Guilherme schrieb am 04.12.2014 um 10:06:
> Hello,
> 
> I reported this issue on the git-user mailing list and they redirected me 
> here.
> 
> The problem I have observed is that with a ignored path `git add
> <single file>` behaves differently then `git add <list of files>`.
> 
> I my git/info/excludes file i have
> 
> /COM/config
> !COM/config/Project.gny
> 
> The file COM/config/Project.gny has already been added to the
> repository via `git add -f`.
> 
> When doing
> 
>     git add -- COM/config/Projec.gny
> 
> git will not complain but when doing
> 
>     git add -- COM/config/Project.gny otherfiles.c
> 
> it will report:
> 
>     The following paths are ignored by one of your .gitignore files:
>     COM/config
>     Use -f if you really want to add them.
>     fatal: no files added

This is because git add assumes you specified on of the files in error,
and thus refuses to add the other one, too.

I found that behaviour surprising. There's already a patch which, in the
2nd case, would make "git add" only warn you about the ignored file but
add the other one anyways. It will probably make its way into the next
release.

For the case of a single file (or rather: ignored files only) I'm
wondering whether we should issue a warning, too.

> This odd behaviour is also present in `git check-ignore`.
> 
> Before adding the file `git check-ignore` correctly reports the file
> as ignored. After having added it via `git add -f` it won't report it
> as ignored anymore.

This is different: Once a file is "added", it is not ignored any more -
you explicitely told git to track that file (rather than ignoring it).
So, the output of git check-ignore is correct.

> Even if not a bug this behaviour is inconsistent and might want to be
> addressed as it makes scripting a little bit harder.
> 
> Thank you.
> 

I guess you want "git check-ignore --no-index". That man page may be a
bit misleading - the description sounds as if only the patterns would
matter.

Michael

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