I have changed a few files name by de-capitalize the first letter, as in Name.jpg
to name.jpg
. Git does not recognize this changes and I had to delete the files and upload them again. Is there a way that Git can be case-sensitive when checking for changes in file names? I have not made any changes to the file itself.
You can use git mv:
git mv -f OldFileNameCase newfilenamecase
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13
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9Using MacOS here (case-insensitive FS) and -f worked! Thanks for the tip – caesarsol Dec 15 '16 at 18:08
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66
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11Don't forget to give the full file path. Obvious, I know, but got me for a while – rickrizzo Aug 15 '17 at 16:03
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11To the top voted comment: you do need the
-f
switch with the latest git (2.18) otherwise you could get thefatal: destination exists
error. – DeepSpace101 Feb 15 '19 at 17:53
Git has a configuration setting that tells it whether to be case sensitive or insensitive: core.ignorecase
. To tell Git to be case-senstive, simply set this setting to false
. (Be careful if you have already pushed the files, then you should first move them given the other answers).
git config core.ignorecase false
Documentation
From the git config
documentation:
core.ignorecase
If true, this option enables various workarounds to enable git to work better on filesystems that are not case sensitive, like FAT. For example, if a directory listing finds
makefile
when git expectsMakefile
, git will assume it is really the same file, and continue to remember it asMakefile
.The default is false, except git-clone(1) or git-init(1) will probe and set
core.ignorecase
true if appropriate when the repository is created.
Case-insensitive file-systems
The two most popular operating systems that have case-insensitive file systems that I know of are
- Windows
- OS X
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12On a side note, I don't think that Mac OS X itself is case-insensitive. Instead, it's the filesystem that determines case-sensitivity. When formatting a HFS+ partition, users can choose whether to make it case-sensitive or insensitive. Case case-insensitive is the default. – spaaarky21 Dec 16 '14 at 19:02
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256It seems very worth noting in this answer that setting this option to
false
on a case-insensitive file system is a bad idea. This isn't necessarily obvious. For example, I just tried this on my Mac, thinking it would fix my problems, then renamed a file fromproductPageCtrl.js
toProductPageCtrl.js
.git status
saw a new file calledProductPageCtrl.js
but didn't think thatproductPageCtrl.js
had been deleted. When I added the new files, committed, and pushed to GitHub, the GitHub repo now contained both files even though my (supposedly up to date) local repo had only one. – Mark Amery Feb 9 '15 at 10:25 -
6@MarkAmery That sounds a lot like a bug in your Git client. Did you file a report? – Domi Feb 13 '15 at 11:49
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33@Domi this is not a bug, this is expected behavior. It is in fact a bad idea to set this to false on an insensitive filesystem because this is what happens. The reason why git didn't saw the lower-case file been deleted is that the filesystem doesn't report it as deleted as it does ignore the case while git does not with this option set to false. Its not that the filenames don't have lower vs upper case on ntfs or fat its just that filename lookup is ignoring the case. – ohcibi Jun 2 '16 at 17:40
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24@Domi git is smart enough. Thats why you should not set this to false on a case insensitive file system. Use
git mv
to move the file and see how git manages it. If you move the file without git, there is nothing git can do as the filesystem isn't telling the truth to git. This is an issue of ntfs/fat/hfs and thelike and not git/linux. – ohcibi Jun 3 '16 at 5:06
Using SourceTree I was able to do this all from the UI
- Rename
FILE.ext
towhatever.ext
- Stage that file
- Now rename
whatever.ext
tofile.ext
- Stage that file again
It's a bit tedious, but if you only need to do it to a few files it's pretty quick
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5
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6"Stage that file" is the important part - none of the other answers above worked for me. It actually worked with the plain old Windows command prompt. – Vlad Sabev Dec 21 '17 at 16:43
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2I didn't realize this worked through the staging area. But in my case, I wanted to modify the folder names as well as some files within those folders. So I first renamed all folders to temporary names. Committed the new names (all files within) and the "deleted" files. Git flagged them all as "renamed". Then renamed all those folders back to their new case versions and committed again. Finally, merged those 2 commits. But based on what you wrote, I could have done the whole thing through the sating area directly, without creating 2 commits + merge. – ThermoX Oct 12 '18 at 16:08
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4
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I wrote a Python 3 Script to do this tedious work: stackoverflow.com/a/58159822/4934640 – user Oct 1 '19 at 2:12
This is what I did on OS X:
git mv File file.tmp
git mv file.tmp file
Two steps because otherwise I got a “file exists” error. Perhaps it can be done in one step by adding --cached
or such.
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23as the top answer suggests,
-f
(force) is the flag you are looking for – rperryng Jul 9 '15 at 22:08 -
5@rperryng - no, the
-f
flag doesn't help in case the underlying FS is case-insensitive. However, two-step solution worked for me – HEKTO Sep 28 '16 at 18:34 -
Using a case-insensitive FS (on Mac) and
-f
worked! Thanks for the tip – caesarsol Dec 15 '16 at 18:07 -
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2
git -c "core.ignorecase=false" add .
will consider files whose case has been changed for commit. – nietonfir Nov 11 '17 at 23:24
Sometimes it is useful to temporarily change Git's case sensitivity.
Method #1 - Change case sensitivity for a single command:
git -c core.ignorecase=true checkout mybranch
to turn off case-sensitivity for a single checkout
command. Or more generally: git -c core.ignorecase=
<<true or false>>
<<command>>
. (Credit to VonC for suggesting this in the comments.)
Method #2 - Change case sensitivity for multiple commands:
To change the setting for longer (e.g. if multiple commands need to be run before changing it back):
git config core.ignorecase
(this returns the current setting, e.g.false
).git config core.ignorecase
<<true or false>>
- set the desired new setting.- ...Run multiple other commands...
git config core.ignorecase
<<false or true>>
- set config value back to its previous setting.
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1Why not directly
git -c core.ignorecase=<true or false> checkout <<branch>>
? Nothing to reset after. – VonC Jul 10 '18 at 11:28 -
2I had a weird experience of the proposed core.ignorecase working when changing from lowercase to uppercase, but not for uppercase to lowercase. seems the only reliable solution is to stop using an OS which fails to recognise filename case. – CodingMatters Sep 30 '18 at 2:56
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Is there a reason why it should be a temporary change? Would that cause any problem if I just leave the settings changed to case sensitive? – cytsunny Jan 24 '19 at 9:39
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This may depend on a few factors, in particular whether the target file system is case sensitive - see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case_sensitivity#In_filesystems. The temporary change may be needed if the deployment file system has different case sensitivity to the file system used for development. Also in my case I work in a team where everyone is expected to have the same Git settings (i.e. case sensitive) so if I turn it off it needs to be temporary. – Steve Chambers Jan 24 '19 at 9:49
Under OSX, to avoid this issue and avoid other problems with developing on a case-insensitive filesystem, you can use Disk Utility to create a case sensitive virtual drive / disk image.
Run disk utility, create new disk image, and use the following settings (or change as you like, but keep it case sensitive):
Make sure to tell git it is now on a case sensitive FS:
git config core.ignorecase false
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15Nah, nuclear is running a fully case-sensitive boot drive on OSX. You'll have to live without poorly written (ahem, Adobe) apps, or run those in their own case-stupid VM, but it's worth it if you code primarily for *nix systems. – Mike Marcacci Aug 6 '15 at 1:33
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1This is the only option that properly works. I've tried the rest and you end up in a pickle one way or another. Solve the problem properly by doing this. – John Hunt Jun 3 '16 at 9:12
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2Note that Disk Utility has a bug OS X 10.11 -- It won't create case sensitive images. You need to use the command line tool hdiutil. apple.stackexchange.com/questions/217915/… – dellsala Jan 18 '17 at 20:51
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7With APFS in High Sierra this is even easier. Click the icon of a drive with a plus and add a case-sensitive volume with no limits on size. It just shares space with the main volume and mounts at /Volumes/volume-name. – Michael Fox Aug 30 '17 at 13:02
I used those following steps:
git rm -r --cached .
git add --all .
git commit -a -m "Versioning untracked files"
git push origin master
For me is a simple solution
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2This is the solution. And unlike the other answers it works well when you are doing batch renames. On glamourphilly.org we needed to change every .Jpg to .jpg. In Finder you can do batch renames like that and this answer lets you check it in. – William Entriken Dec 9 '19 at 22:50
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1
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We can use git mv command. Example below , if we renamed file abcDEF.js to abcdef.js then we can run the following command from terminal
git mv -f .\abcDEF.js .\abcdef.js
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1Forcing is not needed anymore since git v2.0.1 (@see github.com/git/git/commit/… ) – Julian Hofmann Jun 18 '20 at 14:05
Similar to @Sijmen's answer, this is what worked for me on OSX when renaming a directory (inspired by this answer from another post):
git mv CSS CSS2
git mv CSS2 css
Simply doing git mv CSS css
gave the invalid argument error: fatal: renaming '/static/CSS' failed: Invalid argument
perhaps because OSX's file system is case insensitive
p.s BTW if you are using Django, collectstatic also wouldn't recognize the case difference and you'd have to do the above, manually, in the static root directory as well
1) rename file Name.jpg
to name1.jpg
2) commit removed file Name.jpg
3) rename file name1.jpg
to name.jpg
4) ammend added file name.jpg
to previous commit
git add
git commit --amend
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2I am getting this
fatal: bad source, source=name1.jpg, destination=name.jpg
at step 3. Do you have suggestion? Thx – Anthony Kong Mar 30 '17 at 0:48 -
2
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Worked for me. Honestly, its actually correct from an audit point of view. – BeaverProj Jan 14 at 18:16
I tried the following solutions from the other answers and they didn't work:
If your repository is hosted remotely (GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket), you can rename the file on origin (GitHub.com) and force the file rename in a top-down manner.
The instructions below pertain to GitHub, however the general idea behind them should apply to any remote repository-hosting platform. Keep in mind the type of file you're attempting to rename matters, that is, whether it's a file type that GitHub deems as editable (code, text, etc) or uneditable (image, binary, etc) within the browser.
- Visit GitHub.com
- Navigate to your repository on GitHub.com and select the branch you're working in
- Using the site's file navigation tool, navigate to the file you intend to rename
- Does GitHub allow you to edit the file within the browser?
- a.) Editable
- Click the "Edit this file" icon (it looks like a pencil)
- Change the filename in the filename text input
- b.) Uneditable
- Open the "Download" button in a new tab and save the file to your computer
- Rename the downloaded file
- In the previous tab on GitHub.com, click the "Delete this file" icon (it looks like a trashcan)
- Ensure the "Commit directly to the
branchname
branch" radio button is selected and click the "Commit changes" button - Within the same directory on GitHub.com, click the "Upload files" button
- Upload the renamed file from your computer
- a.) Editable
- Ensure the "Commit directly to the
branchname
branch" radio button is selected and click the "Commit changes" button - Locally, checkout/fetch/pull the branch
- Done
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Good to know. This technique should theoretically work on any repository hosting platform but I'd be interested to know if there are any that it would not work with. – gmeben Jan 2 '18 at 19:11
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Doesn't work for files that can't be edited in the browser, like images or PDF; there is no edit option, obviously. – Abhijit Sarkar Dec 26 '18 at 20:16
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@AbhijitSarkar Good point. I updated my answer for those cases. I tested and verified these instructions work. – gmeben Jan 11 '19 at 20:36
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Mac OSX High Sierra 10.13 fixes this somewhat. Just make a virtual APFS partition for your git projects, by default it has no size limit and takes no space.
- In Disk Utility, click the + button while the Container disk is selected
- Select APFS (Case-Sensitive) under format
- Name it
Sensitive
- Profit
- Optional: Make a folder in Sensitive called
git
andln -s /Volumes/Sensitive/git /Users/johndoe/git
Your drive will be in /Volumes/Sensitive/
How do I commit case-sensitive only filename changes in Git?
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I love this suggestion, it elegantly and painlessly solves the problem without resort to ugly workarounds. Thanks! – Phil Gleghorn Sep 24 '18 at 23:42
I've faced this issue several times on MacOS. Git is case sensitive but Mac is only case preserving.
Someone commit a file: Foobar.java
and after a few days decides to rename it to FooBar.java
. When you pull the latest code it fails with The following untracked working tree files would be overwritten by checkout...
The only reliable way that I've seen that fixes this is:
git rm Foobar.java
- Commit it with a message that you cannot miss
git commit -m 'TEMP COMMIT!!'
- Pull
- This will pop up a conflict forcing you to merge the conflict - because your change deleted it, but the other change renamed (hence the problem) it
- Accept your change which is the 'deletion'
git rebase --continue
- Now drop your workaround
git rebase -i HEAD~2
anddrop
theTEMP COMMIT!!
- Confirm that the file is now called
FooBar.java
When you've done a lot of file renaming and some of it are just a change of casing, it's hard to remember which is which. manually "git moving" the file can be quite some work. So what I would do during my filename change tasks are:
- remove all non-git files and folder to a different folder/repository.
- commit current empty git folder (this will show as all files deleted.)
- add all the files back into the original git folder/repository.
- commit current non-empty git folder.
This will fix all the case issues without trying to figure out which files or folders you renamed.
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Why not
git commmit --amend
in In paragraph 4? Otherwise, there will be an extra commit with the removal of all files. Or you can usegit rebase -i
with squash. – Alex78191 Jun 3 '17 at 17:06
I took @CBarr answer and wrote a Python 3 Script to do it with a list of files:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
# -*- coding: UTF-8 -*-
import os
import shlex
import subprocess
def run_command(absolute_path, command_name):
print( "Running", command_name, absolute_path )
command = shlex.split( command_name )
command_line_interface = subprocess.Popen(
command, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, cwd=absolute_path )
output = command_line_interface.communicate()[0]
print( output )
if command_line_interface.returncode != 0:
raise RuntimeError( "A process exited with the error '%s'..." % (
command_line_interface.returncode ) )
def main():
FILENAMES_MAPPING = \
[
(r"F:\\SublimeText\\Data", r"README.MD", r"README.md"),
(r"F:\\SublimeText\\Data\\Packages\\Alignment", r"readme.md", r"README.md"),
(r"F:\\SublimeText\\Data\\Packages\\AmxxEditor", r"README.MD", r"README.md"),
]
for absolute_path, oldname, newname in FILENAMES_MAPPING:
run_command( absolute_path, "git mv '%s' '%s1'" % ( oldname, newname ) )
run_command( absolute_path, "git add '%s1'" % ( newname ) )
run_command( absolute_path,
"git commit -m 'Normalized the \'%s\' with case-sensitive name'" % (
newname ) )
run_command( absolute_path, "git mv '%s1' '%s'" % ( newname, newname ) )
run_command( absolute_path, "git add '%s'" % ( newname ) )
run_command( absolute_path, "git commit --amend --no-edit" )
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
git mv
works. – VonC Mar 27 '15 at 6:44