me
# - researched CocoaPods .lock more carefully, thanks to Gokhan Celiker
# 2013 updates:
# - fixed the broken "save personal Schemes"
# - added line-by-line explanations for EVERYTHING (some were missing)
#
# NB: if you are storing "built" products, this WILL NOT WORK,
# and you should use a different .gitignore (or none at all)
# This file is for SOURCE projects, where there are many extra
# files that we want to exclude
#
#########################

#####
# OS X temporary files that should never be committed
#
# c.f. http://www.westwind.com/reference/os-x/invisibles.html

.DS_Store

# c.f. http://www.westwind.com/reference/os-x/invisibles.html

.Trashes

# c.f. http://www.westwind.com/reference/os-x/invisibles.html

*.swp

#
# *.lock - this is used and abused by many editors for many different things.
#    For the main ones I use (e.g. Eclipse), it should be excluded
#    from source-control, but YMMV.
#   (lock files are usually local-only file-synchronization on the local FS that should NOT go in git)
# c.f. the "OPTIONAL" section at bottom though, for tool-specific variations!
#
# In particular, if you're using CocoaPods, you'll want to comment-out this line:
*.lock


#
# profile - REMOVED temporarily (on double-checking, I can't find it in OS X docs?)
#profile


####
# Xcode temporary files that should never be committed
# 
# NB: NIB/XIB files still exist even on Storyboard projects, so we want this...

*~.nib


####
# Xcode build files -
#
# NB: slash on the end, so we only remove the FOLDER, not any files that were badly named "DerivedData"

DerivedData/

# NB: slash on the end, so we only remove the FOLDER, not any files that were badly named "build"

build/


#####
# Xcode private settings (window sizes, bookmarks, breakpoints, custom executables, smart groups)
#
# This is complicated:
#
# SOMETIMES you need to put this file in version control.
# Apple designed it poorly - if you use "custom executables", they are
#  saved in this file.
# 99% of projects do NOT use those, so they do NOT want to version control this file.
#  ..but if you're in the 1%, comment out the line "*.pbxuser"

# .pbxuser: http://lists.apple.com/archives/xcode-users/2004/Jan/msg00193.html

*.pbxuser

# .mode1v3: http://lists.apple.com/archives/xcode-users/2007/Oct/msg00465.html

*.mode1v3

# .mode2v3: http://lists.apple.com/archives/xcode-users/2007/Oct/msg00465.html

*.mode2v3

# .perspectivev3: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5223297/xcode-projects-what-is-a-perspectivev3-file

*.perspectivev3

#    NB: also, whitelist the default ones, some projects need to use these
!default.pbxuser
!default.mode1v3
!default.mode2v3
!default.perspectivev3


####
# Xcode 4 - semi-personal settings
#
# Apple Shared data that Apple put in the wrong folder
# c.f. http://stackoverflow.com/a/19260712/153422
#     FROM ANSWER: Apple says "don't ignore it"
#     FROM COMMENTS: Apple is wrong; Apple code is too buggy to trust; there are no known negative side-effects to ignoring Apple's unofficial advice and instead doing the thing that actively fixes bugs in Xcode
# Up to you, but ... current advice: ignore it.
*.xccheckout

#
#
# OPTION 1: ---------------------------------
#     throw away ALL personal settings (including custom schemes!
#     - unless they are "shared")
# As per build/ and DerivedData/, this ought to have a trailing slash
#
# NB: this is exclusive with OPTION 2 below
xcuserdata/

# OPTION 2: ---------------------------------
#     get rid of ALL personal settings, but KEEP SOME OF THEM
#     - NB: you must manually uncomment the bits you want to keep
#
# NB: this *requires* git v1.8.2 or above; you may need to upgrade to latest OS X,
#    or manually install git over the top of the OS X version
# NB: this is exclusive with OPTION 1 above
#
#xcuserdata/**/*

#     (requires option 2 above): Personal Schemes
#
#!xcuserdata/**/xcschemes/*

####
# Xcode 4 workspaces - more detailed
#
# Workspaces are important! They are a core feature of Xcode - don't exclude them :)
#
# Workspace layout is quite spammy. For reference:
#
# /(root)/
#   /(project-name).xcodeproj/
#     project.pbxproj
#     /project.xcworkspace/
#       contents.xcworkspacedata
#       /xcuserdata/
#         /(your name)/xcuserdatad/
#           UserInterfaceState.xcuserstate
#     /xcshareddata/
#       /xcschemes/
#         (shared scheme name).xcscheme
#     /xcuserdata/
#       /(your name)/xcuserdatad/
#         (private scheme).xcscheme
#         xcschememanagement.plist
#
#

####
# Xcode 4 - Deprecated classes
#
# Allegedly, if you manually "deprecate" your classes, they get moved here.
#
# We're using source-control, so this is a "feature" that we do not want!

*.moved-aside

####
# OPTIONAL: Some well-known tools that people use side-by-side with Xcode / iOS development
#
# NB: I'd rather not include these here, but gitignore's design is weak and doesn't allow
#     modular gitignore: you have to put EVERYTHING in one file.
#
# COCOAPODS:
#
# c.f. http://guides.cocoapods.org/using/using-cocoapods.html#what-is-a-podfilelock
# c.f. http://guides.cocoapods.org/using/using-cocoapods.html#should-i-ignore-the-pods-directory-in-source-control
#
#!Podfile.lock
#
# RUBY:
#
# c.f. http://yehudakatz.com/2010/12/16/clarifying-the-roles-of-the-gemspec-and-gemfile/
#
#!Gemfile.lock
#
# IDEA:
#
# c.f. https://www.jetbrains.com/objc/help/managing-projects-under-version-control.html?search=workspace.xml
# 
#.idea/workspace.xml
#
# TEXTMATE:
#
# -- UNVERIFIED: c.f. http://stackoverflow.com/a/50283/153422
#
#tm_build_errors

####
# UNKNOWN: recommended by others, but I can't discover what these files are
#
52
  • 77
    You shouldn't be ignoring *.lock or Podfile.lock (never mind the redundancy). You want the exact same versions installed in all workspaces, you don't want the "latest version".
    – tvon
    Apr 17, 2013 at 13:58
  • 10
    I have removed the Podfile part. I didn't add that originally, SO says someone else added it and I carelessly copy/pasted it into the gist. My apologies for any/all confusion and misunderstanding. I really dislike the way StackOverflow lets anyone edit your answers :(.
    – Adam
    Apr 17, 2013 at 14:22
  • 6
    There's now an explanation line for EVERYTHING, line by line. This should make it much clearer, and make it easier to customize for your own projects.
    – Adam
    Apr 19, 2013 at 13:21
  • 3
    @Adam As I can see, this file contains VCS metadata, and should therefore not be checked into the VCS. No, there no mentions on developer.apple.com about xccheckout. But on official github page, this file included already in the gitignore file. https://github.com/github/gitignore/blob/master/Objective-C.gitignore
    – skywinder
    Nov 13, 2013 at 4:20
  • 4
    Without official description, we're not going to ignore anything. Almost every time people have done that, it's corrupted someone's project sooner or later. Way too dangerous - don't go there. So I refuse to add anything to this file unless I have a verifiable source confirming it is safe to ignore!
    – Adam
    Dec 28, 2015 at 14:55
276

Based on this guide for Mercurial my .gitignore includes:

.DS_Store
*.swp
*~.nib

build/

*.pbxuser
*.perspective
*.perspectivev3

I've also chosen to include:

*.mode1v3
*.mode2v3

which, according to this Apple mailing list post, are "user-specific project settings".

And for Xcode 4:

xcuserdata
14
  • 53
    I don't particularly like the .pbxuser/.perspective/*.perspectivev3 patterns. I much prefer the following .xcodeproj/ !*.xcodeproj/project.pbxproj That ignores everything inside a *.xcodeproj except the project.pbxproj. Mar 15, 2009 at 20:33
  • 6
    I do not ignore *.pbxuser, *.perspective and *.perspectivev3 because I like to keep those settings back when I clone my repository.
    – lajos
    May 27, 2009 at 5:57
  • 8
    Also you might want to add that you can make a "global" gitignore file like this: git config --global core.excludesfile ~/.gitignore Apr 27, 2010 at 14:56
  • 65
    I'd like to caution everyone who added .gitignore file after they have committed the project: those files you ignore are still being tracked. You'll have to remove them from git manually using git rm --cached <files>
    – pixelfreak
    Jun 27, 2011 at 1:44
  • 22
    @SpacyRicochet: Comment formatting has apparently changed since I wrote the comment. Hence the italics. My pattern is supposed to look like *.xcodeproj/* !*.xcodeproj/project.pbxproj. Of course, these days you do need to adjust it for workspaces. May 10, 2012 at 19:14
73

Regarding the 'build' directory exclusion -

If you place your build files in a different directory from your source, as I do, you don't have the folder in the tree to worry about.

This also makes life simpler for sharing your code, preventing bloated backups, and even when you have dependencies to other Xcode projects (while require the builds to be in the same directory as each other)

You can grab an up-to-date copy from the Github gist https://gist.github.com/708713

My current .gitignore file is

# Mac OS X
*.DS_Store

# Xcode
*.pbxuser
*.mode1v3
*.mode2v3
*.perspectivev3
*.xcuserstate
project.xcworkspace/
xcuserdata/

# Generated files
*.o
*.pyc


#Python modules
MANIFEST
dist/
build/

# Backup files
*~.nib
1
  • 8
    I do have the build folder outside of the project folder, but when other users build the project, it by default is recreated in the project- so I found that adding it to the ignore file is a better solution, otherwise it gets readded in their commits.
    – lajos
    May 27, 2009 at 5:53
59

For Xcode 4 I also add:

YourProjectName.xcodeproj/xcuserdata/*
YourProjectName.xcodeproj/project.xcworkspace/xcuserdata/*
2
  • 80
    If you just add xcuserdata, then that takes care of both.
    – ma11hew28
    Apr 12, 2011 at 18:13
  • 7
    For some reason just adding xcuserdata without the prefix didn't work for me. I thought it should, though. Odd.
    – BastiBen
    Dec 2, 2013 at 14:22
18

The people of GitHub have exhaustive and documented .gitignore files for Xcode projects:

Swift: https://github.com/github/gitignore/blob/master/Swift.gitignore

Objective-C: https://github.com/github/gitignore/blob/master/Objective-C.gitignore

3
  • 5
    This has already been posted to one of the answers above. I found it to be: incorrect, questionably supported (more than 100 outstanding pull requests!), and undocumented. The fact that it's "incorrect" is the worst of all; they have made an ignore that only works for a narrow set of uses and haven't explained what or why! Hence: my answer above, which corrects their bugs AND explains what's being done and why, so you can make educated decisions on a project-by-project basis (on a new project, I sometimes forget why some of the items are in there - the comments help me decide :))
    – Adam
    Oct 14, 2012 at 16:42
  • @Adam: GitHub's .gitignore has now been updated for Xcode 6.3.2 and Swift, so it's now correct. It's also documented.
    – Eric
    Jun 22, 2015 at 10:40
  • yeah, but the problem with publishing a data-destructive file and keeping it that way for months or years - and apparently not bothering to test it properly - is that you permanently sacrifice all faith, trust, respect from the community. Too late.
    – Adam
    Jun 26, 2015 at 11:45
18

You should checkout gitignore.io for Objective-C and Swift.

Here is the .gitignore file I'm using:

# Xcode
.DS_Store
*/build/*
*.pbxuser
!default.pbxuser
*.mode1v3
!default.mode1v3
*.mode2v3
!default.mode2v3
*.perspectivev3
!default.perspectivev3
xcuserdata
profile
*.moved-aside
DerivedData
.idea/
*.hmap
*.xccheckout
*.xcworkspace
!default.xcworkspace

#CocoaPods
Pods
3
  • 1
    always use your example. nice settings! Thanks! Oct 30, 2014 at 7:38
  • I haven't used gitignore.io for a while - worth checking if you haven't. You can use it to create a gitignore file for whatever IDE / language etc you're using. It'll even add a cocoapods section. Brilliant Sep 4, 2018 at 15:19
  • you should keep *.xcworkspace file which could be the main project file
    – us_david
    Dec 2, 2023 at 0:52
14

I'm using both AppCode and XCode. So .idea/ should be ignored.

append this to Adam's .gitignore

####
# AppCode
.idea/
14

Most of the answers are from the Xcode 4-5 era. I recommend an ignore file in a modern style.

# Xcode Project
**/*.xcodeproj/xcuserdata/
**/*.xcworkspace/xcuserdata/
**/.swiftpm/xcode/xcuserdata/
**/*.xcworkspace/xcshareddata/IDEWorkspaceChecks.plist
**/*.xcworkspace/xcshareddata/*.xccheckout
**/*.xcworkspace/xcshareddata/*.xcscmblueprint
**/*.playground/**/timeline.xctimeline
.idea/

# Build
**/.build/
**/Build/
DerivedData/
*.ipa

# Carthage
Carthage/

# CocoaPods
Pods/

# fastlane
fastlane/report.xml
fastlane/Preview.html
fastlane/screenshots
fastlane/test_output
fastlane/sign&cert

# CSV
*.orig
.svn

# Other
*~
.DS_Store
*.swp
*.save
._*
*.bak

Keep it updated from: https://github.com/BB9z/iOS-Project-Template/blob/master/.gitignore

0
13

Adding a .gitignore file for

Mac OS X + Xcode + Swift

This is how I have added a .gitignore file into my Swift project:

  1. Select you project in Xcode and right click → New Group → name it "Git"
  2. Select the Git folder and right click → Add new file
  3. Within the iOS tab → select Otherempty file

Enter image description here

  1. Give the file name here ".gitignore"

Enter image description here

  1. Confirm the file name and type

Enter image description here

Here is the result structure:

Enter image description here

  1. Open the file and past the below code

# file

#########################################################################
#                                                                       #
#       Title         - .gitignore file                                 #
#       For           - Mac OS X, Xcode 7 and Swift Source projects     #
#       Updated by    - Ramdhan Choudhary                               #
#       Updated on    - 13 - November - 2015                            #
#                                                                       #
#########################################################################

########### Xcode ###########
# Xcode temporary files that should never be committed

## Build generated
build/
DerivedData

# NB: NIB/XIB files still exist even on Storyboard projects, so we want this
*~.nib
*.swp

## Various settings
*.pbxuser
!default.pbxuser
*.mode1v3
!default.mode1v3
*.mode2v3
!default.mode2v3
*.perspectivev3
!default.perspectivev3
xcuserdata

## Other
*.xccheckout
*.moved-aside
*.xcuserstate
*.xcscmblueprint
*.xcscheme

########### Mac OS X ###########
# Mac OS X temporary files that should never be committed

.DS_Store
.AppleDouble
.LSOverride

# Icon must end with two \r
Icon


# Thumbnails
._*

# Files that might appear in the root of a volume
.DocumentRevisions-V100
.fseventsd
.Spotlight-V100
.TemporaryItems
.Trashes
.VolumeIcon.icns

# Directories potentially created on remote AFP share
.AppleDB
.AppleDesktop
Network Trash Folder
Temporary Items
.apdisk

########## Objective-C/Swift specific ##########
*.hmap
*.ipa

# CocoaPods
#
# We recommend against adding the Pods directory to your .gitignore. However
# you should judge for yourself, the pros and cons are mentioned at:
# https://guides.cocoapods.org/using/using-cocoapods.html#should-i-check-the-pods-directory-into-source-control
#
# Pods/

# Carthage
#
# Add this line if you want to avoid checking in source code from Carthage dependencies.
# Carthage/Checkouts

Carthage/Build

# fastlane
#
# It is recommended to not store the screenshots in the Git repository. Instead, use fastlane to re-generate the

fastlane/report.xml
fastlane/screenshots

Well, thanks to Adam. His answer helped me a lot, but still I had to add a few more entries as I wanted a .gitignore file for:

Mac OS X + Xcode + Swift

References: this and this

1
9

Mine is a .bzrignore, but it is the same idea :)

.DS_Store
*.mode1v3
*.pbxuser
*.perspectivev3
*.tm_build_errors

The tm_build_errors is for when I use TextMate to build my project. It is not quite as comprehensive as Hagelin, but I thought it was worth posting for the tm_build_errors line.

6

For Xcode 5 I add:

####
# Xcode 5 - VCS metadata
#
*.xccheckout

From Berik's Answer

5

Best of all,

gitignore.io

Go and choose your language, and then it'll give you the file.

0
4

I've added:

xcuserstate
xcsettings

and placed my .gitignore file at the root of my project.

After committing and pushing. I then ran:

git rm --cached UserInterfaceState.xcuserstate WorkspaceSettings.xcsettings

buried with the folder below:

<my_project_name>/<my_project_name>.xcodeproj/project.xcworkspace/xcuserdata/<my_user_name>.xcuserdatad/

I then ran git commit and push again

2
  • Did you add it also? Or is this just all you do?
    – hakre
    Sep 26, 2012 at 8:41
  • 1
    Yes, I added both but xcusersate was the main offending file. Adding that was the only way I could push my code remotely. Otherwise I was stuck in a feedback loop that required commit before push. So you commit, then Xcode 4.5 would ask you to commit again and you are never able to push because the pre req is committing. Oct 2, 2012 at 21:59
4

I use the following .gitignore file generated in gitignore.io:

### Xcode ###
build/
*.pbxuser
!default.pbxuser
*.mode1v3
!default.mode1v3
*.mode2v3
!default.mode2v3
*.perspectivev3
!default.perspectivev3
xcuserdata
*.xccheckout
*.moved-aside
DerivedData
*.xcuserstate


### Objective-C ###
# Xcode
#
build/
*.pbxuser
!default.pbxuser
*.mode1v3
!default.mode1v3
*.mode2v3
!default.mode2v3
*.perspectivev3
!default.perspectivev3
xcuserdata
*.xccheckout
*.moved-aside
DerivedData
*.hmap
*.ipa
*.xcuserstate

# CocoaPods
#
# We recommend against adding the Pods directory to your .gitignore. However
# you should judge for yourself, the pros and cons are mentioned at:
# http://guides.cocoapods.org/using/using-cocoapods.html#should-i-ignore-the-pods-directory-in-source-control
#
Pods/
0
4

gitignore.io: Create useful .gitignore files for your project

  • Example: Preview | Edit
    • Programming Languages: Objective-C Swift
    • Build Automation Tool: SwiftPackageManager Carthage
    • IDEs: Xcode
    • Operating Systems: macOS
  • Steps to use in Terminal (Refer to the YouTube Video)
    1. Create Git global config alias (One time only)

      git config --global alias.ignore '!gi() { curl -L -s https://www.gitignore.io/api/$@ ;}; gi'
      
    2. Enter the project directory

      cd <the project directory>
      
    3. Generate .gitignore file

      git ignore Objective-C,Swift,SwiftPackageManager,Carthage,Xcode,macOS >.gitignore
      
    4. Add and commit .gitignore file

      git add .gitignore
      git commit -m "Add .gitignore file"
      
2

Here's the .gitignore that GitHub uses by default for new Xcode repositories:

https://github.com/github/gitignore/blob/master/Objective-C.gitignore

It's likely to be reasonably correct at any given time.

2
  • The github .gitignore file is a collection of all files which we had problems with in the past. Right now, if you start a Xcode project from scratch an let Xcode preconfigure the git repository, there's not too much left to ignore in .gitignore: The only thing I prefer to ignore is xcuserdata/ ... this helps not to clutter your commits.
    – crosscode
    Jan 2, 2015 at 17:03
  • GitHub is the first place I ever look for gitignores :)
    – Ky -
    Sep 12, 2016 at 12:29
0

We did find that even if you add the .gitignore and the .gitattribte the *.pbxproj file can get corrupted. So we have a simple plan.

Every person that codes in office simply discards the changes made to this file. In the commit we simple mention the files that are added into the source. And then push to the server. Our integration manager than pulls and sees the commit details and adds the files into the resources.

Once he updates the remote everyone will always have a working copy. In case something is missing then we inform him to add it in and then pull once again.

This has worked out for us without any issues.

0

I recommend using joe to generate a .gitignore file.

For an iOS project run the following command:

$ joe g osx,xcode > .gitignore

It will generate this .gitignore:

.DS_Store
.AppleDouble
.LSOverride

Icon
._*

.DocumentRevisions-V100
.fseventsd
.Spotlight-V100
.TemporaryItems
.Trashes
.VolumeIcon.icns

.AppleDB
.AppleDesktop
Network Trash Folder
Temporary Items
.apdisk

build/
DerivedData

*.pbxuser
!default.pbxuser
*.mode1v3
!default.mode1v3
*.mode2v3
!default.mode2v3
*.perspectivev3
!default.perspectivev3
xcuserdata

*.xccheckout
*.moved-aside
*.xcuserstate
1
  • 1
    For the next person trying to install Joe, check if it's 5+ years of dead repo resurrected before wasting time
    – Ely Dantas
    Mar 5, 2021 at 21:02
0

If someone need a standard gitignore file as a simple way.

Just run this line in cmd/ terminal after navigating to your project.

npx gitignore Objective-C
4
0

This will create up-to-date gitignore file

For iOS development

git ignore swift,ios >.gitignore

For macOS development

git ignore swift,macos >.gitignore
-4

A Structure of a standerd .gitignore file for Xcode project >

.DS_Store
.DS_Store?
._*
.Spotlight-V100
.Trashes
Icon?
ehthumbs.db
Thumbs.db
build/
*.pbxuser
!default.pbxuser
*.mode1v3
!default.mode1v3
*.mode2v3
!default.mode2v3
*.perspectivev3
!default.perspectivev3
!default.xcworkspace
xcuserdata
profile
*.moved-aside
DerivedData
.idea/
2
  • How is this any different to any of the previous answers? Don't just paste your gitignore file here, this does not add anything to this subject. Sep 4, 2018 at 15:08
  • @AshleyMills Please read the answar first then add a comment .... The answar is for a standerd structure / required ones .... which are essentials to have ... Sep 6, 2018 at 7:24

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