Just installed git on Windows. I set the GIT_DIR variable to be c:\git\ and verified that this environment variable is maintained by cygwin (i.e. echo $GIT_DIR is what it should be). I went to the folder that I wanted to create the git repository for, let's say c:\www, and then ran:
git init
git add .
Then I get the error:
fatal: This operation must be run in a work tree
I'm not sure what went wrong, but the c:\git directory has a config file that says:
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = false
bare = true
symlinks = false
ignorecase = true
I'm pretty sure this shouldn't be bare and that's our problem.
The direct reason for the error is that yes, it's impossible to use git-add
with a bare repository. A bare repository, by definition, has no work tree. git-add
takes files from the work tree and adds them to the index, in preparation for committing.
You may need to put a bit of thought into your setup here, though. GIT_DIR is the repository directory used for all git commands. Are you really trying to create a single repository for everything you track, maybe things all over your system? A git repository by nature tracks the contents of a single directory. You'll need to set GIT_WORK_TREE
to a path containing everything you want to track, and then you'll need a .gitignore
to block out everything you're not interested in tracking.
Maybe you're trying to create a repository which will track just c:\www
? Then you should put it in c:\www
(don't set GIT_DIR). This is the normal usage of git, with the repository in the .git directory of the top-level directory of your "module".
Unless you have a really good reason, I'd recommend sticking with the way git likes to work. If you have several things to track, you probably want several repositories!