Remove untracked files from the working tree
Step 1 is to show what will be deleted by using the
-n
option:git clean -n
Clean Step - beware: this will delete files:
git clean -f
- To remove directories, run
git clean -f -d
orgit clean -fd
- To remove ignored files, run
git clean -f -X
orgit clean -fX
- To remove ignored and non-ignored files, run
git clean -f -x
orgit clean -fx
Note the case difference on the
X
for the two latter commands.
If
clean.requireForce
is set to "true" (the default) in your configuration, one needs to specify -f
otherwise nothing will actually happen.
Again see the
git-clean
docs for more information.Options
-f
--force
If the Git configuration variable clean.requireForce is not set to false, git clean will refuse to run unless given -f, -n or -i.
-x
Don’t use the standard ignore rules read from .gitignore (per directory) and $GIT_DIR/info/exclude, but do still use the ignore rules given with -e options. This allows removing all untracked files, including build products. This can be used (possibly in conjunction with git reset) to create a pristine working directory to test a clean build.
-X
Remove only files ignored by Git. This may be useful to rebuild everything from scratch, but keep manually created files.
-n
--dry-run
Don’t actually remove anything, just show what would be done.
-d
Remove untracked directories in addition to untracked files. If an untracked directory is managed by a different Git repository, it is not removed by default. Use -f option twice if you really want to remove such a directory.
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