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nix-gitignore

(for nix 2.0 or higher)

This implements primitive a gitignore filter for builtins.filterSource via translation to regexes.

Motivation

If you want to deploy your code from the development directory, it would make sense to clean out the development/tmp/cache files before copying your project's source to the nix store. The set of development files you'll want to clean is likely the same one your gitignore patterns match, so this is why this is useful.

Example

This project has been included in nixpkgs since 2019.02.18. and it should land in the 19.03 release, so you can start using it like this:

with (import <nixpkgs> {});

let
  additionalIgnores = ''
    /this
    /that/**.html
  '';

  source = nix-gitignore.gitignoreSource additionalIgnores ./source;
in
  "use ${source} here"
Here's the `fetchFromGitHub` nix example if it's ever needed.

fetchFromGitHub example

Replace the rev and sha256 lines with the output of this command:

nix-prefetch-git https://github.com/siers/nix-gitignore 2> /dev/null | jq -r '"rev = \"\(.rev)\";\nsha256 = \"\(.sha256)\";"'

in this snippet:

with (import <nixpkgs> {});

let
  gitignore = callPackage (pkgs.fetchFromGitHub {
    owner = "siers";
    repo = "nix-gitignore";
    rev = "…";
    sha256 = "…";
  }) {};
in
  with gitignore;

let
  additionalIgnores = ''
    /this
    /that/**.html
  '';

  source = gitignoreSource additionalIgnores ./source;
in
  "use ${source} here"

Usage

The default.nix exports (among other things) four functions. Three of these are:

gitignoreSource [] ./source
    # Simplest version

gitignoreSource "supplemental-ignores\n" ./source
    # This one reads the ./source/.gitignore and concats the auxiliary ignores

gitignoreSourcePure "ignore-this\nignore-that\n" ./source
    # Use this string as gitignore, don't read ./source/.gitignore.

gitignoreSourcePure ["ignore-this\nignore-that\n" ~/.gitignore] ./source
    # It also accepts a list (of strings and paths) that will be concatenated
    # once the paths are turned to strings via readFile.

They're all derived from the Filter functions with the first filter argument hardcoded as (_: _: true):

gitignoreSourcePure = gitignoreFilterSourcePure (_: _: true);
gitignoreSource = gitignoreFilterSource (_: _: true);

The filter accepts the same arguments the filterSource function would pass to its filters. Thus fn: gitignoreFilterSourcePure fn "" is extensionally equivalent to filterSource. The file is blacklisted iff it's blacklisted by either your filter or the gitignoreFilter.

If you want to make your own filter from scratch, you may use

gitignoreFilter = ign: root: filterPattern (gitignoreToPatterns ign) root;

.gitignore files in subdirectories

If you wish to use a filter that would search for .gitignore files in subdirectories, just like git does by default, use this function.

gitignoreFilterRecursiveSource = filter: patterns: root:
gitignoreRecursiveSource = gitignoreFilterRecursiveSource (_: _: true);

Testing

I highly recommend taking a look at the test files test.nix and test.sh which show how closely the actual git implementation's being mimicked. If you find any deviances, please file an issue. Even though it probably works 99% of the time, the pattern [^b/]har-class-pathalogic is the only one found that doesn't work like in git.