I'm trying to add an existing iPhone project to a subversion account on unfuddle.com.
Everything seems smooth except for some .a files which are ignored. I know they are ignored because I don't see them in svn status unless I use the --no-ignore flag.
When I run
svn propget svn:ignore .
I get no output. To make sure I wasn't crazy I ran
svn propget --xml svn:ignore .
and get this
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<properties>
</properties>
Which means there are no entries in the ignore property?
How do I find where this ignore is coming from?
You can also have globally ignored patterns defined in your Subversion configuration file, so maybe
*.a
is ignored there. See the Config section of the Subversion book.You can explicitly add the file via
svn add <filename>
if it isn't getting picked up automatically.Subversion config files can have files ignored ("global-ignores") -- these are usually in
~/.subversion/config
and/etc/subversion/config
, but there are other locations as well; see http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.4/svn.advanced.confarea.html.What command were you using to add the files? If it was
svn add *
, could it be as simple as the file starting with a.
?New day. Clear head.
Thanks for the help, it certainly lead me in the right direction.
The answer is there is a default global-ignore list that is built into subversion itself, not the config files, which was where the *.a ignore was coming from.
The global ignores in my config file looked like this:
I figured this was fine, because I didn't want to ignore anything. I was wrong because then subversion enforces its scarcely documented default global-ignores. I changed it to this, note the exclusion of '*.a'
At this point *.a files are no longer ignores, and my .DS_Store file is still ignored, and all is right in my world.
As GraemeF suggested, propget does not retrieve global values for svn:ignore. As Ether suggested, you can add ignored files by naming them explicitly.
The best link I found was here: http://svn.haxx.se/users/archive-2009-02/0725.shtml
This post says to me that there is a non-empty default value for global-ignores that is used if global-ignores is not set in the config file.