179

What is the best (or as good as possible) general SVN ignore pattern to use?

There are a number of different IDE, editor, compiler, plug-in, platform, etc. specific files and some file types that "overlap" (i.e. desirable for some types projects and not for others).

There are however, a large number of file types that you just never want included in source control automatically regardless the specifics of your development environment.

The answer to this question would serve as a good starting point for any project - only requiring them to add the few environment specific items they need. It could be adapted for other Version Control Systems (VCS) as well.

1
  • Hello Zach, I've been reading this post of yours: zachburlingame.com/2011/03/… and I have a couple of questions..Is there a way to reach you with this? Thanks for your time...P.S: Couldn't find any other way to reach you except through this comment here, sorry for the annoyance
    – Brams
    Jul 9, 2014 at 8:56

17 Answers 17

196

I'll add my own two cents to this question:

I use the following SVN ignore pattern with TortoiseSVN and Subversion CLI for native C++, C#/VB.NET, and PERL projects on both Windows and Linux platforms. It works well for me!

Formatted for copy and paste:

*.o *.lo *.la #*# .*.rej *.rej .*~ *~ .#* .DS_Store thumbs.db Thumbs.db *.bak *.class *.exe *.dll *.mine *.obj *.ncb *.lib *.log *.idb *.pdb *.ilk *.msi* .res *.pch *.suo *.exp *.*~ *.~* ~*.* cvs CVS .CVS .cvs release Release debug Debug ignore Ignore bin Bin obj Obj *.csproj.user *.user *.generated.cs

Formatted for readability:

*.o *.lo *.la #*# .*.rej *.rej
.*~ *~ .#* .DS_Store thumbs.db 
Thumbs.db *.bak *.class *.exe *.dll
*.mine *.obj *.ncb *.lib *.log 
*.idb *.pdb *.ilk *.msi* .res *.pch *.suo 
*.exp *.*~ *.~* ~*.* cvs  CVS .CVS .cvs  
release Release debug Debug
ignore Ignore bin Bin obj  Obj
*.csproj.user *.user
*.generated.cs
10
  • 3
    Also, if you do WPF *.g.vb *.g.cs *.baml *.GenerateResource.Cache *.cache
    – Bob King
    Jul 17, 2009 at 17:15
  • 6
    is *.dll required as it may be case when the reference assemblies needs to be commited also in repository? Apr 8, 2010 at 9:43
  • 6
    @Xabatcha - You can always explicitly include a file of any extension (or folder) regardless of whether it is listed in the global ignore pattern or not. Generally you do not want *.dll being tracked by SVN however you can always explicitly add any necessary ones (which I often do in the case of third-party assemblies). Apr 8, 2010 at 20:03
  • 2
    If you're using ReSharper the add that too
    – autonomatt
    May 11, 2010 at 16:16
  • 1
    If you're using NuGet you should add packages and allow nuget to download missing packages during build
    – jitidea
    May 23, 2013 at 7:04
45

Based on Burly's ignore pattern, I have added ReSharper to the ignore list

Formatted for copy and paste:

*.o *.lo .la ## .*.rej .rej .~ ~ .# .DS_Store thumbs.db Thumbs.db *.bak *.class *.exe *.dll *.mine *.obj *.ncb *.lib *.log *.idb *.pdb *.ilk .msi .res *.pch *.suo *.exp ~. cvs CVS .CVS .cvs release Release debug Debug ignore Ignore bin Bin obj Obj *.csproj.user *.user _ReSharper.* *.resharper.user

Formatted for readability:

*.o *.lo .la ## .*.rej .rej .~ ~ .# .DS_Store thumbs.db Thumbs.db *.bak
*.class *.exe *.dll *.mine *.obj *.ncb *.lib *.log *.idb *.pdb *.ilk .msi .res *.pch *.suo *.exp ~. cvs
CVS .CVS .cvs release Release debug
Debug ignore Ignore bin Bin obj Obj
*.csproj.user *.user _ReSharper.* *.resharper.user
2
  • 1
    i use this just also with: _ReSharper.*
    – David
    Jan 20, 2011 at 3:30
  • 1
    Note that Dve's comment has been incorporated into the pattern above. You don't need to add it again. Dec 11, 2012 at 6:05
36

My ignore pattern for Visual Studio:

*/bin */obj */Release */Debug *.suo *.err *.log *.obj *.bin *.dll *.exe *.LOG *.user *.pdb [tT]emp [tT]empPE Ankh.Load thumbs.db *.resharper *.vspscc *.vsssccc *.scc */_ReSharper* */_ReSharper.* bin obj *.resharperoptions *.db *.bak *_ReSharper* *.snk logs output TestResults *.crunchsolution.* *.crunchproject.*

Formatted for readability

*/bin */obj */Release */Debug *.suo *.err *.log *.obj *.bin *.dll *.exe 
*.LOG *.user *.pdb [tT]emp [tT]empPE Ankh.Load thumbs.db *.resharper 
*.vspscc *.vsssccc *.scc */_ReSharper* */_ReSharper.* bin obj 
*.resharperoptions *.db *.bak *_ReSharper* *.snk logs output TestResults 
*.crunchsolution.* *.crunchproject.*
16

Every time I come across a file I generally do not want in the repository, I update the pattern. I believe there is no "best" pattern - it always depends on the language and environment you develop in.

Moreover, you're not very likely to think of all the possible "ignorable" filetypes - you'll always encounter a filetype you simply forgot to include. Thats why updating the pattern as you go works the best.

3
  • 2
    I agree there is no "best" pattern in the absolute sense, which i why I added the (or as good as possible). You are correct, you won't enumerate all of them and it does depend on the lang & env, which I also stated. However, there are a large number you can knock out right off the bat. Sep 17, 2008 at 17:10
  • 1
    Also while adding them as you go works alright for single developer environments, when you have multiple developers on a project, having a common project ignore pattern is desirable. You want to have to update it as infrequently as possible, so you want to knock out as many as possible up front Sep 17, 2008 at 17:10
  • Of course, the usual pattern of *.bin *.bak *.pdb *.suo etc etc must be set up front, I agree. But once you set the ignore properties on a repository folder, they do effectively become shared - although I am aware this is not exactly what you meant.
    – petr k.
    Sep 17, 2008 at 17:21
11

Windows users might want to throw in desktop.ini and thumbs.db.

5

Used for my Visual Studio projects

*/bin */obj *.user *.suo

You can expand more file types from there.

4
  • I saw a similar list earlier today -- what's the difference between */bin and just bin? Assuming you want to ignore the whole folder.
    – harpo
    Sep 17, 2008 at 17:03
  • Read section 5.13. Ignoring Files And Directories of the TortoiseSVN help file.
    – icelava
    Sep 18, 2008 at 14:31
  • 5
    tortoisesvn.net/docs/release/TortoiseSVN_en/… There it says that you shouldn't include a / or \, and that including them is a legacy of earlier versions
    – Simon D
    Jul 9, 2009 at 15:33
  • @Simon, isn't it saying (in the "No Paths in Global Ignore List" inset) that paths are okay in svn:ignore, but not in the global ignore list? Oct 12, 2011 at 17:19
3

Visual Studio (VC++) users definitely need to exclude the .ncb files

1

Mac users probably want to throw in .DS_Store. In addition, if there are dev's using Emacs or Vim, you probably want to add ~~ and ##.

1

For Eclipse, I use:

bin
.*

.* gets all the project configuration. You almost never want to check in a 'hidden' directory or file, but if it comes up, you can still svn add it.

1
  • obj is also necessary, as well as *.user files Feb 1, 2012 at 14:24
1

Since you may be using third party libs and dll's as part of the project(s) then I don't see the wisdom in blocking *.lib and *.dll from the repository. These are the things that are meant to be stored in the repository.

1
  • 5
    When using third party libs, dlls, exes, etc. just explicitly add them. If you want to a do an entire 3rd party tree, just temporarily disable the ignore pattern. You don't want these types being picked up implicitly during day-to-day development however, hence their inclusion in the pattern. Oct 9, 2008 at 15:18
1

Visual Studio 2010 users should add ipch (a folder which contains C++ precompiled headers) and *.sdf (huge files used by intellisense for any kind of project).

0

The pattern depends on which operating system you're using.

On Linux, you'll want to block **.o*, **.so*, **.a*, and **.la* to begin with. You may also want to block **~* (backup file from editing) and #*# (emacs backup from a crash).

On Windows, you'll want **.obj*, **.lib*, and **.dll* at the very least.

Any other files you need to block depend on your IDE, editor, and compiler.

0

Gotta add Resharper to the mix if you use one.

another one to look out for is Ankh*.*

1
  • Yeah, I left out most of the tool specific flags except for Visual Studio. Hopefully others continue to add answers with explicit file pattern lists for their various tools! Jun 22, 2010 at 12:36
0

Don't forget NCrunch temporary files:

*.crunchsolution.* *.crunchproject.*
0

And core dumps (cygwin, linux)

*.stackdump core.*
0

gitignore.io provides configurable patterns for git. They provide a readable list, which you need to reformat for SVN.

For instance, requesting MicrosoftOffice and Windows returns

# Created by https://www.gitignore.io/api/microsoftoffice,windows

### MicrosoftOffice ###
*.tmp

# Word temporary
~$*.doc*

# Excel temporary
~$*.xls*

# Excel Backup File
*.xlk

# PowerPoint temporary
~$*.ppt*

# Visio autosave temporary files
*.~vsdx


### Windows ###
# Windows image file caches
Thumbs.db
ehthumbs.db

# Folder config file
Desktop.ini

# Recycle Bin used on file shares
$RECYCLE.BIN/

# Windows Installer files
*.cab
*.msi
*.msm
*.msp

# Windows shortcuts
*.lnk
0

gitignore.io provides configurable patterns for git. They provide a readable list, which you need to reformat for SVN.

For instance, requesting MicrosoftOffice and Windows returns

# Created by https://www.gitignore.io/api/microsoftoffice,windows

### MicrosoftOffice ###
*.tmp

# Word temporary
~$*.doc*

# Excel temporary
~$*.xls*

# Excel Backup File
*.xlk

# PowerPoint temporary
~$*.ppt*

# Visio autosave temporary files
*.~vsdx


### Windows ###
# Windows image file caches
Thumbs.db
ehthumbs.db

# Folder config file
Desktop.ini

# Recycle Bin used on file shares
$RECYCLE.BIN/

# Windows Installer files
*.cab
*.msi
*.msm
*.msp

# Windows shortcuts
*.lnk

It seems that it can be directly used as svn:global-ignore

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.