I have a git checkout. All the file permissions are different than what git thinks they should be therefore they all show up as modified.
Without touching the content of the files (just want to modify the permissions) how do I set all the files permissions to what git thinks they should be?
Git keeps track of filepermission and exposes permission changes when creating patches using git diff -p
. So all we need is:
As a one-liner:
git diff -p -R --no-ext-diff --no-color \
| grep -E "^(diff|(old|new) mode)" --color=never \
| git apply
you can also add it as an alias to your git config...
git config --global --add alias.permission-reset '!git diff -p -R --no-ext-diff --no-color | grep -E "^(diff|(old|new) mode)" --color=never | git apply'
...and you can invoke it via:
git permission-reset
Note, if you shell is bash
, make sure to use '
instead of "
quotes around the !git
, otherwise it gets substituted with the last git
command you ran.
Thx to @Mixologic for pointing out that by simply using -R
on git diff
, the cumbersome sed
command is no longer required.