I understand that Windows uses CRLF and that it's good practice to let Git change line endings to LF before committing and back to CRLF when checking out. For that reason, I have core.autocrlf
set to true. However, contrary to what other threads say (e.g., this), I am still getting this warning:
warning: LF will be replaced by CRLF in [FILE_NAME]. The file will have its original line endings in your working directory.
Firstly, I thought setting core.autocrlf
to true was supposed to stop these warnings. Secondly, isn't Git supposed to convert LF to CRLF when committing, not the other way around?
Interestingly, I just committed many files and got this warning for only two of them (a .csproj and a .cs).
P.S. I am using Git Bash on Windows.
It is, but not with core.autocrlf.
You should always set core.autocrlf to false, as it would try and convert eol (end of line) for all files (including non-text file)
If you have files that need conversion, use an
eol
directive in a.gitattributes
file.Make sure to use the latest Git for Windows though: there was a bug in Git 2.10.
That being said, if you still want to use
core.autocrlf
, see "Make Git “LF will be replaced by CRLF” warnings go away": you can remove your index and checkout again.