Thanks guys. Sorry but one more question, like I mentioned we have hosted repositories so how do I make some configuration changes are server based so whether the client have those changes or not, it wouldn't matter. Also I have one client on linux and another one on windows (for my testing purpose) and I see that .git/config on both machines are little different. Is that normal? Thanks Again. On Friday, January 17, 2014 10:08 AM, Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@xxxxxx> wrote: On 01/17/2014 03:26 AM, Jeff King wrote: > On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 03:58:57PM -0800, SH wrote: > >> We have a repository which holds lots of shell and perl scripts. We add the >> files to repository (from windows client) with executable permissions (using >> cygwin) but when we pull that repository on another machine (windows or linux), >> files dont have executable permission. Can you please provide a solutions for >> this? > > Git does not preserve file permissions _except_ for the executable bit. > So this should be working. > > However, I suspect that `core.fileMode` is set to `false` in your > repository, which causes git to ignore the executable bit. When a > repository is initialized, we check whether the filesystem simply > creates everything with the executable bit. If so, we turn off > core.fileMode for the repository (since otherwise every file would have > it set). > > -Peff Cygwin has been a little bit special (and mingw still is). Until this commit: Author: Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> Date: Wed Jul 24 19:22:49 2013 -0700 Merge branch 'ml/cygwin-updates' The tip one does _not_ revert c869753e (Force core.filemode to false on Cygwin., 2006-12-30) on purpose, so that people can still retain the old behaviour if they wanted to. * ml/cygwin-updates: cygwin: stop forcing core.filemode=false Cygwin 1.7 supports mmap Cygwin 1.7 has thread-safe pread Cygwin 1.7 needs compat/regex the repositories created by cygwin had always core.filemode=false. You can easily check your configuration by running git config -l on the cygwin machine, as Peff suggested. The next step is to check how the files had been recored in git, using git ls-files -s | less on any machine. If I do this on git.git, we find lines like this, where 100755 means an executable file, 100644 means non-executable file. 100755 9c3f4131b8586408acd81d1e60912b51688575ed 0 Documentation/technical/api-index.sh 100644 dd894043ae8b04269b3aa2108f96cb935217181d 0 Documentation/technical/api-lockfile.txt The 3rd step is to check how file are shown in cygwin, run ls -l (Do they have the executable bit set ?) Side note: And I think the way the auto-probing of the file system works is like this: When a git repo is initialized, the .git/config file is created. After that, we try to toggle the executable bit, and if lstat reports it as toggled, we set core.filemode=true. (See builtin/init-db.c, search for core.filemode) I tested to create a repo on a network share exported by SAMBA. The Server was configured so that all new created files had the executable bit set by default. Git detected that the executable bit could be switched off, and configured core.filemode=true Nice. /Torsten -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html