I have several .screen files inside /xxx/documentation
and its subdirectories that are already tracked by Git.
After modifying many of these screen files, I run git add documentation/\\*.screen
—as indicated by the first example in git-add
's documentation—to stage these files, but the command fails:
fatal: pathspec 'documentation/\*.screen' did not match any files
Is my command bad, or does git have a bug?
I've tried the accepted answer, but it didn't worked for me.. so here's mine just in case someone wants to get it's job done without spending time in dissecting various aspects that might cause the problem:
//the -u option to git-add adds to index just the files that were previously tracked and modified
It's a bug in the documentation. Quote the asterisk with
or
to get the behavior you want.
If instead you want to add files in the current directory only, use
UPDATE: I submitted a patch that corrects the issue, now fixed as of version 1.6.6.2.
try
git add *.java works for me to add recursively all the java files
You told the shell to look for
*.screen
(i.e. exactly this string - which doesn't exist - instead of what you want "all files that end with.screen
). Omit the\\
so the shell can do the file name expansion for you.This what I just used for a similar problem of git adding all the files in a directory:
For the original question the command would be:
Note that I'm dealing with the case where a fully specified file name contains spaces. Thats why my answer. Edit the portion before the first
|
in order to pick out different files to add.