Add a .gitignore to storage/framework with the following content:
.gitignore
storage/framework
* !.gitignore
Those are compiled views and should never be committed in the first place, so you can safely remove them by then typing git rm -r --cached storage/framework/*.
git rm -r --cached storage/framework/*
Then commit.
okay Thanks RVxLab
my current .gitignore is like :
/node_modules /public/hot /public/storage /storage/*.key /vendor .env .env.testing .env.backup .phpunit.result.cache Homestead.json Homestead.yaml npm-debug.log yarn-error.log .idea/ /public/img/avatars /public/js /public/css
`
What should I add exactly ?
Please re-read my comment, as I explained exactly what you need to do to fix this.
In case you didn’t know, it’s completely fine to have multiple .gitignore files.
/storage/* /storage/!.gitignore
and then run git rm -r --cached storage/framework/*
Not wrong. But also not what I said.
In case Mostafa didn’t know, it’s entire possible and legal to have multiple .gitignore files.
Possible, but from my personal experience it is better to have a single .gitignore file to rule them all 🙂
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Add a
.gitignore
tostorage/framework
with the following content:Those are compiled views and should never be committed in the first place, so you can safely remove them by then typing
git rm -r --cached storage/framework/*
.Then commit.
okay Thanks RVxLab
my current .gitignore is like :
`
What should I add exactly ?
Please re-read my comment, as I explained exactly what you need to do to fix this.
In case you didn’t know, it’s completely fine to have multiple .gitignore files.
and then run
git rm -r --cached storage/framework/*
Not wrong. But also not what I said.
In case Mostafa didn’t know, it’s entire possible and legal to have multiple .gitignore files.
Possible, but from my personal experience it is better to have a single
.gitignore
file to rule them all 🙂