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git-ls-files.1 (15070B)


  1. '\" t
  2. .\" Title: git-ls-files
  3. .\" Author: [FIXME: author] [see http://www.docbook.org/tdg5/en/html/author]
  4. .\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets v1.79.2 <http://docbook.sf.net/>
  5. .\" Date: 2025-03-14
  6. .\" Manual: Git Manual
  7. .\" Source: Git 2.49.0
  8. .\" Language: English
  9. .\"
  10. .TH "GIT\-LS\-FILES" "1" "2025-03-14" "Git 2\&.49\&.0" "Git Manual"
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  30. .SH "NAME"
  31. git-ls-files \- Show information about files in the index and the working tree
  32. .SH "SYNOPSIS"
  33. .sp
  34. .nf
  35. \fIgit ls\-files\fR [\-z] [\-t] [\-v] [\-f]
  36. [\-c|\-\-cached] [\-d|\-\-deleted] [\-o|\-\-others] [\-i|\-\-ignored]
  37. [\-s|\-\-stage] [\-u|\-\-unmerged] [\-k|\-\-killed] [\-m|\-\-modified]
  38. [\-\-resolve\-undo]
  39. [\-\-directory [\-\-no\-empty\-directory]] [\-\-eol]
  40. [\-\-deduplicate]
  41. [\-x <pattern>|\-\-exclude=<pattern>]
  42. [\-X <file>|\-\-exclude\-from=<file>]
  43. [\-\-exclude\-per\-directory=<file>]
  44. [\-\-exclude\-standard]
  45. [\-\-error\-unmatch] [\-\-with\-tree=<tree\-ish>]
  46. [\-\-full\-name] [\-\-recurse\-submodules]
  47. [\-\-abbrev[=<n>]] [\-\-format=<format>] [\-\-] [<file>\&...\:]
  48. .fi
  49. .SH "DESCRIPTION"
  50. .sp
  51. This command merges the file listing in the index with the actual working directory list, and shows different combinations of the two\&.
  52. .sp
  53. Several flags can be used to determine which files are shown, and each file may be printed multiple times if there are multiple entries in the index or if multiple statuses are applicable for the relevant file selection options\&.
  54. .SH "OPTIONS"
  55. .PP
  56. \-c, \-\-cached
  57. .RS 4
  58. Show all files cached in Git\(cqs index, i\&.e\&. all tracked files\&. (This is the default if no \-c/\-s/\-d/\-o/\-u/\-k/\-m/\-\-resolve\-undo options are specified\&.)
  59. .RE
  60. .PP
  61. \-d, \-\-deleted
  62. .RS 4
  63. Show files with an unstaged deletion
  64. .RE
  65. .PP
  66. \-m, \-\-modified
  67. .RS 4
  68. Show files with an unstaged modification (note that an unstaged deletion also counts as an unstaged modification)
  69. .RE
  70. .PP
  71. \-o, \-\-others
  72. .RS 4
  73. Show other (i\&.e\&. untracked) files in the output
  74. .RE
  75. .PP
  76. \-i, \-\-ignored
  77. .RS 4
  78. Show only ignored files in the output\&. Must be used with either an explicit
  79. \fI\-c\fR
  80. or
  81. \fI\-o\fR\&. When showing files in the index (i\&.e\&. when used with
  82. \fI\-c\fR), print only those files matching an exclude pattern\&. When showing "other" files (i\&.e\&. when used with
  83. \fI\-o\fR), show only those matched by an exclude pattern\&. Standard ignore rules are not automatically activated; therefore, at least one of the
  84. \fB\-\-exclude\fR* options is required\&.
  85. .RE
  86. .PP
  87. \-s, \-\-stage
  88. .RS 4
  89. Show staged contents\*(Aq mode bits, object name and stage number in the output\&.
  90. .RE
  91. .PP
  92. \-\-directory
  93. .RS 4
  94. If a whole directory is classified as "other", show just its name (with a trailing slash) and not its whole contents\&. Has no effect without \-o/\-\-others\&.
  95. .RE
  96. .PP
  97. \-\-no\-empty\-directory
  98. .RS 4
  99. Do not list empty directories\&. Has no effect without \-\-directory\&.
  100. .RE
  101. .PP
  102. \-u, \-\-unmerged
  103. .RS 4
  104. Show information about unmerged files in the output, but do not show any other tracked files (forces \-\-stage, overrides \-\-cached)\&.
  105. .RE
  106. .PP
  107. \-k, \-\-killed
  108. .RS 4
  109. Show untracked files on the filesystem that need to be removed due to file/directory conflicts for tracked files to be able to be written to the filesystem\&.
  110. .RE
  111. .PP
  112. \-\-resolve\-undo
  113. .RS 4
  114. Show files having resolve\-undo information in the index together with their resolve\-undo information\&. (resolve\-undo information is what is used to implement "git checkout \-m $PATH", i\&.e\&. to recreate merge conflicts that were accidentally resolved)
  115. .RE
  116. .PP
  117. \-z
  118. .RS 4
  119. \e0 line termination on output and do not quote filenames\&. See OUTPUT below for more information\&.
  120. .RE
  121. .PP
  122. \-\-deduplicate
  123. .RS 4
  124. When only filenames are shown, suppress duplicates that may come from having multiple stages during a merge, or giving
  125. \fB\-\-deleted\fR
  126. and
  127. \fB\-\-modified\fR
  128. option at the same time\&. When any of the
  129. \fB\-t\fR,
  130. \fB\-\-unmerged\fR, or
  131. \fB\-\-stage\fR
  132. option is in use, this option has no effect\&.
  133. .RE
  134. .PP
  135. \-x <pattern>, \-\-exclude=<pattern>
  136. .RS 4
  137. Skip untracked files matching pattern\&. Note that pattern is a shell wildcard pattern\&. See EXCLUDE PATTERNS below for more information\&.
  138. .RE
  139. .PP
  140. \-X <file>, \-\-exclude\-from=<file>
  141. .RS 4
  142. Read exclude patterns from <file>; 1 per line\&.
  143. .RE
  144. .PP
  145. \-\-exclude\-per\-directory=<file>
  146. .RS 4
  147. Read additional exclude patterns that apply only to the directory and its subdirectories in <file>\&. If you are trying to emulate the way Porcelain commands work, using the
  148. \fB\-\-exclude\-standard\fR
  149. option instead is easier and more thorough\&.
  150. .RE
  151. .PP
  152. \-\-exclude\-standard
  153. .RS 4
  154. Add the standard Git exclusions: \&.git/info/exclude, \&.gitignore in each directory, and the user\(cqs global exclusion file\&.
  155. .RE
  156. .PP
  157. \-\-error\-unmatch
  158. .RS 4
  159. If any <file> does not appear in the index, treat this as an error (return 1)\&.
  160. .RE
  161. .PP
  162. \-\-with\-tree=<tree\-ish>
  163. .RS 4
  164. When using \-\-error\-unmatch to expand the user supplied <file> (i\&.e\&. path pattern) arguments to paths, pretend that paths which were removed in the index since the named <tree\-ish> are still present\&. Using this option with
  165. \fB\-s\fR
  166. or
  167. \fB\-u\fR
  168. options does not make any sense\&.
  169. .RE
  170. .PP
  171. \-t
  172. .RS 4
  173. Show status tags together with filenames\&. Note that for scripting purposes,
  174. \fBgit-status\fR(1)
  175. \fB\-\-porcelain\fR
  176. and
  177. \fBgit-diff-files\fR(1)
  178. \fB\-\-name\-status\fR
  179. are almost always superior alternatives; users should look at
  180. \fBgit-status\fR(1)
  181. \fB\-\-short\fR
  182. or
  183. \fBgit-diff\fR(1)
  184. \fB\-\-name\-status\fR
  185. for more user\-friendly alternatives\&.
  186. .sp
  187. This option provides a reason for showing each filename, in the form of a status tag (which is followed by a space and then the filename)\&. The status tags are all single characters from the following list:
  188. .PP
  189. H
  190. .RS 4
  191. tracked file that is not either unmerged or skip\-worktree
  192. .RE
  193. .PP
  194. S
  195. .RS 4
  196. tracked file that is skip\-worktree
  197. .RE
  198. .PP
  199. M
  200. .RS 4
  201. tracked file that is unmerged
  202. .RE
  203. .PP
  204. R
  205. .RS 4
  206. tracked file with unstaged removal/deletion
  207. .RE
  208. .PP
  209. C
  210. .RS 4
  211. tracked file with unstaged modification/change
  212. .RE
  213. .PP
  214. K
  215. .RS 4
  216. untracked paths which are part of file/directory conflicts which prevent checking out tracked files
  217. .RE
  218. .PP
  219. ?
  220. .RS 4
  221. untracked file
  222. .RE
  223. .PP
  224. U
  225. .RS 4
  226. file with resolve\-undo information
  227. .RE
  228. .RE
  229. .PP
  230. \-v
  231. .RS 4
  232. Similar to
  233. \fB\-t\fR, but use lowercase letters for files that are marked as
  234. \fIassume unchanged\fR
  235. (see
  236. \fBgit-update-index\fR(1))\&.
  237. .RE
  238. .PP
  239. \-f
  240. .RS 4
  241. Similar to
  242. \fB\-t\fR, but use lowercase letters for files that are marked as
  243. \fIfsmonitor valid\fR
  244. (see
  245. \fBgit-update-index\fR(1))\&.
  246. .RE
  247. .PP
  248. \-\-full\-name
  249. .RS 4
  250. When run from a subdirectory, the command usually outputs paths relative to the current directory\&. This option forces paths to be output relative to the project top directory\&.
  251. .RE
  252. .PP
  253. \-\-recurse\-submodules
  254. .RS 4
  255. Recursively calls ls\-files on each active submodule in the repository\&. Currently there is only support for the \-\-cached and \-\-stage modes\&.
  256. .RE
  257. .PP
  258. \-\-abbrev[=<n>]
  259. .RS 4
  260. Instead of showing the full 40\-byte hexadecimal object lines, show the shortest prefix that is at least
  261. \fI<n>\fR
  262. hexdigits long that uniquely refers the object\&. Non default number of digits can be specified with \-\-abbrev=<n>\&.
  263. .RE
  264. .PP
  265. \-\-debug
  266. .RS 4
  267. After each line that describes a file, add more data about its cache entry\&. This is intended to show as much information as possible for manual inspection; the exact format may change at any time\&.
  268. .RE
  269. .PP
  270. \-\-eol
  271. .RS 4
  272. Show <eolinfo> and <eolattr> of files\&. <eolinfo> is the file content identification used by Git when the "text" attribute is "auto" (or not set and core\&.autocrlf is not false)\&. <eolinfo> is either "\-text", "none", "lf", "crlf", "mixed" or ""\&.
  273. .sp
  274. "" means the file is not a regular file, it is not in the index or not accessible in the working tree\&.
  275. .sp
  276. <eolattr> is the attribute that is used when checking out or committing, it is either "", "\-text", "text", "text=auto", "text eol=lf", "text eol=crlf"\&. Since Git 2\&.10 "text=auto eol=lf" and "text=auto eol=crlf" are supported\&.
  277. .sp
  278. Both the <eolinfo> in the index ("i/<eolinfo>") and in the working tree ("w/<eolinfo>") are shown for regular files, followed by the ("attr/<eolattr>")\&.
  279. .RE
  280. .PP
  281. \-\-sparse
  282. .RS 4
  283. If the index is sparse, show the sparse directories without expanding to the contained files\&. Sparse directories will be shown with a trailing slash, such as "x/" for a sparse directory "x"\&.
  284. .RE
  285. .PP
  286. \-\-format=<format>
  287. .RS 4
  288. A string that interpolates %(\fBfieldname\fR) from the result being shown\&. It also interpolates %% to %, and %xXX where
  289. \fBXX\fR
  290. are hex digits interpolates to character with hex code
  291. \fBXX\fR; for example %x00 interpolates to \e0 (NUL), %x09 to \et (TAB) and %x0a to \en (LF)\&. \-\-format cannot be combined with
  292. \fB\-s\fR,
  293. \fB\-o\fR,
  294. \fB\-k\fR,
  295. \fB\-t\fR,
  296. \fB\-\-resolve\-undo\fR
  297. and
  298. \fB\-\-eol\fR\&.
  299. .RE
  300. .PP
  301. \-\-
  302. .RS 4
  303. Do not interpret any more arguments as options\&.
  304. .RE
  305. .PP
  306. <file>
  307. .RS 4
  308. Files to show\&. If no files are given all files which match the other specified criteria are shown\&.
  309. .RE
  310. .SH "OUTPUT"
  311. .sp
  312. \fIgit ls\-files\fR just outputs the filenames unless \fB\-\-stage\fR is specified in which case it outputs:
  313. .sp
  314. .if n \{\
  315. .RS 4
  316. .\}
  317. .nf
  318. [<tag> ]<mode> <object> <stage> <file>
  319. .fi
  320. .if n \{\
  321. .RE
  322. .\}
  323. .sp
  324. \fIgit ls\-files \-\-eol\fR will show i/<eolinfo><SPACES>w/<eolinfo><SPACES>attr/<eolattr><SPACE*><TAB><file>
  325. .sp
  326. \fIgit ls\-files \-\-unmerged\fR and \fIgit ls\-files \-\-stage\fR can be used to examine detailed information on unmerged paths\&.
  327. .sp
  328. For an unmerged path, instead of recording a single mode/SHA\-1 pair, the index records up to three such pairs; one from tree O in stage 1, A in stage 2, and B in stage 3\&. This information can be used by the user (or the porcelain) to see what should eventually be recorded at the path\&. (see \fBgit-read-tree\fR(1) for more information on state)
  329. .sp
  330. Without the \fB\-z\fR option, pathnames with "unusual" characters are quoted as explained for the configuration variable \fBcore\&.quotePath\fR (see \fBgit-config\fR(1))\&. Using \fB\-z\fR the filename is output verbatim and the line is terminated by a NUL byte\&.
  331. .sp
  332. It is possible to print in a custom format by using the \fB\-\-format\fR option, which is able to interpolate different fields using a %(\fBfieldname\fR) notation\&. For example, if you only care about the "objectname" and "path" fields, you can execute with a specific "\-\-format" like
  333. .sp
  334. .if n \{\
  335. .RS 4
  336. .\}
  337. .nf
  338. git ls\-files \-\-format=\*(Aq%(objectname) %(path)\*(Aq
  339. .fi
  340. .if n \{\
  341. .RE
  342. .\}
  343. .SH "FIELD NAMES"
  344. .sp
  345. The way each path is shown can be customized by using the \fB\-\-format=\fR\fI<format>\fR option, where the %(fieldname) in the <format> string for various aspects of the index entry are interpolated\&. The following "fieldname" are understood:
  346. .PP
  347. objectmode
  348. .RS 4
  349. The mode of the file which is recorded in the index\&.
  350. .RE
  351. .PP
  352. objecttype
  353. .RS 4
  354. The object type of the file which is recorded in the index\&.
  355. .RE
  356. .PP
  357. objectname
  358. .RS 4
  359. The name of the file which is recorded in the index\&.
  360. .RE
  361. .PP
  362. objectsize[:padded]
  363. .RS 4
  364. The object size of the file which is recorded in the index ("\-" if the object is a
  365. \fBcommit\fR
  366. or
  367. \fBtree\fR)\&. It also supports a padded format of size with "%(objectsize:padded)"\&.
  368. .RE
  369. .PP
  370. stage
  371. .RS 4
  372. The stage of the file which is recorded in the index\&.
  373. .RE
  374. .PP
  375. eolinfo:index, eolinfo:worktree
  376. .RS 4
  377. The <eolinfo> (see the description of the
  378. \fB\-\-eol\fR
  379. option) of the contents in the index or in the worktree for the path\&.
  380. .RE
  381. .PP
  382. eolattr
  383. .RS 4
  384. The <eolattr> (see the description of the
  385. \fB\-\-eol\fR
  386. option) that applies to the path\&.
  387. .RE
  388. .PP
  389. path
  390. .RS 4
  391. The pathname of the file which is recorded in the index\&.
  392. .RE
  393. .SH "EXCLUDE PATTERNS"
  394. .sp
  395. \fIgit ls\-files\fR can use a list of "exclude patterns" when traversing the directory tree and finding files to show when the flags \-\-others or \-\-ignored are specified\&. \fBgitignore\fR(5) specifies the format of exclude patterns\&.
  396. .sp
  397. These exclude patterns can be specified from the following places, in order:
  398. .sp
  399. .RS 4
  400. .ie n \{\
  401. \h'-04' 1.\h'+01'\c
  402. .\}
  403. .el \{\
  404. .sp -1
  405. .IP " 1." 4.2
  406. .\}
  407. The command\-line flag \-\-exclude=<pattern> specifies a single pattern\&. Patterns are ordered in the same order they appear in the command line\&.
  408. .RE
  409. .sp
  410. .RS 4
  411. .ie n \{\
  412. \h'-04' 2.\h'+01'\c
  413. .\}
  414. .el \{\
  415. .sp -1
  416. .IP " 2." 4.2
  417. .\}
  418. The command\-line flag \-\-exclude\-from=<file> specifies a file containing a list of patterns\&. Patterns are ordered in the same order they appear in the file\&.
  419. .RE
  420. .sp
  421. .RS 4
  422. .ie n \{\
  423. \h'-04' 3.\h'+01'\c
  424. .\}
  425. .el \{\
  426. .sp -1
  427. .IP " 3." 4.2
  428. .\}
  429. The command\-line flag \-\-exclude\-per\-directory=<name> specifies a name of the file in each directory
  430. \fIgit ls\-files\fR
  431. examines, normally \&.\fBgitignore\fR\&. Files in deeper directories take precedence\&. Patterns are ordered in the same order they appear in the files\&.
  432. .RE
  433. .sp
  434. A pattern specified on the command line with \-\-exclude or read from the file specified with \-\-exclude\-from is relative to the top of the directory tree\&. A pattern read from a file specified by \-\-exclude\-per\-directory is relative to the directory that the pattern file appears in\&.
  435. .sp
  436. Generally, you should be able to use \fB\-\-exclude\-standard\fR when you want the exclude rules applied the same way as what Porcelain commands do\&. To emulate what \fB\-\-exclude\-standard\fR specifies, you can give \fB\-\-exclude\-per\-directory=\&.gitignore\fR, and then specify:
  437. .sp
  438. .RS 4
  439. .ie n \{\
  440. \h'-04' 1.\h'+01'\c
  441. .\}
  442. .el \{\
  443. .sp -1
  444. .IP " 1." 4.2
  445. .\}
  446. The file specified by the
  447. \fBcore\&.excludesfile\fR
  448. configuration variable, if exists, or the
  449. \fB$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/ignore\fR
  450. file\&.
  451. .RE
  452. .sp
  453. .RS 4
  454. .ie n \{\
  455. \h'-04' 2.\h'+01'\c
  456. .\}
  457. .el \{\
  458. .sp -1
  459. .IP " 2." 4.2
  460. .\}
  461. The
  462. \fB$GIT_DIR/info/exclude\fR
  463. file\&.
  464. .RE
  465. .sp
  466. via the \fB\-\-exclude\-from=\fR option\&.
  467. .SH "SEE ALSO"
  468. .sp
  469. \fBgit-read-tree\fR(1), \fBgitignore\fR(5)
  470. .SH "GIT"
  471. .sp
  472. Part of the \fBgit\fR(1) suite