On Fri, Jan 06, 2017 at 01:56:36PM -0800, Steven Robertson wrote: > Hello, > > I was doing development on a linux box on AWS, when we found a code > bug that had me switching to running the code on a Mac instead. We > discovered that we had accidentally named two files the same when > looked at case-insensitively, which made git commands afterwards > display the wrong thing. It looked like this (ignoring some things > that aren't relevant): > > $ git status > > > modified: tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt > > > no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a") > > $ git checkout tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt > > $ git status > > > modified: tests/test_system/show_19_l.txt > > > no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a") > > $ git checkout tests/test_system/show_19_l.txt > > $ git status > > > modified: tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt > > > no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a") > > $ diff tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt tests/test_system/show_19_l.txt > > $ > > > Those two files are different in our repo, and as such git thinks that > we modified one of them when we try and pull it down from github > again. > > > Thanks for looking at this! > -- Steven I assume that you are on Mac OS ? This is what I would have done: - find the twin of your file: $ git ls-files | grep -i tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt - Let's assume it is the little brother: "tests/test_system/show_19_l.txt" $ git mv tests/test_system/show_19_l.txt tests/test_system/show_19_l2.txt - Check out the original: $ git checkout tests/test_system/show_19_L.txt - check: $ git status