My source tree contains several directories which are using Git source control, and I need to tarball the whole tree excluding any references to the Git metadata or custom log files.
I tho开发者_如何转开发ught I'd have a go using a combination of find/egrep/xargs/tar, but somehow the tar file contains the .git directories and the *.log files.
This is what I have:
find -type f . | egrep -v '\.git|\.log' | xargs tar rvf ~/app.tar
Can someone explain my misunderstanding here? Why is tar processing the files that find and egrep are filtering?
I'm open to other techniques as well.
You will get a nasty surprise when the number of files increase to more than one xargs
command: Then you will first make a tar file of the first files and then overwrite the same tar file with the rest of the files.
GNU tar
has the --exclude
option which will solve this issue:
tar cvf ~/app.tar --exclude .git --exclude "*.log" .
You can try directly with the tar option --exclude-vcs:
--exclude-vcs:
Exclude version control system directories
For example:
tar cvfj nameoffile.tar.bz2 directory/ --exclude-vcs
It works with Git.
Try something like this:
git archive --format=tar -o ~/tarball.tar -v HEAD
Add your .log files and everything else you don't want to be packed to your .gitignore file.
To exclude version control system directories:
tar --exclude-vcs
This will exclude svn, git metafiles etc.
The newer GNU tar has the option to exclude version control directories automatically by using flag --exclude-vcs . This will take care of .git as well.
[slap] Bah! The parameters to find were in the wrong order! I didn't see the warnings because they whizzed off the screen. This allowed '.' to pass through egrep which caused tar to slurp up everything.
That will teach me for drowning important messages in verbose debug.
This works:
find . -type f | egrep -v '\.git|\.log' | xargs tar cvf ~/app.tar
You could do that without grep. find is powerful
find . -type f -not \( -iname ".git" -or -iname ".log" \) | xargs ...
git-archive may be what you're looking for.
For doing it from outside the app directory:
tar cvfz app.tar.gz --exclude ".git/*" --exclude ".git" app/
For me, the .gitignore
content is what I needed:
tar cvfz $PROJECT.tar.gz --exclude-from=$PROJECT/.gitignore $PROJECT
--exclude-from
is reading the file's contents - and exlucde the patterns listed there
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