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Sourcetree seens deleted files that doesn't exists

Jean-Philippe Murray March 31, 2015

Hello,

I just started to configure a new OS X workstation, and after installing Sourcetree and cloning our repo, without doing anything else then cloning the repo, Sourcetree sees some deleted binary files (that yes, did exists at some point in the project) and place them as unstaged.

I though no problem, let's just stage them and they'll go away, theses are deleted files. Trying to stage them gives me this result:

git -c diff.mnemonicprefix=false -c core.quotepath=false -c credential.helper=sourcetree rm -q -f -- file.jpg 

fatal: pathspec 'file.jpg' did not match any files

Completed with errors, see above

So they stay in unstaged, I can't stage them. Trying to discard or remove them gives me the same error.

Is there anyway I can have them go away

EDIT FOR SCREENSHOT

Screen Shot 2015-03-31 at 2.08.50 PM.png

3 answers

0 votes
Tim Crall
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March 31, 2015

I notice that it looks like all the filenames have accents in them.  Can your Mac's OS support filenames with those characters?

We have noticed that if attempt to clone a repo onto a workstation which doesn't support some of the filenames, it will show them as pending deletions (although that usually causes them to be staged - so it doesn't seem exactly like what's happening here).

Since these are just (showing up as) unstaged files that you don't wish, is the only real harm that they are cluttering up your list of unstaged files?  Can you just add them all to .gitignore?

Jean-Philippe Murray April 1, 2015

I'm on Mavericks, so I can't see why it wouldn't support accented characters... Unless putting the OS in english makes it unable to process them? That'd be silly, but still... And yes, putting them in .gitignore will be a solution, but I wanted to check if there was something else to do before ;-)

Tim Crall
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April 1, 2015

Hmm, I seem to be able to create files with accents on my Mac and to commit them to a git repo, so that doesn't seem to be it. I can't shake the feeling that it could be somehow related, though. If you do a git checkout of a commit that should have those files present, do they appear?

Jean-Philippe Murray April 2, 2015

I'll be damned. They *are* in the repo over at bitbucket. I'm in a develop branch, it's the one I checked out locally also. Files are on the remote repo, but not locally. I can't ignore them on Sourcetree and trying to show in finder won't open either. Although, it sure has to do with accented character. I used the "copy path" to manually edit the .gitignore file and it comes up like this: Epices-moi-Gambas-pe^ches-5-150x150.jpg. As you can see, the accent is not placed correctly. And adding the files manually to the .gitignore just won't cut it either...

Seth
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April 2, 2015

You shouldn't be able to ignore files that are tracked. Sounds like the real problem here is that you are unable to stage the deletion. I suspect the accented characters are causing SourceTree to choke. Try staging from the command line.

Tim Crall
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April 2, 2015

Do you want the files to be present in your next commit or not? Right, if the files are present in the branch and being tracked you can't ignore them. I'm not sure whether its the OS, git, or SourceTree that's choking on the filenames. Do the files show up in your working directory on the local clone? I'm kind of guessing not. This may be kind of English-speaker-centric of me, but I think the best solution is to change the names of the files so that they do not contain accents. In order to do this, you'd need to clone the repo somewhere that supports the character set and then rename the files with git mv and recommit. We had a very similar problem with Windows users trying to clone repos that contained files whose names ended in a period (which Windows appears to not tolerate). The only difference was that there they showed up as staged deletions.

Tim Crall
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April 2, 2015

My tests with on Mac using git, SourceTree, and Stash with a simple filename with an á in it seem to work fine, though. I'll try with a more extensive range of characters.

Tim Crall
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April 2, 2015

I added some more filenames with different accented characters to my test repo and had no problem adding them to Git, pushing them to Stash, and pulling them back down again with SourceTree. Not sure why exactly you're having this problem but somewhere in your chain something must be having difficulties with the names. What happens if you clone this repo: https://bitbucket.org/timcrall/accented-chars.git Also, maybe try taking SourceTree out of the mix and using git command lines to clone the repo to your Mac and then do git status to see what's there?

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Jean-Philippe Murray March 31, 2015

Here you go! ;-)

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Seth
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March 31, 2015

I'd appreciate seeing a screenshot to get a better idea of the state of things.

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