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   1gitattributes(5)
   2================
   3
   4NAME
   5----
   6gitattributes - defining attributes per path
   7
   8SYNOPSIS
   9--------
  10$GIT_DIR/info/attributes, .gitattributes
  11
  12
  13DESCRIPTION
  14-----------
  15
  16A `gitattributes` file is a simple text file that gives
  17`attributes` to pathnames.
  18
  19Each line in `gitattributes` file is of form:
  20
  21        pattern attr1 attr2 ...
  22
  23That is, a pattern followed by an attributes list,
  24separated by whitespaces.  When the pattern matches the
  25path in question, the attributes listed on the line are given to
  26the path.
  27
  28Each attribute can be in one of these states for a given path:
  29
  30Set::
  31
  32        The path has the attribute with special value "true";
  33        this is specified by listing only the name of the
  34        attribute in the attribute list.
  35
  36Unset::
  37
  38        The path has the attribute with special value "false";
  39        this is specified by listing the name of the attribute
  40        prefixed with a dash `-` in the attribute list.
  41
  42Set to a value::
  43
  44        The path has the attribute with specified string value;
  45        this is specified by listing the name of the attribute
  46        followed by an equal sign `=` and its value in the
  47        attribute list.
  48
  49Unspecified::
  50
  51        No pattern matches the path, and nothing says if
  52        the path has or does not have the attribute, the
  53        attribute for the path is said to be Unspecified.
  54
  55When more than one pattern matches the path, a later line
  56overrides an earlier line.  This overriding is done per
  57attribute.  The rules how the pattern matches paths are the
  58same as in `.gitignore` files; see linkgit:gitignore[5].
  59Unlike `.gitignore`, negative patterns are forbidden.
  60
  61When deciding what attributes are assigned to a path, Git
  62consults `$GIT_DIR/info/attributes` file (which has the highest
  63precedence), `.gitattributes` file in the same directory as the
  64path in question, and its parent directories up to the toplevel of the
  65work tree (the further the directory that contains `.gitattributes`
  66is from the path in question, the lower its precedence). Finally
  67global and system-wide files are considered (they have the lowest
  68precedence).
  69
  70When the `.gitattributes` file is missing from the work tree, the
  71path in the index is used as a fall-back.  During checkout process,
  72`.gitattributes` in the index is used and then the file in the
  73working tree is used as a fall-back.
  74
  75If you wish to affect only a single repository (i.e., to assign
  76attributes to files that are particular to
  77one user's workflow for that repository), then
  78attributes should be placed in the `$GIT_DIR/info/attributes` file.
  79Attributes which should be version-controlled and distributed to other
  80repositories (i.e., attributes of interest to all users) should go into
  81`.gitattributes` files. Attributes that should affect all repositories
  82for a single user should be placed in a file specified by the
  83`core.attributesFile` configuration option (see linkgit:git-config[1]).
  84Its default value is $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/attributes. If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
  85is either not set or empty, $HOME/.config/git/attributes is used instead.
  86Attributes for all users on a system should be placed in the
  87`$(prefix)/etc/gitattributes` file.
  88
  89Sometimes you would need to override an setting of an attribute
  90for a path to `Unspecified` state.  This can be done by listing
  91the name of the attribute prefixed with an exclamation point `!`.
  92
  93
  94EFFECTS
  95-------
  96
  97Certain operations by Git can be influenced by assigning
  98particular attributes to a path.  Currently, the following
  99operations are attributes-aware.
 100
 101Checking-out and checking-in
 102~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 103
 104These attributes affect how the contents stored in the
 105repository are copied to the working tree files when commands
 106such as 'git checkout' and 'git merge' run.  They also affect how
 107Git stores the contents you prepare in the working tree in the
 108repository upon 'git add' and 'git commit'.
 109
 110`text`
 111^^^^^^
 112
 113This attribute enables and controls end-of-line normalization.  When a
 114text file is normalized, its line endings are converted to LF in the
 115repository.  To control what line ending style is used in the working
 116directory, use the `eol` attribute for a single file and the
 117`core.eol` configuration variable for all text files.
 118Note that `core.autocrlf` overrides `core.eol`
 119
 120Set::
 121
 122        Setting the `text` attribute on a path enables end-of-line
 123        normalization and marks the path as a text file.  End-of-line
 124        conversion takes place without guessing the content type.
 125
 126Unset::
 127
 128        Unsetting the `text` attribute on a path tells Git not to
 129        attempt any end-of-line conversion upon checkin or checkout.
 130
 131Set to string value "auto"::
 132
 133        When `text` is set to "auto", the path is marked for automatic
 134        end-of-line conversion.  If Git decides that the content is
 135        text, its line endings are converted to LF on checkin.
 136        When the file has been committed with CRLF, no conversion is done.
 137
 138Unspecified::
 139
 140        If the `text` attribute is unspecified, Git uses the
 141        `core.autocrlf` configuration variable to determine if the
 142        file should be converted.
 143
 144Any other value causes Git to act as if `text` has been left
 145unspecified.
 146
 147`eol`
 148^^^^^
 149
 150This attribute sets a specific line-ending style to be used in the
 151working directory.  It enables end-of-line conversion without any
 152content checks, effectively setting the `text` attribute.
 153
 154Set to string value "crlf"::
 155
 156        This setting forces Git to normalize line endings for this
 157        file on checkin and convert them to CRLF when the file is
 158        checked out.
 159
 160Set to string value "lf"::
 161
 162        This setting forces Git to normalize line endings to LF on
 163        checkin and prevents conversion to CRLF when the file is
 164        checked out.
 165
 166Backwards compatibility with `crlf` attribute
 167^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 168
 169For backwards compatibility, the `crlf` attribute is interpreted as
 170follows:
 171
 172------------------------
 173crlf            text
 174-crlf           -text
 175crlf=input      eol=lf
 176------------------------
 177
 178End-of-line conversion
 179^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 180
 181While Git normally leaves file contents alone, it can be configured to
 182normalize line endings to LF in the repository and, optionally, to
 183convert them to CRLF when files are checked out.
 184
 185If you simply want to have CRLF line endings in your working directory
 186regardless of the repository you are working with, you can set the
 187config variable "core.autocrlf" without using any attributes.
 188
 189------------------------
 190[core]
 191        autocrlf = true
 192------------------------
 193
 194This does not force normalization of text files, but does ensure
 195that text files that you introduce to the repository have their line
 196endings normalized to LF when they are added, and that files that are
 197already normalized in the repository stay normalized.
 198
 199If you want to ensure that text files that any contributor introduces to
 200the repository have their line endings normalized, you can set the
 201`text` attribute to "auto" for _all_ files.
 202
 203------------------------
 204*       text=auto
 205------------------------
 206
 207The attributes allow a fine-grained control, how the line endings
 208are converted.
 209Here is an example that will make Git normalize .txt, .vcproj and .sh
 210files, ensure that .vcproj files have CRLF and .sh files have LF in
 211the working directory, and prevent .jpg files from being normalized
 212regardless of their content.
 213
 214------------------------
 215*               text=auto
 216*.txt           text
 217*.vcproj        text eol=crlf
 218*.sh            text eol=lf
 219*.jpg           -text
 220------------------------
 221
 222NOTE: When `text=auto` conversion is enabled in a cross-platform
 223project using push and pull to a central repository the text files
 224containing CRLFs should be normalized.
 225
 226From a clean working directory:
 227
 228-------------------------------------------------
 229$ echo "* text=auto" >.gitattributes
 230$ rm .git/index     # Remove the index to force Git to
 231$ git reset         # re-scan the working directory
 232$ git status        # Show files that will be normalized
 233$ git add -u
 234$ git add .gitattributes
 235$ git commit -m "Introduce end-of-line normalization"
 236-------------------------------------------------
 237
 238If any files that should not be normalized show up in 'git status',
 239unset their `text` attribute before running 'git add -u'.
 240
 241------------------------
 242manual.pdf      -text
 243------------------------
 244
 245Conversely, text files that Git does not detect can have normalization
 246enabled manually.
 247
 248------------------------
 249weirdchars.txt  text
 250------------------------
 251
 252If `core.safecrlf` is set to "true" or "warn", Git verifies if
 253the conversion is reversible for the current setting of
 254`core.autocrlf`.  For "true", Git rejects irreversible
 255conversions; for "warn", Git only prints a warning but accepts
 256an irreversible conversion.  The safety triggers to prevent such
 257a conversion done to the files in the work tree, but there are a
 258few exceptions.  Even though...
 259
 260- 'git add' itself does not touch the files in the work tree, the
 261  next checkout would, so the safety triggers;
 262
 263- 'git apply' to update a text file with a patch does touch the files
 264  in the work tree, but the operation is about text files and CRLF
 265  conversion is about fixing the line ending inconsistencies, so the
 266  safety does not trigger;
 267
 268- 'git diff' itself does not touch the files in the work tree, it is
 269  often run to inspect the changes you intend to next 'git add'.  To
 270  catch potential problems early, safety triggers.
 271
 272
 273`ident`
 274^^^^^^^
 275
 276When the attribute `ident` is set for a path, Git replaces
 277`$Id$` in the blob object with `$Id:`, followed by the
 27840-character hexadecimal blob object name, followed by a dollar
 279sign `$` upon checkout.  Any byte sequence that begins with
 280`$Id:` and ends with `$` in the worktree file is replaced
 281with `$Id$` upon check-in.
 282
 283
 284`filter`
 285^^^^^^^^
 286
 287A `filter` attribute can be set to a string value that names a
 288filter driver specified in the configuration.
 289
 290A filter driver consists of a `clean` command and a `smudge`
 291command, either of which can be left unspecified.  Upon
 292checkout, when the `smudge` command is specified, the command is
 293fed the blob object from its standard input, and its standard
 294output is used to update the worktree file.  Similarly, the
 295`clean` command is used to convert the contents of worktree file
 296upon checkin.
 297
 298One use of the content filtering is to massage the content into a shape
 299that is more convenient for the platform, filesystem, and the user to use.
 300For this mode of operation, the key phrase here is "more convenient" and
 301not "turning something unusable into usable".  In other words, the intent
 302is that if someone unsets the filter driver definition, or does not have
 303the appropriate filter program, the project should still be usable.
 304
 305Another use of the content filtering is to store the content that cannot
 306be directly used in the repository (e.g. a UUID that refers to the true
 307content stored outside Git, or an encrypted content) and turn it into a
 308usable form upon checkout (e.g. download the external content, or decrypt
 309the encrypted content).
 310
 311These two filters behave differently, and by default, a filter is taken as
 312the former, massaging the contents into more convenient shape.  A missing
 313filter driver definition in the config, or a filter driver that exits with
 314a non-zero status, is not an error but makes the filter a no-op passthru.
 315
 316You can declare that a filter turns a content that by itself is unusable
 317into a usable content by setting the filter.<driver>.required configuration
 318variable to `true`.
 319
 320For example, in .gitattributes, you would assign the `filter`
 321attribute for paths.
 322
 323------------------------
 324*.c     filter=indent
 325------------------------
 326
 327Then you would define a "filter.indent.clean" and "filter.indent.smudge"
 328configuration in your .git/config to specify a pair of commands to
 329modify the contents of C programs when the source files are checked
 330in ("clean" is run) and checked out (no change is made because the
 331command is "cat").
 332
 333------------------------
 334[filter "indent"]
 335        clean = indent
 336        smudge = cat
 337------------------------
 338
 339For best results, `clean` should not alter its output further if it is
 340run twice ("clean->clean" should be equivalent to "clean"), and
 341multiple `smudge` commands should not alter `clean`'s output
 342("smudge->smudge->clean" should be equivalent to "clean").  See the
 343section on merging below.
 344
 345The "indent" filter is well-behaved in this regard: it will not modify
 346input that is already correctly indented.  In this case, the lack of a
 347smudge filter means that the clean filter _must_ accept its own output
 348without modifying it.
 349
 350If a filter _must_ succeed in order to make the stored contents usable,
 351you can declare that the filter is `required`, in the configuration:
 352
 353------------------------
 354[filter "crypt"]
 355        clean = openssl enc ...
 356        smudge = openssl enc -d ...
 357        required
 358------------------------
 359
 360Sequence "%f" on the filter command line is replaced with the name of
 361the file the filter is working on.  A filter might use this in keyword
 362substitution.  For example:
 363
 364------------------------
 365[filter "p4"]
 366        clean = git-p4-filter --clean %f
 367        smudge = git-p4-filter --smudge %f
 368------------------------
 369
 370Note that "%f" is the name of the path that is being worked on. Depending
 371on the version that is being filtered, the corresponding file on disk may
 372not exist, or may have different contents. So, smudge and clean commands
 373should not try to access the file on disk, but only act as filters on the
 374content provided to them on standard input.
 375
 376Interaction between checkin/checkout attributes
 377^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 378
 379In the check-in codepath, the worktree file is first converted
 380with `filter` driver (if specified and corresponding driver
 381defined), then the result is processed with `ident` (if
 382specified), and then finally with `text` (again, if specified
 383and applicable).
 384
 385In the check-out codepath, the blob content is first converted
 386with `text`, and then `ident` and fed to `filter`.
 387
 388
 389Merging branches with differing checkin/checkout attributes
 390^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 391
 392If you have added attributes to a file that cause the canonical
 393repository format for that file to change, such as adding a
 394clean/smudge filter or text/eol/ident attributes, merging anything
 395where the attribute is not in place would normally cause merge
 396conflicts.
 397
 398To prevent these unnecessary merge conflicts, Git can be told to run a
 399virtual check-out and check-in of all three stages of a file when
 400resolving a three-way merge by setting the `merge.renormalize`
 401configuration variable.  This prevents changes caused by check-in
 402conversion from causing spurious merge conflicts when a converted file
 403is merged with an unconverted file.
 404
 405As long as a "smudge->clean" results in the same output as a "clean"
 406even on files that are already smudged, this strategy will
 407automatically resolve all filter-related conflicts.  Filters that do
 408not act in this way may cause additional merge conflicts that must be
 409resolved manually.
 410
 411
 412Generating diff text
 413~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 414
 415`diff`
 416^^^^^^
 417
 418The attribute `diff` affects how Git generates diffs for particular
 419files. It can tell Git whether to generate a textual patch for the path
 420or to treat the path as a binary file.  It can also affect what line is
 421shown on the hunk header `@@ -k,l +n,m @@` line, tell Git to use an
 422external command to generate the diff, or ask Git to convert binary
 423files to a text format before generating the diff.
 424
 425Set::
 426
 427        A path to which the `diff` attribute is set is treated
 428        as text, even when they contain byte values that
 429        normally never appear in text files, such as NUL.
 430
 431Unset::
 432
 433        A path to which the `diff` attribute is unset will
 434        generate `Binary files differ` (or a binary patch, if
 435        binary patches are enabled).
 436
 437Unspecified::
 438
 439        A path to which the `diff` attribute is unspecified
 440        first gets its contents inspected, and if it looks like
 441        text and is smaller than core.bigFileThreshold, it is treated
 442        as text. Otherwise it would generate `Binary files differ`.
 443
 444String::
 445
 446        Diff is shown using the specified diff driver.  Each driver may
 447        specify one or more options, as described in the following
 448        section. The options for the diff driver "foo" are defined
 449        by the configuration variables in the "diff.foo" section of the
 450        Git config file.
 451
 452
 453Defining an external diff driver
 454^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 455
 456The definition of a diff driver is done in `gitconfig`, not
 457`gitattributes` file, so strictly speaking this manual page is a
 458wrong place to talk about it.  However...
 459
 460To define an external diff driver `jcdiff`, add a section to your
 461`$GIT_DIR/config` file (or `$HOME/.gitconfig` file) like this:
 462
 463----------------------------------------------------------------
 464[diff "jcdiff"]
 465        command = j-c-diff
 466----------------------------------------------------------------
 467
 468When Git needs to show you a diff for the path with `diff`
 469attribute set to `jcdiff`, it calls the command you specified
 470with the above configuration, i.e. `j-c-diff`, with 7
 471parameters, just like `GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF` program is called.
 472See linkgit:git[1] for details.
 473
 474
 475Defining a custom hunk-header
 476^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 477
 478Each group of changes (called a "hunk") in the textual diff output
 479is prefixed with a line of the form:
 480
 481        @@ -k,l +n,m @@ TEXT
 482
 483This is called a 'hunk header'.  The "TEXT" portion is by default a line
 484that begins with an alphabet, an underscore or a dollar sign; this
 485matches what GNU 'diff -p' output uses.  This default selection however
 486is not suited for some contents, and you can use a customized pattern
 487to make a selection.
 488
 489First, in .gitattributes, you would assign the `diff` attribute
 490for paths.
 491
 492------------------------
 493*.tex   diff=tex
 494------------------------
 495
 496Then, you would define a "diff.tex.xfuncname" configuration to
 497specify a regular expression that matches a line that you would
 498want to appear as the hunk header "TEXT". Add a section to your
 499`$GIT_DIR/config` file (or `$HOME/.gitconfig` file) like this:
 500
 501------------------------
 502[diff "tex"]
 503        xfuncname = "^(\\\\(sub)*section\\{.*)$"
 504------------------------
 505
 506Note.  A single level of backslashes are eaten by the
 507configuration file parser, so you would need to double the
 508backslashes; the pattern above picks a line that begins with a
 509backslash, and zero or more occurrences of `sub` followed by
 510`section` followed by open brace, to the end of line.
 511
 512There are a few built-in patterns to make this easier, and `tex`
 513is one of them, so you do not have to write the above in your
 514configuration file (you still need to enable this with the
 515attribute mechanism, via `.gitattributes`).  The following built in
 516patterns are available:
 517
 518- `ada` suitable for source code in the Ada language.
 519
 520- `bibtex` suitable for files with BibTeX coded references.
 521
 522- `cpp` suitable for source code in the C and C++ languages.
 523
 524- `csharp` suitable for source code in the C# language.
 525
 526- `css` suitable for cascading style sheets.
 527
 528- `fortran` suitable for source code in the Fortran language.
 529
 530- `fountain` suitable for Fountain documents.
 531
 532- `html` suitable for HTML/XHTML documents.
 533
 534- `java` suitable for source code in the Java language.
 535
 536- `matlab` suitable for source code in the MATLAB language.
 537
 538- `objc` suitable for source code in the Objective-C language.
 539
 540- `pascal` suitable for source code in the Pascal/Delphi language.
 541
 542- `perl` suitable for source code in the Perl language.
 543
 544- `php` suitable for source code in the PHP language.
 545
 546- `python` suitable for source code in the Python language.
 547
 548- `ruby` suitable for source code in the Ruby language.
 549
 550- `tex` suitable for source code for LaTeX documents.
 551
 552
 553Customizing word diff
 554^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 555
 556You can customize the rules that `git diff --word-diff` uses to
 557split words in a line, by specifying an appropriate regular expression
 558in the "diff.*.wordRegex" configuration variable.  For example, in TeX
 559a backslash followed by a sequence of letters forms a command, but
 560several such commands can be run together without intervening
 561whitespace.  To separate them, use a regular expression in your
 562`$GIT_DIR/config` file (or `$HOME/.gitconfig` file) like this:
 563
 564------------------------
 565[diff "tex"]
 566        wordRegex = "\\\\[a-zA-Z]+|[{}]|\\\\.|[^\\{}[:space:]]+"
 567------------------------
 568
 569A built-in pattern is provided for all languages listed in the
 570previous section.
 571
 572
 573Performing text diffs of binary files
 574^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 575
 576Sometimes it is desirable to see the diff of a text-converted
 577version of some binary files. For example, a word processor
 578document can be converted to an ASCII text representation, and
 579the diff of the text shown. Even though this conversion loses
 580some information, the resulting diff is useful for human
 581viewing (but cannot be applied directly).
 582
 583The `textconv` config option is used to define a program for
 584performing such a conversion. The program should take a single
 585argument, the name of a file to convert, and produce the
 586resulting text on stdout.
 587
 588For example, to show the diff of the exif information of a
 589file instead of the binary information (assuming you have the
 590exif tool installed), add the following section to your
 591`$GIT_DIR/config` file (or `$HOME/.gitconfig` file):
 592
 593------------------------
 594[diff "jpg"]
 595        textconv = exif
 596------------------------
 597
 598NOTE: The text conversion is generally a one-way conversion;
 599in this example, we lose the actual image contents and focus
 600just on the text data. This means that diffs generated by
 601textconv are _not_ suitable for applying. For this reason,
 602only `git diff` and the `git log` family of commands (i.e.,
 603log, whatchanged, show) will perform text conversion. `git
 604format-patch` will never generate this output. If you want to
 605send somebody a text-converted diff of a binary file (e.g.,
 606because it quickly conveys the changes you have made), you
 607should generate it separately and send it as a comment _in
 608addition to_ the usual binary diff that you might send.
 609
 610Because text conversion can be slow, especially when doing a
 611large number of them with `git log -p`, Git provides a mechanism
 612to cache the output and use it in future diffs.  To enable
 613caching, set the "cachetextconv" variable in your diff driver's
 614config. For example:
 615
 616------------------------
 617[diff "jpg"]
 618        textconv = exif
 619        cachetextconv = true
 620------------------------
 621
 622This will cache the result of running "exif" on each blob
 623indefinitely. If you change the textconv config variable for a
 624diff driver, Git will automatically invalidate the cache entries
 625and re-run the textconv filter. If you want to invalidate the
 626cache manually (e.g., because your version of "exif" was updated
 627and now produces better output), you can remove the cache
 628manually with `git update-ref -d refs/notes/textconv/jpg` (where
 629"jpg" is the name of the diff driver, as in the example above).
 630
 631Choosing textconv versus external diff
 632^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 633
 634If you want to show differences between binary or specially-formatted
 635blobs in your repository, you can choose to use either an external diff
 636command, or to use textconv to convert them to a diff-able text format.
 637Which method you choose depends on your exact situation.
 638
 639The advantage of using an external diff command is flexibility. You are
 640not bound to find line-oriented changes, nor is it necessary for the
 641output to resemble unified diff. You are free to locate and report
 642changes in the most appropriate way for your data format.
 643
 644A textconv, by comparison, is much more limiting. You provide a
 645transformation of the data into a line-oriented text format, and Git
 646uses its regular diff tools to generate the output. There are several
 647advantages to choosing this method:
 648
 6491. Ease of use. It is often much simpler to write a binary to text
 650   transformation than it is to perform your own diff. In many cases,
 651   existing programs can be used as textconv filters (e.g., exif,
 652   odt2txt).
 653
 6542. Git diff features. By performing only the transformation step
 655   yourself, you can still utilize many of Git's diff features,
 656   including colorization, word-diff, and combined diffs for merges.
 657
 6583. Caching. Textconv caching can speed up repeated diffs, such as those
 659   you might trigger by running `git log -p`.
 660
 661
 662Marking files as binary
 663^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 664
 665Git usually guesses correctly whether a blob contains text or binary
 666data by examining the beginning of the contents. However, sometimes you
 667may want to override its decision, either because a blob contains binary
 668data later in the file, or because the content, while technically
 669composed of text characters, is opaque to a human reader. For example,
 670many postscript files contain only ASCII characters, but produce noisy
 671and meaningless diffs.
 672
 673The simplest way to mark a file as binary is to unset the diff
 674attribute in the `.gitattributes` file:
 675
 676------------------------
 677*.ps -diff
 678------------------------
 679
 680This will cause Git to generate `Binary files differ` (or a binary
 681patch, if binary patches are enabled) instead of a regular diff.
 682
 683However, one may also want to specify other diff driver attributes. For
 684example, you might want to use `textconv` to convert postscript files to
 685an ASCII representation for human viewing, but otherwise treat them as
 686binary files. You cannot specify both `-diff` and `diff=ps` attributes.
 687The solution is to use the `diff.*.binary` config option:
 688
 689------------------------
 690[diff "ps"]
 691  textconv = ps2ascii
 692  binary = true
 693------------------------
 694
 695Performing a three-way merge
 696~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 697
 698`merge`
 699^^^^^^^
 700
 701The attribute `merge` affects how three versions of a file are
 702merged when a file-level merge is necessary during `git merge`,
 703and other commands such as `git revert` and `git cherry-pick`.
 704
 705Set::
 706
 707        Built-in 3-way merge driver is used to merge the
 708        contents in a way similar to 'merge' command of `RCS`
 709        suite.  This is suitable for ordinary text files.
 710
 711Unset::
 712
 713        Take the version from the current branch as the
 714        tentative merge result, and declare that the merge has
 715        conflicts.  This is suitable for binary files that do
 716        not have a well-defined merge semantics.
 717
 718Unspecified::
 719
 720        By default, this uses the same built-in 3-way merge
 721        driver as is the case when the `merge` attribute is set.
 722        However, the `merge.default` configuration variable can name
 723        different merge driver to be used with paths for which the
 724        `merge` attribute is unspecified.
 725
 726String::
 727
 728        3-way merge is performed using the specified custom
 729        merge driver.  The built-in 3-way merge driver can be
 730        explicitly specified by asking for "text" driver; the
 731        built-in "take the current branch" driver can be
 732        requested with "binary".
 733
 734
 735Built-in merge drivers
 736^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 737
 738There are a few built-in low-level merge drivers defined that
 739can be asked for via the `merge` attribute.
 740
 741text::
 742
 743        Usual 3-way file level merge for text files.  Conflicted
 744        regions are marked with conflict markers `<<<<<<<`,
 745        `=======` and `>>>>>>>`.  The version from your branch
 746        appears before the `=======` marker, and the version
 747        from the merged branch appears after the `=======`
 748        marker.
 749
 750binary::
 751
 752        Keep the version from your branch in the work tree, but
 753        leave the path in the conflicted state for the user to
 754        sort out.
 755
 756union::
 757
 758        Run 3-way file level merge for text files, but take
 759        lines from both versions, instead of leaving conflict
 760        markers.  This tends to leave the added lines in the
 761        resulting file in random order and the user should
 762        verify the result. Do not use this if you do not
 763        understand the implications.
 764
 765
 766Defining a custom merge driver
 767^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 768
 769The definition of a merge driver is done in the `.git/config`
 770file, not in the `gitattributes` file, so strictly speaking this
 771manual page is a wrong place to talk about it.  However...
 772
 773To define a custom merge driver `filfre`, add a section to your
 774`$GIT_DIR/config` file (or `$HOME/.gitconfig` file) like this:
 775
 776----------------------------------------------------------------
 777[merge "filfre"]
 778        name = feel-free merge driver
 779        driver = filfre %O %A %B %L %P
 780        recursive = binary
 781----------------------------------------------------------------
 782
 783The `merge.*.name` variable gives the driver a human-readable
 784name.
 785
 786The `merge.*.driver` variable's value is used to construct a
 787command to run to merge ancestor's version (`%O`), current
 788version (`%A`) and the other branches' version (`%B`).  These
 789three tokens are replaced with the names of temporary files that
 790hold the contents of these versions when the command line is
 791built. Additionally, %L will be replaced with the conflict marker
 792size (see below).
 793
 794The merge driver is expected to leave the result of the merge in
 795the file named with `%A` by overwriting it, and exit with zero
 796status if it managed to merge them cleanly, or non-zero if there
 797were conflicts.
 798
 799The `merge.*.recursive` variable specifies what other merge
 800driver to use when the merge driver is called for an internal
 801merge between common ancestors, when there are more than one.
 802When left unspecified, the driver itself is used for both
 803internal merge and the final merge.
 804
 805The merge driver can learn the pathname in which the merged result
 806will be stored via placeholder `%P`.
 807
 808
 809`conflict-marker-size`
 810^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 811
 812This attribute controls the length of conflict markers left in
 813the work tree file during a conflicted merge.  Only setting to
 814the value to a positive integer has any meaningful effect.
 815
 816For example, this line in `.gitattributes` can be used to tell the merge
 817machinery to leave much longer (instead of the usual 7-character-long)
 818conflict markers when merging the file `Documentation/git-merge.txt`
 819results in a conflict.
 820
 821------------------------
 822Documentation/git-merge.txt     conflict-marker-size=32
 823------------------------
 824
 825
 826Checking whitespace errors
 827~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 828
 829`whitespace`
 830^^^^^^^^^^^^
 831
 832The `core.whitespace` configuration variable allows you to define what
 833'diff' and 'apply' should consider whitespace errors for all paths in
 834the project (See linkgit:git-config[1]).  This attribute gives you finer
 835control per path.
 836
 837Set::
 838
 839        Notice all types of potential whitespace errors known to Git.
 840        The tab width is taken from the value of the `core.whitespace`
 841        configuration variable.
 842
 843Unset::
 844
 845        Do not notice anything as error.
 846
 847Unspecified::
 848
 849        Use the value of the `core.whitespace` configuration variable to
 850        decide what to notice as error.
 851
 852String::
 853
 854        Specify a comma separate list of common whitespace problems to
 855        notice in the same format as the `core.whitespace` configuration
 856        variable.
 857
 858
 859Creating an archive
 860~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 861
 862`export-ignore`
 863^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 864
 865Files and directories with the attribute `export-ignore` won't be added to
 866archive files.
 867
 868`export-subst`
 869^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 870
 871If the attribute `export-subst` is set for a file then Git will expand
 872several placeholders when adding this file to an archive.  The
 873expansion depends on the availability of a commit ID, i.e., if
 874linkgit:git-archive[1] has been given a tree instead of a commit or a
 875tag then no replacement will be done.  The placeholders are the same
 876as those for the option `--pretty=format:` of linkgit:git-log[1],
 877except that they need to be wrapped like this: `$Format:PLACEHOLDERS$`
 878in the file.  E.g. the string `$Format:%H$` will be replaced by the
 879commit hash.
 880
 881
 882Packing objects
 883~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 884
 885`delta`
 886^^^^^^^
 887
 888Delta compression will not be attempted for blobs for paths with the
 889attribute `delta` set to false.
 890
 891
 892Viewing files in GUI tools
 893~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 894
 895`encoding`
 896^^^^^^^^^^
 897
 898The value of this attribute specifies the character encoding that should
 899be used by GUI tools (e.g. linkgit:gitk[1] and linkgit:git-gui[1]) to
 900display the contents of the relevant file. Note that due to performance
 901considerations linkgit:gitk[1] does not use this attribute unless you
 902manually enable per-file encodings in its options.
 903
 904If this attribute is not set or has an invalid value, the value of the
 905`gui.encoding` configuration variable is used instead
 906(See linkgit:git-config[1]).
 907
 908
 909USING MACRO ATTRIBUTES
 910----------------------
 911
 912You do not want any end-of-line conversions applied to, nor textual diffs
 913produced for, any binary file you track.  You would need to specify e.g.
 914
 915------------
 916*.jpg -text -diff
 917------------
 918
 919but that may become cumbersome, when you have many attributes.  Using
 920macro attributes, you can define an attribute that, when set, also
 921sets or unsets a number of other attributes at the same time.  The
 922system knows a built-in macro attribute, `binary`:
 923
 924------------
 925*.jpg binary
 926------------
 927
 928Setting the "binary" attribute also unsets the "text" and "diff"
 929attributes as above.  Note that macro attributes can only be "Set",
 930though setting one might have the effect of setting or unsetting other
 931attributes or even returning other attributes to the "Unspecified"
 932state.
 933
 934
 935DEFINING MACRO ATTRIBUTES
 936-------------------------
 937
 938Custom macro attributes can be defined only in top-level gitattributes
 939files (`$GIT_DIR/info/attributes`, the `.gitattributes` file at the
 940top level of the working tree, or the global or system-wide
 941gitattributes files), not in `.gitattributes` files in working tree
 942subdirectories.  The built-in macro attribute "binary" is equivalent
 943to:
 944
 945------------
 946[attr]binary -diff -merge -text
 947------------
 948
 949
 950EXAMPLE
 951-------
 952
 953If you have these three `gitattributes` file:
 954
 955----------------------------------------------------------------
 956(in $GIT_DIR/info/attributes)
 957
 958a*      foo !bar -baz
 959
 960(in .gitattributes)
 961abc     foo bar baz
 962
 963(in t/.gitattributes)
 964ab*     merge=filfre
 965abc     -foo -bar
 966*.c     frotz
 967----------------------------------------------------------------
 968
 969the attributes given to path `t/abc` are computed as follows:
 970
 9711. By examining `t/.gitattributes` (which is in the same
 972   directory as the path in question), Git finds that the first
 973   line matches.  `merge` attribute is set.  It also finds that
 974   the second line matches, and attributes `foo` and `bar`
 975   are unset.
 976
 9772. Then it examines `.gitattributes` (which is in the parent
 978   directory), and finds that the first line matches, but
 979   `t/.gitattributes` file already decided how `merge`, `foo`
 980   and `bar` attributes should be given to this path, so it
 981   leaves `foo` and `bar` unset.  Attribute `baz` is set.
 982
 9833. Finally it examines `$GIT_DIR/info/attributes`.  This file
 984   is used to override the in-tree settings.  The first line is
 985   a match, and `foo` is set, `bar` is reverted to unspecified
 986   state, and `baz` is unset.
 987
 988As the result, the attributes assignment to `t/abc` becomes:
 989
 990----------------------------------------------------------------
 991foo     set to true
 992bar     unspecified
 993baz     set to false
 994merge   set to string value "filfre"
 995frotz   unspecified
 996----------------------------------------------------------------
 997
 998
 999SEE ALSO
1000--------
1001linkgit:git-check-attr[1].
1002
1003GIT
1004---
1005Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite