On May 18, 2018 7:31 AM, Anmol Sethi <me@xxxxxxxx> > That works but most binaries do not have a file extension. Its just not > standard on linux. > > > On May 17, 2018, at 8:37 AM, Randall S. Becker <rsbecker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > > > On May 16, 2018 11:18 PM, Jacob Keller > >> On Wed, May 16, 2018 at 5:45 PM, Anmol Sethi <me@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> I think it’d be great to have an option to have git ignore binary > >>> files. My > >> repositories are always source only, committing a binary is always a > mistake. > >> At the moment, I have to configure the .gitignore to ignore every > >> binary file and that gets tedious. Having git ignore all binary files would be > great. > >>> > >>> This could be achieved via an option in .gitconfig or maybe a > >>> special line in > >> .gitignore. > >>> > >>> I just want to never accidentally commit a binary again. > >> > >> I believe you can do a couple things. There should be a hook which > >> you can modify to validate that there are no binary files on > >> pre-commit[1], or pre- push[2] to verify that you never push commits > with binaries in them. > >> > >> You could also implement the update hook on the server if you control > >> it, to allow it to block pushes which contain binary files. > > > > What about configuring ${HOME}/.config/git/ignore instead (described at > https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore). Inside, put: > > > > *.o > > *.exe > > *.bin > > *.dat > > Etc.... I have a similar problem on my platform, with a different solution. My builds involve GCC binaries, NonStop L-series binaries (x86), and a NonStop J-series binaries (itanium). To keep me sane, I have all build targets going to separate directories, like Build/GCC, Build/Lbin, Build/Jbin away from the sources. This allows me to ignore Build/ regardless of extension and also to build different targets without link collisions. This is similar to how Java works (a.k.a. bin/). Much more workable, IMHO, than trying to manage individual binaries name by name or even by extension. I also have a mix of jpg and UTF-16 HTML that would end up in false-positives on a pure binary match and I do want to manage those. What helps me is that I do most of my work in ECLIPSE, so derived resources (objects, generated sources) get auto-ignored by EGit, if you can make your compiler arrange that - but that's an ECLIPSE thing not a file system thing. Cheers, Randall -- Brief whoami: NonStop developer since approximately 211288444200000000 UNIX developer since approximately 421664400 -- In my real life, I talk too much.