In git 1.9.0 the "magic word" exclude
was added to pathspec
s. So if you want to search for foobar
in every file except for those matching *.java
you can do:
git grep foobar -- './*' ':(exclude)*.java'
Or using the !
"short form" for exclude:
git grep foobar -- './*' ':!*.java'
Note that in git versions up to v2.12, when using an exclude pathspec
, you must have at least one "inclusive" pathspec
. In the above examples this is the ./*
(recursively include everything under the current directory). In git v2.13 this restriction was lifted and git grep foobar -- ':!*.java'
works without the ./*
.
You could also use something like :(top)
(short form: :/
) to include everything from the top of the repo. But then you'd probably also want to adjust your exclude pathspec
to start from the top as well: :/!*.java
(otherwise it would only exclude *.java
files from under your current directory).
There's a good reference for all the "magic words" allowed in a pathspec
at git-scm.com (or just git help glossary
). For some reason, the docs at kernel.org are really out of date even though they often come up first in google searches.