I frequently add bash scripts to my Git repository, and the scripts have executable permissions in the Linux filesystem prior to the git add
. But after pushing the added files to a remote repository and pulling in another location, the files show up with non-executable permissions. There seem to be two ways to correct the problem:
-
chmod u+x $script git commit -am "fixing the script permissions... again..."
-
git update-index --chmod=+x $script
Instead of fixing up the permissions every time, is there a way to have Git simply look at the file permissions on the script during git add
, recognize "Hey, this here is an executable file!" and add it to the repository with the executable permissions directly?
filemode=false
?filemode=false
issue. I think this is the normal behavior of git--I'm just looking for some way to skip the manual fixup step.git add --chmod=+x
will be enough! See my answer below.*.sh text eol=lf chmod=+x