-c, --cached
Show cached files in the output (default)
-d, --deleted
Show deleted files in the output
-m, --modified
Show modified files in the output
-o, --others
Show other (i.e. untracked) files in the output
-i, --ignored
Show only ignored files in the output. When showing files in
the index, print only those matched by an exclude pattern.
When showing "other" files, show only those matched by an
exclude pattern. Standard ignore rules are not automatically
activated, therefore at least one of the --exclude*
options
is required.
-s, --stage
Show staged contents' mode bits, object name and stage number
in the output.
--directory
If a whole directory is classified as "other", show just its
name (with a trailing slash) and not its whole contents.
--no-empty-directory
Do not list empty directories. Has no effect without
--directory.
-u, --unmerged
Show unmerged files in the output (forces --stage)
-k, --killed
Show files on the filesystem that need to be removed due to
file/directory conflicts for checkout-index to succeed.
-z
\0 line termination on output and do not quote filenames. See
OUTPUT below for more information.
--deduplicate
When only filenames are shown, suppress duplicates that may
come from having multiple stages during a merge, or giving
--deleted
and --modified
option at the same time. When any of
the -t
, --unmerged
, or --stage
option is in use, this option
has no effect.
-x <pattern>, --exclude=<pattern>
Skip untracked files matching pattern. Note that pattern is a
shell wildcard pattern. See EXCLUDE PATTERNS below for more
information.
-X <file>, --exclude-from=<file>
Read exclude patterns from <file>; 1 per line.
--exclude-per-directory=<file>
Read additional exclude patterns that apply only to the
directory and its subdirectories in <file>.
--exclude-standard
Add the standard Git exclusions: .git/info/exclude,
.gitignore in each directory, and the user's global exclusion
file.
--error-unmatch
If any <file> does not appear in the index, treat this as an
error (return 1).
--with-tree=<tree-ish>
When using --error-unmatch to expand the user supplied <file>
(i.e. path pattern) arguments to paths, pretend that paths
which were removed in the index since the named <tree-ish>
are still present. Using this option with -s
or -u
options
does not make any sense.
-t
This feature is semi-deprecated. For scripting purpose,
git-status(1) --porcelain
and git-diff-files(1) --name-status
are almost always superior alternatives, and users should
look at git-status(1) --short
or git-diff(1) --name-status
for more user-friendly alternatives.
This option identifies the file status with the following
tags (followed by a space) at the start of each line:
H
cached
S
skip-worktree
M
unmerged
R
removed/deleted
C
modified/changed
K
to be killed
?
other
-v
Similar to -t
, but use lowercase letters for files that are
marked as assume unchanged (see git-update-index(1)).
-f
Similar to -t
, but use lowercase letters for files that are
marked as fsmonitor valid (see git-update-index(1)).
--full-name
When run from a subdirectory, the command usually outputs
paths relative to the current directory. This option forces
paths to be output relative to the project top directory.
--recurse-submodules
Recursively calls ls-files on each active submodule in the
repository. Currently there is only support for the --cached
mode.
--abbrev[=<n>]
Instead of showing the full 40-byte hexadecimal object lines,
show the shortest prefix that is at least <n> hexdigits long
that uniquely refers the object. Non default number of digits
can be specified with --abbrev=<n>.
--debug
After each line that describes a file, add more data about
its cache entry. This is intended to show as much information
as possible for manual inspection; the exact format may
change at any time.
--eol
Show <eolinfo> and <eolattr> of files. <eolinfo> is the file
content identification used by Git when the "text" attribute
is "auto" (or not set and core.autocrlf is not false).
<eolinfo> is either "-text", "none", "lf", "crlf", "mixed" or
"".
"" means the file is not a regular file, it is not in the
index or not accessible in the working tree.
<eolattr> is the attribute that is used when checking out or
committing, it is either "", "-text", "text", "text=auto",
"text eol=lf", "text eol=crlf". Since Git 2.10 "text=auto
eol=lf" and "text=auto eol=crlf" are supported.
Both the <eolinfo> in the index ("i/<eolinfo>") and in the
working tree ("w/<eolinfo>") are shown for regular files,
followed by the ("attr/<eolattr>").
--
Do not interpret any more arguments as options.
<file>
Files to show. If no files are given all files which match
the other specified criteria are shown.